McHay v. Peterson

113 S.W. 981, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 195, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 333
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 2, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 981 (McHay v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McHay v. Peterson, 113 S.W. 981, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 195, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 333 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

McMEANS, Associate Justice.

— This suit was brought by A. N. McKay, plaintiff in error, against Charles J. Peterson, defendant in error, to recover the possession of two promissory notes alleged to he the property of the former and in the possession of the latter. Plaintiff al *196 leged the execution and delivery by Tillie A. Waterman and her husband, W. H. Waterman, to Christine Peterson, of a promissory note for $2,000, and also the execution and delivery of a note for $2,000 by Ella D. Pivito and her husband, M. E. Pivito, to the said Christine Peterson, both of which notes were secured by mortgages; the assignment of said notes by Christine Peterson to Peter W. Peterson, and the assignment of same by Peter W. Peterson to plaintiff.

Defendant answered, alleging that on October 16, 1902, the date of the assignment to Peter W. Peterson, Christine Peterson was of unsound mind and incapable of contracting, and further that "If it should appear that any form of apparent transfer of the notes sued for was obtained by Peter W. Peterson from Christine Peterson, for any purpose whatever, then defendant avers and would show to the court that same' was obtained by fraud, and by duress and undue influence, in that about October 16, 1902, and for four weeks prior thereto, and up to the time of her death on October 19, 1902, the said Christine Peterson was secluded in the house of the said Peter W. Peterson near Vermillion, South Dakota, by him and the other members of his family and household, who were all acting with him for the common purpose of obtaining by deception and extortion, and by undue and overbearing persuasion, from said Christine Peterson, such testamentary or like disposition of her property in contemplation of her approaching death as would give the said Peter W. Peterson a portion thereof greater than he would have received by her voluntary disposition-; to this end the said Peter W. Peterson, who is masterful and overbearing in character, and his said accomplices, excluded from access to his said mother all of her other children, who were then within such a distance as to have enabled them to have visited her, and withheld from all of them information as to her true condition up to her death, and admitted none to see her except those who were indifferent, or those who were conspiring with him for the said purpose; that said Peter W. Peterson falsely insinuated to his mother that she had been cheated and defrauded in the sale of her interest in certain Texas lands to five of her children, and awed and intimidated her with threats of placing her under guardianship as incompetent, and deprived her of the advice and consolation of her other children, which she greatly needed, and while thus subdued and under his exclusive influence persuaded her that, unless some special provision was made for him he, under the laws of Texas, would be cut off from an equal share with the other children of the paternal and maternal inheritance, whom he falsely represented as intending such course; moreover, the said Christine Peterson had long been partly deaf, and ivas illiterate, and had lost her memory, and all of her faculties were so impaired as to render her incapable of the ordinary means of communication with others in respect of business matters on October 16, 1902.

"If the said Peter W. Peterson on said date obtained any apparent consent to or acquiescence in any form of transfer to himself of said instruments, it was such as resulted from her physical and mental impairment, as aforesaid, and from said fraud and from undue influence, as above alleged, and not from the true consent of said Christine Peterson, and that only such persons were present at the time thereof as were so conspiring, as aforesaid, with said Peter W. Peterson.

*197 “That the two notes in controversy constitute about 4-11 of all the property of the said Christine Peterson which she owned on and prior to October 16, 1903, and at the time of her death; that the said Christine Peterson had five children besides the said Peter W. Peterson and this defendant, and that her affection for all of them was such as to render it her true will that all of her children should share equally in her estate after her death; that there was no valuable consideration for the transfer of the said notes to Peter W. Peterson, and that the said Peter W. Peterson is a man about ten times the wealth of his said mother, while she had several children who had no property or wealth whatever.

“That if there was any apparent transfer from Peter W. Peterson to plaintiff of his claim upon the said notes, the same was made with the purpose of obtaining to said Peter W. Peterson the benefits of the chances of litigating the claim of the said Peter W. Peterson herein set up as belonging to plaintiff, without affording this court the means of adjusting all the equities between the parties in respect of other undue advantages obtained by said Peter W. Peterson in the disposition of his mother’s estate by acts done or apparently done on the 16th day of October, 1903; and defendant says that this court ought not to entertain plaintiff’s suit unless the said Peter W. Peterson will come in and subject himself to the jurisdiction of this court in order that the equities may be adjusted in respect of the subject matter and other property of the estate of the said Christine Peterson.

“The defendant says he holds the notes sued for for the benefit of himself and the other children of the said Christine Peterson, deceased, who each own a 1-7 undivided interest therein, which interest he is ready and willing to pay over to each of the said children out of the proceeds to be collected on the said notes; or the defendant is ready and willing to surrender the said notes to any proper representative of the estate of the said Christine Peterson, who will show a better right thereto than defendant has.”

Christine Maurer and her husband, E. H. Maurer, Tillie A. Waterman and husband, W. H. Waterman, Mary Swanson and her husband, Gus Swanson, Ella D. Pivito and her husband, M. E. Pivito, and Frank H. Peterson intervened as parties defendant, and for their answer adopted the allegations contained in the answer of Charles J. Peterson.

The case was tried before a jury which rendered a verdict in favor of defendants, upon which judgment for them was duly entered. The plaintiff in error’s motion for new trial having been overruled, he perfected this appeal.

The evidence was uncontradicted that Peter W. Peterson, and all the defendants except E. H. Maurer, W. H. Waterman, Gus Swanson and M. E. Pivito, were the children and heirs-at-law of Christine Peterson; that the said Christine Peterson, prior to her death, which occurred on October 19, 1903, had lived in the home of her son Peter W. Peterson for a considerable length of time; that for some time before her death. she suffered with, and died from, the effects of cancer, and that from the ravages of the disease great physical weakness resulted; that three days before her death she assigned the notes and mortgages sued for to *198 Peter W. Peterson, and that he thereafter assigned the same to the plaintiff in error.

The evidence was not sufficient to raise the issue of unsoundness of-Mrs. Peterson’s mind at the time she executed the assignments, unless the statement made by Peter W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 981, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 195, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mchay-v-peterson-texapp-1908.