McGrath v. West End Orchard & Land Co.

251 P. 623, 43 Idaho 255, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 32
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 251 P. 623 (McGrath v. West End Orchard & Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGrath v. West End Orchard & Land Co., 251 P. 623, 43 Idaho 255, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 32 (Idaho 1926).

Opinion

*259 BUDGE, J.

On October 9 and December 1, 1920, C. J. McGrath entered into three separate contracts with appellant company for the purchase of certain lands, and upon each contract made down payments of varying amounts. Thereafter, in the spring of 1921, McGrath was taken to the state hospital for the insane at Orofino. Subsequent to his commitment Marie McGrath, his wife, was appointed guardian of his estate in proceedings had in the probate court of Nez Perce county, and as such guardian, through her attorneys, notified appellant company that C. J. McGrath was insane and incompetent upon the dates the contracts involved herein were entered into and that she refused to be bound thereby, and demanded repayment of the sums advanced under them. Appellant company, by written notice addressed to O. J. McGrath, to Marie McGrath, his guardian, and to her attorneys, advised that by reason of failure to comply with the terms of the contract dated October 9, 1920, the same was canceled and terminated and pursuant to the provisions thereof payments theretofore made would be retained. This action was subsequently commenced by the said guardian to recover from appellant the amounts paid on the three contracts, with interest, upon the ground that at the time of entering into the contracts G. J. McGrath was mentally incompetent and incapable of making a valid contract. To the complaint a general demurrer was filed, and overruled. Answering the complaint appellant denied the incapacity of O. J. McGrath to make a valid contract, and prayed that the action be dismissed.

Before the' cause came on for trial C. J. McGrath died. The trial court, upon application, made and entered an order continuing the cause in the name of Marie McGrath as administratrix of the estate of C. J. McGrath, deceased, as *260 plaintiff, and granting plaintiff leave to file a supplemental complaint alleging her appointment as administratrix. A supplemental complaint containing such allegation was thereupon filed.

It appears from the record that an amended answer was filed but withdrawn and a second amended answer filed in lieu thereof after the death of McGrath and the substitution of Marie McGrath, administratrix, as plaintiff, in which latter answer the incapacity of C. J. McGrath to make the contracts was denied, as was also the appointment of Marie McGrath as guardian of the estate of C. J. McGrath. The second amended answer affirmatively alleged that the Mc-Graths had been guilty of laches by failure timely to rescind the contracts and that the same had been ratified.

Upon the issues made by the complaint, supplemental complaint and second amended answer the cause was tried before the court, with a jury sitting in an advisory capacity on the question of the sanity of McGrath. Evidence was introduced by both sides upon the issue as to the sanity of Mc-Grath during the times of making of the contracts, and upon interrogatories submitted to it the jury found that at the time he entered into the contracts McGrath understood that he was buying lands in Lewiston Orchards; that prior thereto and at the time of entering into the contracts McGrath had not examined and did not know what particular tracts he was undertaking to purchase; that at the time he undertook to purchase the lands he did not understand what the purchase price was or the portion payable in cash or in deferred payments, or the rate of interest on deferred payments; that at the time of execution of the contracts by McGrath he did not know that the instruments which he signed were contracts for the purchase of the particular lands described therein, and that he did not understand the general meaning and effect of the contracts. To the last interrogatory, “If you find that C. J. McGrath was at any time insane, did he have lucid intervals?” the jury answered “Yes.”

After the advisory verdict of the jury was received the court heard evidence on matters other than the mental *261 capacity of McGrath, and when the case had been finally submitted a decree was entered, based upon findings of fact and conclusions of law, wherein it was adjudged that the contracts had been drdy and timely rescinded and that the same were void and unenforceable, and that respondent as administratrix of the estate of C. J. McGrath, deceased, was entitled to judgment against appellant for a recovery of the sums paid under the contracts, together with interest and costs.

Upon appeal to this court the specifications of error of appellant may be grouped and considered as follows:

1. That the evidence is insufficient to justify the advisory verdict and the findings of the court upon the question of the sanity of C. J. McGrath;

2. That the trial court erred in finding that Marie Mc-Grath was the duly and regularly appointed guardian of the estate of C. J. McGrath, an insane person, for the reason that the evidence shows a failure to give notice to McGrath o£ the hearing of the petition for letters of guardianship, and that he was not present when the purported appointment of guardian was made, thus rendering the probate court without jurisdiction to make the purported appointment;

3. That the trial court erred in ordering the case continued in the name of Mane McGrath, administratrix, for the reason that the ease not having been instituted by one having authority in the first instance, it could not be validated by the later order of substitution;

4. That the trial court could not properly render a judgment and decree affecting more than the interest of C. J. McGrath — the evidence establishing clearly that the amounts paid on the contracts belonged to the community of C. J. McGrath and Marie McGrath — for the reason that the suit was one by the purported guardian of McGrath alone;

5. That the trial court erred in finding that the contracts had been duly and timely rescinded, for the reason that the evidence shows that Marie McGrath was guilty of laches and estopped to make the attempted disaffirmance; and

6. That the trial court erred in admitting incompetent opinion evidence on the mental capacity of C. J. McGrath, *262 and in the admission in evidence of the deposition of Dr. John W. Givens.

While the burden rested upon respondent to prove that at the time C. J. McGrath entered into the contracts in question he was of unsound mind and therefore not competent to make the contracts; there is a conflict in the evidence as to whether or not at the time the contracts were entered into McGrath was sane or insane, or whether at such times he had lucid intervals. The preponderance of the evidence shows that McGrath was insane at the times he made the contracts, and although the jury found that he had lucid intervals, in the absence of a finding that during lucid intervals McGrath ratified the contracts, the court’s findings in this respect will not be disturbed. We do not deem it necessary to set out in this opinion all of the facts and circumstances testified to by the witnesses called to determine this issue. A reading of the record convinces us that the trial court reached the proper conclusion, based upon its own findings and the advisory verdict of the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
251 P. 623, 43 Idaho 255, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrath-v-west-end-orchard-land-co-idaho-1926.