Reagan v. Murray

142 N.W. 545, 176 Mich. 231, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 615
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1913
DocketDocket No. 59
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 142 N.W. 545 (Reagan v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reagan v. Murray, 142 N.W. 545, 176 Mich. 231, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 615 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Steere, C. J.

The bill of complaint in this suit is filed for the purpose of setting aside, on the ground of fraud and incompetency, two deeds, dated August 17, 1910, executed by Michael Murray shortly before his death, conveying all his real estate to defendant.

Complainant and defendant are. brother and sister, and only heirs at law of said Michael Murray, who died at St. Ignace, Mich., on August 23, 1910, at the age of 85 years. He had resided in St. Ignace for over half a century. At the time of his death he was a widower, his wife having died less than a year previous. He owned about 10 acres of land in the city, upon which were five comparatively small and inexpensive dwelling houses; also about 200 acres of land near by, and was possessed of personal property, estimated at from $400 to $500. His last illness was only of about eight days’ duration.

Complainant, at the time of the hearing in this case, had been married 34 years, having a husband and six living sons, the eldest of whom was 32 years and the youngest 15 years of age. Her husband, a man of respectability and responsibility, formerly a blacksmith by trade, had been for many years a justice of the peace of the city of St. Ignace, and was then also acting as janitor of the First National Bank of said city.

Defendant was a bachelor 50 years of age, by occupation a woodsman, and was employed at the time of his father’s death and for years prior thereto as a [233]*233foreman in the lumber camps of a cousin. He had at times been dissipated, and caused his father much trouble and anxiety, but in recent years appears to have changed his habits. He is crippled in his hands, and, on account of such condition, partially incapacitated for manual labor. He might find it difficult to procure employment with strangers, but had been able, in the employ of his cousin, to earn regular wages as a scaler and foreman. '

During his long residence in St. Ignace deceased was known as an unusually strong and vigorous man, mentally and physically, and something of a leading character. He had two brothers, David and Patrick, with whom he was associated in various business activities, including owning and dealing in a tract of land. He had charge of and managed this business for the three. He had held different public offices for many years, having been supervisor of his ward, member of the board of aldermen, and for some 15 years prior to his death a member and secretary of the board of poor commissioners of the county. He was a temperate man, religiously inclined, of strict integrity, and of general good health according to his age. Up to the time of his last sickness he attended to the affairs of his office as secretary of the board of poor commissioners, looked after his own business matters, continued the habits of his life in going daily to the post office, a distance of nearly a mile from his home, and regularly to church, which was about the same distance. He walked to church on August 14, 1910, the day preceding the one on which he was taken with his last illness. The consensus of opinion on the part of all the witnesses, including those of complainant, is that he was a man remarkably well preserved for his age, and, though becoming more feeble and less vigorous as age came upon him, his mind was active and he was capable of transacting his [234]*234business affairs understandingly, was in possession of his faculties, and retained his characteristics of mind up to the time of his last sickness, except that , complainant and her husband claim and testify that after the death of his wife he failed rapidly and his memory was perceptibly impaired.

Such testimony, even though undisputed, is not evidence that he was mentally unsound. Lynch v. Doran, 95 Mich. 395 (54 N. W. 882); Davis v. Phillips, 85 Mich. 198 (48 N. W. 513). Complainant’s husband testified that up to the 1st day of August, 1910, he was mentally capable to transact business and convey his real estate understandingly if he so desired. Counsel for complainant say, in their brief:

“On the issue of mental competency we are asked to believe that up to the time of his death Michael Murray was a man of more than ordinary ability. We are ready to admit — have never denied — that normally, and when he was in active business life, he was a man of fair, average ability, and more or less familiar with the class of business that would likely interest him, including the transfers of real estate; but we do insist that such was not his condition after he was taken sick, or even before that time, but he was failing, mentally and physically, all of the time.”

That the burden of years was bearing on him is undoubtedly true, but the testimony is so overwhelming, that up to the time of his last sickness he was fully competent to transact business and make conveyances of real estate understandingly, that we shall spend no further time on that question. That he was a man of independent thought and not easily influenced is strongly established, and the only serious issue in the case is whether or not, after his sickness and at the time he executed the instruments in question, he had so changed and become so enfeebled, both [235]*235physically and mentally, that the execution of the deeds in question was not his own intelligent act in disposing of his property according to his actual wishes.

Deceased and his wife had, prior to her death, lived alone in their own home for many years except as defendant went and came, making his home with them when not away at his employment in the woods.

Up to the time of deceased’s death the relations of all the various members of the family were apparently pleasant and harmonious. Complainant had lived for many years at her own home with her husband and children, in the neighborhood of half a mile distant from that of her parents, with whom she and her family frequently visited back and forth, exchanging the mutual help, hospitality, and attentive manifestation of affection, good will, and interest, appropriate and common to such close relations. Deceased had given complainant the lot on which their home was built by her husband shortly after her marriage, and was kind and helpful to the family in many ways, prompted by his interest in their welfare rather than their necessities, for the husband was independent and cared for his family and business affairs. Deceased’s wife had been in feeble health for some time before her death, and complainant had been much at her father’s house on that account, looking after and helping care for her mother. After the mother’s death, the father being left alone and desirous of remaining at the home, where he had lived for many years, complainant with her husband and family moved to her father’s home to look after and care for him, as she and her husband claim at the solicitation of defendant and the father; to which defendant does not fully assent, claiming it was their own suggestion, and that the father, though kindly disposed to them, was at times annoyed by, and objected to, the number and noise of the children.

[236]*236Defendant became less of an anxiety and more of a comfort to Ms parents as he grew older. He had been quite regularly in the employ of his cousin for about 12 years before his father’s death. When not away at work he lived with his parents, and frequently went home from his work in the woods to spend the Sabbath with them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 N.W. 545, 176 Mich. 231, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reagan-v-murray-mich-1913.