McClure v. Lewis

4 Mo. App. 554, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 132
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Mo. App. 554 (McClure v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClure v. Lewis, 4 Mo. App. 554, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 132 (Mo. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

HaydeN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action to set aside two conveyances, a deed and a lease, made by the plaintiff to the defendant, on the ground of fraud and of undue influence exercised by the [556]*556defendant over tbe plaintiff,'who, it is alleged, was weak of mind. In January, 1872, the plaintiff was the owner of a farm, lying some twelve miles from St. Louis, and of a lot in that city, the two pieces of property being, as claimed, of over the value of $16,000, and composing her estate. The conveyances were executed on January 6, 1872. The deed conveyed the farm and lot in fee to the defendant, with reservation of an estate to the plaintiff for her life, the consideration in the deed being stated to be love and affection and the sum of $1. By the lease, for the consideration of $400'., annual rent and the payment of taxes, the plaintiff' conveyed to the defendant the farm and lot, during the'life of the plaintiff, subject to a provision that if the defendant should, die before the plaintiff the lease should determine. The plaintiff, an unmarried lady of about fifty years of age, had been, in feeble health for some years before the execution of these conveyances, and was so at that time. It appears she was. a woman of strong affections, and that the death of her two. brothers, to whom she was much attached, as well as a, chronic complaint with which she was afflicted, had. caused mental disturbance and weakened her nervous system. The degree in which her mind was affected, whether seriously, or only remotely and slightly, as illness and trouble ordinarily affect persons of strong will and sound mind, was one of the issues in the case. • Her brothers, who had been unmarried, and with whom she had lived, died, one of them in the spring, the other in the autumn of 1871, leaving to her the property which has been described; and when she executed the conveyances she was living at the house of the defendant, near the farm, the wife of the defendant being her neice. ■ The court below dismissed the bill, and the plaintiff appealed.,;.

A large part of the evidence in this voluminous record is of too speculative a character to be of any substantial aid as a guide to decision. The., theories .of witnesses as 'to mental condition are of but little value when.specific acts,, and, still more, the general conduct, of the person indicate; [557]*557.the state of the intellect. As there is here no evidence tending to show actual fraud, and as it cannot be fairly claimed that the defendant bore to the plaintiff any relation of special trust and confidence, the real question is one of undue influence on the defendant’s part, and, as affecting this, of the plaintiff’s mental condition. Proceeding to test this condition by the plaintiff’s conduct, we find that of ■her own accord she entertained the design of making some ■disposition as to her property. Prom her own account, a plan — the details of which, it would appear, were discussed between herself on the one hand, and the defendant or his wife (her niece) on the other — was arranged, which involved the lease of the property, or a part of it, and of this plan it was one of the features that the plaintiff was to be supported in sickness and health, and taken care of during her life. The initiative towards making some disposition of the property appears to have been taken by the plaintiff. It ■seems that another matter of business, the execution of partition deeds, by which the plaintiff and her sister were to divide their property, held previously in common, immediately preceded the execution of the present convey.ances. This partition matter the plaintiff seems to have herself undertaken, and it may be inferred that she did it as a preliminary to making some disposition as to her property. At any rate, on January 1, 1872, she seems to have been in no doubt as to her capacity to• transact business, and to have been both cheerful and confident in transacting it. A few days after, on January 6,1872, the plaintiff, and the defendant and his wife, went together from the house in the country, about twelve miles from the city, to St. Louis, and there, at the office of a conveyancer, who had previously been spoken to by the defendant in order that the ■deed and lease might be ready for signature, the two instruments were executed. There were no intimate relations between the conveyancer and the defendant, and the part played by the former was merely to draw the instruments [558]*558as directed, not to give counsel or advice to either party. The testimony of the conveyancer, a highly respectable man, of great experience, is in the case, and to him, though the plaintiff seemed feeble, it appeared that she understood the transaction, as, indeed, her own conduct shows she did. The deeds were read slowly and carefully by the conveyancer, in the presence of both parties, and it was at the suggestion of the plaintiff that the clause which now appears in the lease, to the following effect, was inserted: “ In the event of the death of said lessee before the death of the said lessor, then this lease shall cease and determine,” etc. When the lease was first read, the plaintiff appeared disappointed that no clause to this effect was in the lease, and so stated; and then, upon her suggestion, the lease was redrawn, or this provision added. As to the deed, the plaintiff says : “ Mr. Babcock read the deed. I understood that I was to have every thing on it as long as I lived, and he [the defendant] was to have it only at my death.” The conveyancer understood, and it was evidently the understanding between the plaintiff and the defendant, though nothing to this effect was put into writing, that it-was part of the arrangement that the defendant should provide a home and its comforts for the plaintiff for her life. It is a reasonable inference from the conduct of the plaintiff while she was at the conveyancer’s office, and just before and afterward, that she was not in a condition of great debility, either physical or mental, though she was undoubtedly ill and feeble. Still more clearly does her conduct on reaching home, as that conduct is described by herself, indicate that she understood the nature of what she had done, and was satisfied, if not with all the details, at least with the substantial result. She states that she proposed to the defendant that he should build a house upon the lot in the city, in which house she and her sister could live permanently with the defendant’s family, and in which she could have her choice of a room. This conversation, as [559]*559given by herself, shows what had been in her mind. She was infirm, and unable to take care of her household. She wished penhanently to secure to herself the society of her niece and her niece’s mother, and to have the comfort and protection of a household. The defendant, on his part, was to build the house, to take care of the property and manage it, and to pay the rent as agreed upon. In view of these facts, and of the further fact that the defendant, as a part of the transaction, paid her $2,000 at or about the time of the execution of the deeds, it is apparent that the consideration was not so inadequate as to make the agreement an unconscionable bargain. Still less will it appear such if the fact is considered that the niece of the plaintiff was her favorite relative, and that, according to the plaintiff’s statement, this niece preferred that, in a disposition of the property, the settlement should ultimately be upon her husband, the defendant, and not upon herself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Mo. App. 554, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclure-v-lewis-moctapp-1877.