Reeves v. Morgan

48 N.J. Eq. 415
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 48 N.J. Eq. 415 (Reeves v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reeves v. Morgan, 48 N.J. Eq. 415 (N.J. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

On the 15th of February, 1890, a jury of Gloucester county, •convened upon a writ de lunático inquirendo issued out of this •court, found Mrs. Isabella Iredell, of Mantua, in that county, a lunatic and of unsound mind, without lucid intervals, and incapable of the government of herself and her estate, and that she liad been in the same state of lunacy for five years before that date. The return of the inquisition embodying this finding was •duly confirmed by this court, and, upon being sent down to the •orphans court of Gloucester county, the complainant was, about .the 1st of April, 1890, appointed her guardian in lunacy.

By this bill he seeks to establish and enforce two several ¡bonds, one of which was secured by a mortgage, which he alleges 'were given to the lunatic by the defendants, or some or one of them, and which bonds, with the mortgage, have been lost or destroyed or have come to the hands of and are concealed by the defendants. The first of these securities is a bond with a war[416]*416rant of attorney to confess judgment, and a mortgage to secure-it, dated March 6th, 1879, executed by the defendant William A.. Morgan to the lunatic, to secure $500 in one year, with interest, covering a house and lot in Mantua, now owned by the defendant Rebecca C. Morgan, and upon which the defendant Jesse. C. Morgan holds a second mortgage. He is made a party on that account, but has not answered, and will not be further noticed.. The existence of this bond and mortgage is admitted. The-second of these securities as described is the joint and several bond with warrant of attorney to confess judgment, executed, as-is alleged, by the defendants Allan S. Morgan, Rebecca C., his wife, and their son William A. Morgan, to the lunatic to secure $600 in one year, with interest, and dated about July 25th, 1883. The existence of this instrument is denied by the defendants.

The defence as to the $500 bond and mortgage is that it has-been paid in full and duly and properly cancelled of record. In support of this allegation a receipt is produced, signed by Mrs. Iredell, in these words—

“ Mantua, 17. X, May 19, 1887.
“ Received of Rebecca C. Morgan §525 for principal and interest in full for-bond and mortgage supposed to be lost or mislaid, I hold against the house and. lot on Mantua Avenue in Mantua R. X
“Isabella Ibedell.”

and also a satisfaction piece executed and duly acknowledged by Mrs. Iredell on the 26th of July, 1889, acknowledging payment' in full of the amount due upon that mortgage.

With regal’d to the alleged $600 bond the defendants admit that Mrs. Iredell did loan $600 to Allan S. Morgan on September 21st, 1883, and they allege that he gave her his bond for that amount without security, and that he paid the amount toiler in four several payments, the last, for $165, on August 25th,. 1887, and he produces her receipt for that payment in these-words: “ Mantua, N. J. August 25,188.7, Received of Allan S. Morgan $165 balance in full on bond which cannot be found.. Isabella Iredell.”

The value of these receipts and the sealed discharge as evidence depends upon the mental condition, of the lunatic at their-[417]*417date. The inquisition reaches back to February, 1885, and overrides their date two years and more. As against the defendants it is on its face, according to well-settled rules, prima facie evidence only. ■ But in this case more strength as against them is claimed for it, for the following reasons: At its date Mrs. Ire-dell was living, and had been for several months, in the family of the defendants, and was under their control. By the family I mean Allan S. Morgan and his wife, Rebecca, and their son, William A. Morgan, a young man living at home. The bill alleges and the answer admits that of these three answering defendants, the father and son appeared in person, and that all three were represented by counsel before the inquisition, and contested the insanity of Mrs. Iredell. It also appears that they did not prpduce her there to be seen by the jury, though she was not over three miles away and quite able, physically, so far as appears, to' attend. These circumstances do certainly give the inquisition increased weight as against these defendants. But I do not find it necessary to determine whether they render it conclusive as against them.

At the hearing, witnesses upon the subject were produced by both parties, and upon the testimony given by them, and quite independent of the inquest, I come without difficulty to the conclusion that the condition of Mrs. Iredell’s mind at the date of the receipts in question was such, at best, as to render them practically worthless as evidence. Here, again, the defendants did not produce Mrs. Iredell at the hearing, although alleging that she was sane, and that her mind and health had both improved materially since her residence with them, which still continued. I do not deem it worth while to state the evidence at length. Mrs. Iredell is not far from seventy years of age. She has no children. Her husband was killed in the late war, and she has enjoyed, and still enjoys, a widow’s pension of $12 a month. For many years she kept, an ice cream, cake áhd candy shop in Mantua, and was very saving and careful in her expenditures, and saved money enough to own a house there, and had considerable loaned out on bonds and mortgages. Mrs. Rebecca C. Morgan is her sister of the whole blood, and a Mrs. Harriet [418]*418Sooy, wife of Samuel T. Sooy, and a Mr. Paul, all living in Mantua, are her sister and brother of the half blood. Besides these she has a nephew of the whole blood. She never had business talent sufficient to attend with safety to the investment of her money, and at all times depended upon her relatives and friends — mainly Mr. Sooy — to do it for her. Before the middle of the last decade.she began to manifest a change in her habits of mind and body; she became forgetful and slovenly and filthy in her dress and house to the last degree; withal she was credulous, confiding and easily imposed upon. Two physicians of the village were sworn; one pronounced her to be suffering from a mild type of what he called “ perceptional insanity.” She had, he said, fixed hallucinations and delusions, and was incapable of reasoning and exercising judgment, and had been in that condition for five years or more. He also swore that she was credulous and easily imposed upon. The other physician, while admitting that her mind had been at times, at least, for several years in an abnormal condition, was disposed to believe it might have been, and probably was, caused by the use of opium in some of its forms. He kept a drug store, and had sold her some laudanum on a few occasions, and inferred that, in addition, she had procured the drug at the country stores. But the salesman at the store near her residence, which she patronized, had never sold her any, nor known of her having inquired for it, and after she went to live with the defendants she manifested no craving for it, as she undoubtedly would have done had she been in the habit of taking it.

The remaining questions in the case are the following:

First. Was the $600 bond in fact executed by the three defendants, Allan S., Rebecca C. and William A. Morgan, as alleged by the complainant, or by the first-mentioned person alone, as alleged by the defendants ?

Second. Have either or both of the bonds above mentioned been paid ?

Third.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.J. Eq. 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reeves-v-morgan-njch-1891.