King v. Burkhart

180 S.W. 534, 167 Ky. 424, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 852
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 534 (King v. Burkhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Burkhart, 180 S.W. 534, 167 Ky. 424, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 852 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Reversing.

This action was brought by the appellants, Mary King, her husband, Woodard P. King, Jane Cloud, her husband, Alexander Cloud, and Nancy Burkhart, against the appellees, Bradley Burkhart and McKinley Burk-hart, infants over fourteen years of age, Lydia Burk-hart and Moses Burkhart, seeking the cancellation of two deeds, executed by Jefferson Burkhart and his wife, Lydia Burkhart, to Bradley Burkhart and McKinley Burkhart, each conveying to them jointly a tract of land lying in Harlan county, of which Jefferson Burkhart had been owner and in possession for many years. The deed to the smaller tract excepted from the boundary thereof twenty acres of land, which the grantors at the same time conveyed by a third deed to the appellant Nancy Burk-hart. The grantors at the same time executed a fourth deed, conveying to the appellee-Moses Burkhart a small tract of land,.disconnected from the tracts first mentioned. Jefferson Burkhart was twice married, the appellants Mary King, Jane Cloud and Nancy Burkhart and the appellee Moses Burkhart being his children by his first wife, and the appellees Bradley Burkhart and McKinley Burkhart, his children by the last wife, the appellee Lydia Burkhart. Jefferson Burkhart died in Harlan county, where he was domiciled, April 15, 1911, intestate and survived by his wife and children above named. >

It was alleged in the petition that Jefferson Burk-hart, at the time of making the several deeds mentioned, was seventy-eight years of age and an invalid, mentally incapable of transacting any business or of understandingly executing a deed, and that he was induced and coerced to make the deeds in question by the fraud and undue influence of the appellee Lydia Burkhart and other persons, then and theretofore practiced and exercised upon and over his mind and will. That the lands attempted to be disposed of by these deeds were all the decedent owned, and that the personal estate left by him was of insignificant value.

[426]*426It was further alleged in the petition that, the two. tracts of land conveyed Bradley and McKinley Burkhart are worth $6,000.00; the tract conveyed Moses Burk-hart $700.00, and the small parcel conveyed Nancy Burk-hart, $100.00; .that the deeds thus made by the decedent were ineffectual to pass the title to the lands therein described, and that the appellants Mary King, Jane Cloud and Nancy Burkhart were entitled to share therein with his other children. The prayer of the petition asked that the two deeds to Bradley and McKinley Burkhart be set aside and the lands described therein divided among the decedent’s heirs-at-l'aw, in the ratio of their respective interests.

After the infants. Bradley and McKinley Burkhart were duly.summoned, upon the filing of an affidavit showing them to be without a statutory or other guardian, curator or committee, a guardian ad litem was appointed by the court to defend for them, whose report appearing. in the record shows the performance of that duty. The appellee Moses Burkhart, though duly summoned, failed to file an answer in the case, but the appellees Lydia Burkhart, Bradley Burkhart and McKinley Burkhart, by their joint and several answer, traversed the averments of the petition and, in addition, alleged that the appellants Mary King, Jane Cloud and Nancy Burkhart are entitled to no interest in the lands or other estate of their deceased father, Jefferson Burkhart; that in 1906, five years before the decedent’s- death, the appellants Mary King and Jane Cloud, in consideration of $100.00 given and paid to each of them by their father, the decedent, each executed and delivered to him a writing in which she acknowledged payment of the hundred dollars and its acceptance in full satisfaction of any and all interest or claim that she had in the father’s estate; and that by virtue of these payments and the contemporaneous writings mentioned they and each of them are estopped to -attack the deeds assailed by the petition or to make any further claim to an interest in the decedent’s estate. That the appellant Nancy Burkhart, by the deed conveying her the twenty acres of land, executed by the decedent and his wife as stated in the petition, thereby received her full share of the decedent’s estate. All affirmative matter in the answer was controverted by the joint and several reply filed by the appellants.

[427]*427After the taking of much proof and submission of the case, the circuit .court rendered judgment dismissing the petition at the appellants’ cost, and from that judgment the latter have appealed.

As in all cases. of .this character, the evidence was furnished by the neighbors and relations of the litigants. These we find about equally divided numerically; some of them testifying that Jefferson Burkhart did not have sufficient mind to make the deeds, and others that he did. Some of the witnesses also testified as- to acts and statements on the part of. the decedent, indicating that the deeds to his sons Bradley and McKinley Burk-hart were executed in pursuance of a purpose entertained by him for a year or more before his death; others as to similar acts and declarations from him, covering several years before his death, which indicated that it was his desire and purpose to have his estate go to and be equally distributed among all his children at his death. The depositions of two physicians were taken, both of whom had known the decedent many years and attended him during his last illness, though neither of them saw him on the day the deeds were executed. One of these physicians testified that at the time of making the deeds he possessed sufficient mind to comprehend the transactions and was competent to make the deeds. The other, with equal positiveness, testified he was not then competent to make the deeds, as he did not have sufficient mind to comprehend their meaning.

The evidence so far referred to, exclusive of that of the two physicians, being little else than mere expressions of opinion on the part of relations and friends of the deceased and his family, made up from casual meetings and interviews with him, throw little intelligent'light ■on the question to be determined, but there are certain significant facts disclosed, yet to be mentioned, which, in our opinion, have a controlling influence in the decision of the case, and these facts, except in certain slight immaterial particulars, are substantially uncontroverted. They are, that for about two years before his death the •decedent was afflicted with ah incurable disease known as dropsy, and was thereby confined to his room or bed for as much as six months before he died. On the night before the execution of the deeds in question he'had an attack which his family thought would cause his' death before morning. Throughout the night he was fre[428]*428quently and strongly dosed with, whiskey by his wife, the appellee Lydia Burkhart, and on the following morning was discovered to be in such a stupor as to have to be aroused to get his attention, and upon being let alone would again lapse into the stupor. About midnight the wife sent a messenger for the decedent’s son, Moses Burkhart, who returned with the messenger, reaching his father’s home about two o’clock. Upon his arrival there he and the decedent’s wife immediately began to confer together, and after such conference the latter sent her stepson, James Dean, to the house of Kelly, a notary public, with the request that he come at once to the decedent’s home and write the deeds. Dean reported that he was unable to find Kelly.

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 534, 167 Ky. 424, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-burkhart-kyctapp-1915.