McCue v. McCue

123 A. 914, 100 Conn. 448, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 1, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 123 A. 914 (McCue v. McCue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCue v. McCue, 123 A. 914, 100 Conn. 448, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 36 (Colo. 1924).

Opinion

Beach, J.

We take up the assignments of error, so far as they are pursued on the brief, in their order.

Assignment No. 3. In charging the jury that an instrument may properly be signed on one day and acknowledged before a notary public at a later date, the court dwelt somewhat on the fact that the personal appearance before the notary was the important thing in the acknowledgment, and concluded with these words: “that is the important thing, and not whether the paper was actually signed in his presence. If he acknowledges the signature, that is all right.” This was said with reference to the power of attorney on the back of the stock certificate, which was signed December 13th, and acknowledged December 14th in connection with the accompanying deed of trust. No complaint is made as to its effect on that paper because the jury found in plaintiff’s favor as regards that transaction. But the claim is made that the jury might have inferred that the deed of real estate was valid, if the plaintiff merely acknowledged her signature, without acknowledging the instrument to be her free act and deed. We think this criticism is far-fetched, especially as plaintiff’s claims made on the trial admit that all the *453 papers in question were “executed by the plaintiff . . . before said Gordon and two witnesses, not members of the family. ” Mr. Gordon was the notary.

Assignment No. 5. The court charged that “by calling the defendants to the stand and making them her own witnesses, the plaintiff in a general sense vouched for their good character. Where their statements were made fairly and the facts to which they testified are not otherwise controverted or contradicted, they must be considered as binding upon her. . . . For instance, if you find that these defendants, called by the plaintiff, testify uniformly that no conspiracy existed and that no improper means were used by them to influence Mrs. McCue to make the various gifts in question, and no other evidence is offered showing the facts to be otherwise, then the plaintiff is bound by their testimony and you must find that no such conspiracy existed. Of course the same limitation there: 'and no other evidence is offered.’ You have a right to consider all the evidence, not only the evidence of these defendants but other evidence introduced by the plaintiff, and to believe that which you find to be most credible under all the circumstances.”

This charge was entirely proper. The general rule was correctly stated: “No man is allowed to impeach the . . . character of his own witnesses; but if they . . . testify against him, he may disprove their testimony by other witnesses. ” 1 Swift’s Digest, p. 767. See also Barlow Bros. Co. v. Parsons, 73 Conn. 696, 706, 49 Atl. 205. The application of the rule was carefully limited, and the jury were charged “to believe that which you find to be most credible under all the circumstances. ”

Assignment No. 6. The court charged in part: “In this connection I wish to say a word about the element of conspiracy in this case. This does not enter into the *454 question of the mental capacity of the plaintiff, the first question you will have to consider. It is, however, an essential allegation of the complaint with respect to the charge of undue influence in securing both the transfer of the Chapel Street property, the sugar stock, and the withdrawal of the funds from the savings bank. It must be proved by the plaintiff by a fair preponderance of the evidence. In other words, the evidence must do more than raise a suspicion in your minds that a conspiracy existed; it must lead to an actual belief on your part that these defendants, or some of them, were joined together in a common purpose to defraud.”

The first two sentences above quoted seem to be self-evident. As the court said elsewhere in the charge: “It is not necessary, of course, to find a conspiracy, to find that she lacked mental capacity; the two have not any real relation. If she did not have mental capacity she could not transfer property, and that is all there is to that.” The rest of the above quotation does not, of course, say anything more than that, upon the allegations of this complaint, the plaintiff must prove by a fair preponderance of the evidence “that these defendants, or some of them, were joined together in a common purpose to defraud.” It is apparent that the narrative already outlined justifies the trial court in this construction of the complaint.

Assignment No. 7. The only comment upon the legal effect on this part of the charge disregards the hypothesis on which it was based, namely: “If at the time these gifts were made she possessed sufficient mind to comprehend the nature of her act, and was not fraudulently induced to make them or unduly influenced.” Upon that hypothesis it necessarily follows, as the court said, that “the fact that she does not now remember having made these gifts has no bearing upon the sub *455 ject, nor would it entitle her to a judgment revoking the gifts.” The objection to the remainder of the excerpt contained in this assignment, that it is “incoherant, misleading and harmful,” asserts no proposition of law. There is some lack of connection evident, but under our rule the court was well within its rights in calling the attention of the jury to the plaintiff’s “evident fear” that George Tyler would in some way get possession of her property, and her “evident desire ” to make some disposition of her property during her lifetime. On the assumption that the plaintiff had sufficient mental capacity to understand the nature and effect of her acts, these were manifestly some of the operative motives for the transactions in question. Whether they were implanted in the plaintiff’s mind by fraud, or undue influence, was another and a different question discussed in another part of the charge.

Assignment No. 8. The jury were charged that if the plaintiff fully comprehended the nature and effect of the deed of real estate, and intended thereby to pass the title to Thomas and Mary, reserving to herself the life use and income, then the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show that her act was induced by fraud or undue influence, and that “you must find such acts as induce upon your part a belief that an active conspiracy existed, and that it was because of this conspiracy and as a result of it that the plaintiff was induced to sign and deliver the deed.” As already stated, the facts alleged in the complaint necessarily involve a charge of conspiracy by the defendants or some of them to defraud the plaintiff.

Assignment No. 9. The court charged that in passing on the issue of undue influence in obtaining the deed of real estate, the jury must take into consideration the fact that she retained for herself during her *456 lifetime the use and income of the property, “and that the grantees can receive no benefit from it during her lifetime.” This last phrase is complained of as incorrect and misleading. In one sense it is true, and in another sense it is not, for the remainder interest acquired by the grantees was a vested interest which they might sell for a valuable consideration during the lifetime of the grantor.

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Bluebook (online)
123 A. 914, 100 Conn. 448, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccue-v-mccue-conn-1924.