Paddock v. Pulsifer

43 Kan. 718
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 43 Kan. 718 (Paddock v. Pulsifer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paddock v. Pulsifer, 43 Kan. 718 (kan 1890).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Horton, C. J.:

David Bobertson died at the home of his married daughter, Mrs. Mary J. Paddock, in Cloud county, in this state, on January 10, 1886, aged about seventy. His wife died many years before. He had been suffering from paralysis nearly two years. He left surviving him several children. At the time of his death he owned $1,100 of notes. A few weeks before his death he had the legal title to and was in the possession of the northwest quarter of section 32, township 5, range 1, in Cloud county. Bobertson executed a will on the 22d day of October, 1883. It was admitted to probate on the 9th of February, 1886. He directed in his will that his real and personal property be converted into money, and, after the payment of his funeral charges, expenses, etc., the proceeds to be divided among his children, share and share alike, with the exception that his oldest daughter, Mrs. Isabel Temple, should receive $400 in addition to her share, and the grandson, David Beid, should receive $120. During the years of 1883, 1884, and a part of 1885, he lived in Cloud county most of the time, with Mrs. Isabel Temple, as one of the family. Sometime in the summer or fall of 1885' he left Mrs. Temple’s and went to Mrs. Mary J. Paddock’s. Before leaving Mrs. Temple’s, he told her he was going down to his farm and set out some shade trees and stay with his daughter Mary. Early in November, 1885, he was taken sick, and never recovered. Mrs. Temple called at her sister’s every [721]*721two or three weeks to see her father. When she called he was very feeble. He could not work, and was not able to help or take care of himself. During his sickness it was thought necessary on account of his sufferings to administer to' him large quantities of whisky and morphine. On the 25th of November, 1885, David Robertson executed to his daughter Mrs. Mary J. Paddock a deed for the tract of land in dispute, and on the 5th of February, 1886, Mrs. Paddock and her husband conveyed the land to her daughter, Mrs. Alice Bourgeois. The land is worth from $4,000 to $5,000. No consideration was- paid by Mrs. Paddock to her father for the conveyance. When Mrs. Bourgeois received the deed, she agreed to convey the land to any person her mother should request. In order that it might appear that a money consideration passed for the deed from Mrs. Paddock to Mrs. Bourgeois, Dr. Bourgeois, her husband, obtained the use of $500 for a few days from a bank. This was handed to Mrs. Paddock, but soon after returned to Dr. Bourgeois and by him to the bank again. Mrs. Paddock claims that she sold the land to Mrs. Bourgeois for $2,600 and was paid that sum for it, but upon the finding of the court we must assume that this is not true.

[722]*7221. Will tooañcefáeea tSnof411 [721]*721In the brief for defendants below it seems to be conceded that Mrs. Bourgeois was not a bona fide purchaser of the land. The brief states: “ If it is a fact that Mrs. Paddock, after being frightened by the houndings of these people, at last made a sham sale to Mrs. Bourgeois of the farm, this is an evidence of weakness rather than of fraud.” This action was brought to set aside and cancel the two deeds — one from David Robertson to his daughter Mrs. Mary J. Paddock, and the other from Mrs. Paddock and her husband to Mrs. Bourgeois. The contention is, that there was no evidence before the trial court tending to show the deed to Mrs. Paddock was procured by fraud, and as the court canceled the deed upon the ground that it was obtained fraudulently, that the judgment is wholly unsupported by any evidence. In [722]*722such a case as this, the burden of establishing the perfect fairness and equity of the conveyance to Mrs. Paddock was thrown upon her, in view of her father’s age, sickness and feebleness of mind, and the close relation of the parties. Confidence was necessarily reposed in Mrs. Paddock. If that confidence was abused in procuring the deed, the trial court very justly set it aside. The deed purports upon its face to have been executed for $2,500, “cash in hand paid.” This is much less than the value of the land. It is admitted by Mrs. Paddock that she paid nothing for the deed: and if she obtained it from her father upon the promise to pay $2,500 in money or in notes, without intending to pay for the same, or if she did not have the means of paying what she agreed to pay, this would be indicative of actual fraud upon her part. She claims, however, that her father gave her the land, and intended to give her the land without any consideration being paid. If this were true, Mrs. Paddock should have clearly established the perfect good faith of the transaction.

Story (1 Eq. Jur., §309) states the rule thus:

“All contracts and conveyances whereby benefits are secured by children to their parents, are objects of jealousy, and if they are not entered into with scrupulous good faith and are not reasonable under the circumstances, they will be set aside, unless third persons have acquired an interest under them, especially where the original purposes for which they have been obtained are perverted or used as a mere cover.”

2. Deed tainVi by fraud The father, David Robertson, at the date of the deed was in his second childhood, therefore the entire relation of the parties was reversed; the father had become the child and the daughter had control of the father. Considering the influence and infirmities under which Robertson labored, the fact that Mrs. Paddock had his entire confidence, that the deed transferred to her without any consideration, all of his real estate and thereby deprived his other children of any possible interest therein, there is ample evidence to sustain the judgment. Certainly, we cannot dis[723]*723turb it upon the ground that it is not supported by any evidence.

In Tracey v. Sacket, 1 Ohio St. 54, it is said:

“Actual fraud . . . was not essentially necessary in order to set aside contracts in equity. . . . The acts and contracts of persons of weak understandings, and who are therefore liable to imposition, will be held void, if the nature of the act or contract justify the conclusion that the party has not exercised a deliberate judgment, but that he has been imposed upon, circumvented, or overcome by cunning, artifice, or undue influence.”

In Jacox v. Jacox, 40 Mich. 473, it is decided that—

“An equitable wardship arises where a son takes charge of his father’s affairs in the belief that the latter is incompetent to manage them, and the father passively submits.”

In Highberger v. Stiffler, 21 Md. 338, it is held that—

“Where a parent, through extreme age and infirmity, has become childish and depends upon her son for advice in all her affairs, contracts made by her in his favor are subject to the same strict scrutiny given to contracts of children in favor of their parents. In such a case it is not necessary to prove the exercise of overweening influence, misrepresentation, importunity, or fraud aliunde the act complained of.”

In Martin v. Martin, 1 Heisk. (Tenn.) 644, Chief Justice Nicholson, in delivering the opinion, used the following language:

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Bluebook (online)
43 Kan. 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paddock-v-pulsifer-kan-1890.