Moon v. Phipps

411 P.2d 157, 67 Wash. 2d 948, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 871
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1966
Docket37815
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 411 P.2d 157 (Moon v. Phipps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moon v. Phipps, 411 P.2d 157, 67 Wash. 2d 948, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 871 (Wash. 1966).

Opinion

Hale, J.

— Joanna Moon had never met Dr. Woolery until the day after her stroke. Sixty-one years of age, widowed, and living with her 91-year-old aunt in the latter’s home, she awoke the morning of May 19, 1962, to find her entire *950 left side parályzed; she could move neither her left leg nor arm. Her aged aunt called Dr. Woolery the next day and he said that the stroke had taken place about 24 hours earlier. In his first examination, he noted that Mrs. Moon was moderately confused but not comatose, paralyzed on her left side from an acute cerebral accident or stroke; and in a severe state of physical as well as mental depression.

Dr. Woolery sent Mrs. Moon to the hospital for 4 days and then transferred her to a nursing home for continuous observation, treatment and rehabilitation during the next 4 months. On leaving the nursing home, she continued treatments from-Dr. Woolery, reporting at intervals to his office. During the course of and as a part of his therapy, he sought to alleviate her feelings of financial insecurity by advising her to sell her farm, and recommended his father-in-law as the agent to help her.

It came about in this way:

The doctor noted that, as her physical symptoms from the stroke subsided, her emotional symptoms persisted. In January, 1963 — over 6 months after the stroke — she was markedly depressed, withdrawn, disinterested, and had an inordinate inclination to reminisce; she was becoming more apprehensive, suspicious, hostile and restless. The doctor characterized these symptoms as forming a prepsychotic neurosis, which, under certain kinds of stress or stimuli, might develop into a suicidal psychosis, or withdrawal into a schizophrenic or paranoid response, or into some other defensive type of withdrawal reaction. Her physical condition, however, improved until she could get around somewhat unsteadily with a leg splint.

Dr. Woolery’s treatment included drugs and psychotherapy, for he believed her emotional symptoms were interrelated to her physical problems. During January and February, at his direction, Mrs. Moon was taking prescribed dosages of Stelazine as a tranquilizer, Parnate as antidepressant, Enduron for her hypertension, Butisol for restlessness, and Deprol because of an added agitated depression which the doctor noted. Although the doctor was *951 a specialist in internal medicine, he felt obliged to resort to psychotherapy in treating Mrs. Moon because of her serious emotional problems.

He employed a kind of therapy whereby the patient is said to ventilate her feelings by talking about personal problems; and in so doing he noted that her ownership of a run-down farm was the source of several unhappy emotional responses. The farm, he concluded as she talked of it and her life in connection with it, was related in her feelings to the accidental death of her father and the suicide of her husband. It was run-down, producing very little, and thus a contributing cause to her anxiety and feelings of insecurity and related to her other emotional symptoms. He said that she repeatedly told him she received very little income from the farm, and he identified this in part with her sense of financial insecurity. As one phase of psychotherapy, he advised her to sell the farm, recommending his father-in-law as a person whom she could trust. Dr. Woolery testified:

I said, “Why don’t you try to get rid of it? It might help you financially, improve your security,” which she mentioned she was becoming financially unsecure and her future did not have much security in it. So I encouraged her early in the course of events to try to get this taken care of. She mentioned that she did not trust anybody, was afraid to do anything with it, so I dropped the subject. But as I talked with her the subject kept coming up, so finally sometime in November or December, I am not sure when, I can’t recall the exact date, the point came up again, and I said that if she would — Q. . . .
When is this? A. I am not sure the exact time. November or December, somewhere around there, the subject came up again and I again asked her why didn’t she do something about it, get rid of it, sell it, have somebody manage it for her, and she pointed out she couldn’t trust anybody, so at this point I said, “Well, would you trust me to advise you or turn you over to somebody who might help you?” And she did have a lot of faith and trust in me at that point. I mentioned that the only person I knew who I felt I could trust with regard to real estate was my father-in-law, and I gave her his name and gave him her name. And she said that would be all *952 right, hoping that this would help her with this problem. I was only interested in helping her.

Mrs. Moon, acting on this suggestion, telephoned defendant Everett R. Phipps, Dr. Woolery’s father-in-law, who came from his home in Portland a few days before Christmas, 1962, to look the farm over.

It consisted of 100 acres of land in Clark County on which the buildings were so ramshackle and in such disrepair as to have little value; but many open fields and orchards and its location 7 miles northwest of Vancouver and a creek bordering its north boundary gave the farm genuine value. In 1955, the land alone had been appraised at $18,700 by three realtors. The trial court found it had a value of $25,000 in 1962.

In January, Phipps drove Mrs. Moon to his home in Portland where his wife served her coffee and cookies, and he prepared a one page written legal instrument which Mrs. Moon testified she thought to be a listing agreement. She said that he made a telephone call to see if a notary public would be available, and later that afternoon he took her to an office where she signed the paper in the presence of a notary public. The only thing she noted about the instrument, she said, was that it contained a legal description of her farm. The instrument, which Mrs. Moon says she thought to be simply a listing agreement, turned out to be a 60-day, irrevocable option to Mr. Phipps to buy the farm for $12,500 at $1,000 down and $150 per month. It contained a rather curious provision as to the payments, which were to be made “during the life time” of the seller until fully paid.

Thus, Mrs. Moon says, and the court so found, that she consulted with and engaged Everett R. Phipps as her agent to sell her farm at the best price obtainable; she learned that she had signed an option agreement — later filed for record by the defendants — giving Phipps the power to buy for $12,500 a farm reasonably worth $25,000. Plaintiff brought this action to rescind and cancel the option agreement, quiet title to the lands in her against any claim de *953 fendants husband and wife might assert, and to bar them from asserting any claims thereunder.

She alleged that the option agreement had been obtained from her by fraud and deceit. From a decree based not on specific findings of fraud but on a finding that defendant Phipps breached a fiduciary relationship, defendants appeal, and the decision turns on whether the relationship between the parties was a fiduciary one or merely an agency.

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Bluebook (online)
411 P.2d 157, 67 Wash. 2d 948, 1966 Wash. LEXIS 871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moon-v-phipps-wash-1966.