Miskey's Appeal

3 Pennyp. 408
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedMarch 19, 1883
DocketNo. 159; No. 1
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Pennyp. 408 (Miskey's Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miskey's Appeal, 3 Pennyp. 408 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

— The opinion of the Court was filed by

G-heen, J:

This was a proceeding on the equity side of the Court below. It was a bill, the purpose of which was to procure a decree, setting aside a voluntary conveyance, made by a son to his father, of the whole of his estate upon . certain trusts therein stated. The property conveyed was personal estate, and by the terms of the deed the income was to be received by the grantor during his life. After his death, the grantee was to pay ten thousand dollars, at his discretion, to the only child of the grantor, and the remainder of the estate was to be divided equally between his father, mother, and sister.

The value of the property conveyed was about $70,000, and the only consideration for it stated in the deed was the sum of five dollars, which, it is said and not denied, was never paid. Jacob A. Miskey, the grantor, had a wife and one child, a son, about fifteen years of age, at the time of his death. No provision whatever was made for the wife and none for the child, except the payment of $10,000, in the manner stated. The deed contained no power of revocation. Miskey’s wife and child were living apart from him at the time of his death, and for some sixteen months prior thereto, the separation having been [415]*415occasioned, as was alleged and found by the master, by bis habits of gross and long-continued intoxication and disorderly conduct in his household. The deed was impeached upon various grounds, principally want of consideration, undue influence exerted by the father, mother, and sister, great mental weakness resulting from his long-continued and excessive use of intoxicating liquor, and fraud and deception practiced upon him by the donees named in the deed. An answer was filed denying the allegations of the bill, and, after replication, the case was referred to a master, who reported a decree declaring the deed to be fraudulent and void, and ordering it to be delivered up to be canceled, and ordering also a return of the various stocks and securities conveyed by the deed. An examination of the master’s report discloses the various considerations upon which his findings of facts and ■ law were based. He does not find that the deed from Jacob A. Miskey to Anthony Miskey, his father, was procured to be made by actual fraud and imposition practiced upon the son by his father, but that certain facts were shown to have existed, and certain other facts, which ought to appear in support of such an instrument, do not appear, and are not to be found in the testimony, and that the combined effect of these affirmative and negative facts is such that an inference of fraud arises sufficient to invalidate the deed. Thus he finds that the conveyance was purely voluntary and without consideration ; that it contained no provision whatever for the support of the wife of the grantor, and no adequate provision for the support of his only child ; that the grantor had, for several years before, and up to the time of the execution of the deed to his father, been given to habits of gross intoxication and to the excessive and inordinate use of alcoholic liquors, insomuch that he had become, and was, an habitual drunkard ; that the deed contained no power of revocation, and that there was no testimony in the case showing that this fact was known to him, or was, in any manner, explained to him ; that it did not appear that the deed was read over or explained to him at or before its execution; that the grantor was, at the time the deed was signed, and always had been, especially subject to the parental influence of his father, and that, from all the testimony in the case, it was fairly to be inferred that the deed was procured to be made by means of the exertion of that influence ; that the grantor entertained a strong affection for both his wife and his child, and that they had done nothing to forfeit either his affection or their right to adequate [416]*416protection and support from him and his estate ; that the grantor had become very much impaired, both in mind and body, in consequence of his excessive use of alcoholic liquor, and that the deed to his father was not the intelligent act of Jacob A. Miskey when in the fair possession of his faculties. The master applies the equitable rules that the absence of a power of revocation from a voluntary deed conveying the property of a grantor is a circumstance which may be availed of to set aside the deed on the ground of mistake, and that where one occupying a confidential relation with another takes a voluntary benefit from the person reposing the confidence, he is subject to a duty to prove affirmatively that the conveyance was the intelligent and deliberate act of the grantor, free from the exercise of the influence of the relation existing between the parties. As to many of these findings there is no controversy. There is no question that the conveyance was purely voluntary ; that it contained no provision for the support of the wife, and a provision of but ten thousand dollars for support of the child. As the estate transferred amounted to seventy thousand dollars, we think it clear that ten thousand dollars, or one seventh of the whole, was an inadequate provision for the child, a mere inspection of the deed shows that it contains no power of revocation, and there is no testimony that it was Jacob A. Miskey’s expressed desire that it should contain no such power, or that the fact of its omission was explained to him, or in any way known to him. It is also quite clear that he was much attached to both his wife and child, and treated them with kindness and a sincere affection when in the full possession of his faculties. There is nothing in the testimony showing that either of them had done anything to forfeit his regard for them or their right to his protection and support from his estate. The act of his wife in leaving him was occasioned solely by his habits of intoxication and his conduct when in that condition. The master has so found, and the evidence abundantly justifies his finding on that subject. The only remaining matters of fact involved in the controversy are those which relate to his use of liquor and habit of intoxication, and the effect thereby produced upon his mind, and the extent and character of the parental influence to which he was subject, and its employment in producing the execution of the deed in question.

There is considerable testimony in the case of persons who saw Jacob A. Miskey with greater or less frequency, and saj that they never, or very seldom, saw him intoxi[417]*417cated; most, perhaps all, of these witnesses testify that, in their opinion, he was of sound mind, capable of transacting business, and of making contracts, and of ample testamentary capacity. A number had business transactions with him and base their opinions upon those transactions, and upon the negative fact that they did not see him intoxicated. Of course a great deal of this testimony is of a negative character, and the opinions expressed are necessarily affected to some extent by that consideration. One who is frequently drunk may, nevertheless, in his sober moments, have adequate capacity for the transaction of business. In this case it is not disputed that Jacob A. Miskey accumulated quite a fortune, and there is no evidence that he had made unfortunate transactions or squan-' dered his means. Were there no other evidence in the case except the testimony of the witnesses to whom we are now referring, we should regard the contention of the appellants as sustained on this branch of the case.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Pennyp. 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miskeys-appeal-pactcomplphilad-1883.