Rucker v. Rucker

114 S.W.2d 770, 272 Ky. 513, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 158
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 11, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 114 S.W.2d 770 (Rucker v. Rucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rucker v. Rucker, 114 S.W.2d 770, 272 Ky. 513, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 158 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Stites

Reversing.

This suit was filed by appellees, Scbnyler Rucker and Rosa Oliver, against the appellant, William Ruck-er, to cancel a deed made July 28, 1931, by Martin Rucker, deceased, to appellant. Martin Rucker undertook to convey 100 acres of land and certain timber to appellant “in consideration of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars in band paid and for tbe further consideration that the second party is to care for, feed and clothe the first party as long as said first party lives.” It is claimed that Martin Rucker did not have mental capacity to make the deed and that he was unduly influenced by his son, the appellant.

The proof indicates that the father of Martin Rucker lived on a tract of some 400 acres and that the tract here involved was inherited by Martin Rucker as Ms share of his father’s estate. After the death of his *515 wife, Martin Rucker went to live with his mother, the grandmother of the parties to the present suit. Thereafter the appellant, William Rucker, and his wife moved in with Martin Rucker. We gather that the grandmother was still living at the time that appellant and his wife moved in. This was some five or six years prior to the death of Martin Rucker in September, 1933. The deed here in question was executed about two years before Martin Rucker’s death and was immediately put to record, although it is asserted that appellees knew nothing of it until after their father died. It is not contended that appellant did not farm the land and feed and clothe his father after the deed was made. Some attempt was made to show that the $100 cash consideration was not paid by testimony to the effect that no one had seen Martin Rucker with $100 or had heard of his spending that much money after the deed was executed. On the other hand, appellant himself testified that the $100 paid was received by him as part of his bonus money for service in the World War, and another witness testified that he was present when the money was handed over to Martin Rucker. No exceptions were filed to the testimony of any of the witnesses, and the only questions argued relate to the sufficiency of the proof to show mental incapacity and undue influence. The chancellor canceled the deeid, and we are confronted with the duty of re-examining the evidence to determine the propriety of his conclusion.

At the outset it may be noted that one of the items relied on by appellees to indicate Martin Rucker’s lack of capacity is the fact that he is claimed to have had a stroke of paralysis or “something like a stroke” several years before this deed was executed. The witnesses who testified to this fact for appellees based their testimony expressly on the statement of the doctor who treated him at the time as to the nature of' his trouble. Appellant introduced the doctor who stated that Martin Rucker did not have a stroke of paralysis, but at the time referred to he treated him for kidney trouble. The doctor further denied having stated that Mr. Rucker had a stroke. Under these circumstances; we may eliminate so much of the testimony for appellees as is based on the theory that decedent had suffered from paralysis.

Appellee Schuyler Rucker testified that his father “didn’t have any recollections of anything, had no *516 judgment of trading” and “at times lie wouldn’t talk.” He further testified, however, that he joined in a deed of partition with his father and appellant and apparently does not seem to think that his father lacked capacity to sign the partition deed. On cross-examination he admitted that at the time when his father signed the deed of partition his mind was “like it had been all the time.” Appellee Rosa Oliver testified that her father’s mind was bad after he had the alleged paralytic stroke. She said that he could not count money and that his memory was bad and he “would get off to himself and wouldn’t talk with us.” She says that her grandmother always did his trading, that “he was just like a little child, Pa was, he could be persuaded into anything.” She had never persuaded him to do anything, nor did she know of any instance of Willie Rucker or Schuyler Rucker influencing him, but she had “heard grandmother tell him what was the- right thing to do and he would mind her.” Her father could not read or write and she had heard him say he could not learn. Her father worked, but it was her grandmother who did the managing.

James Wilson, a nephew of Martin Rucker, testified that Mr. Rucker never did any business without being advised and that he was not mentally capable of doing any business or taking care of his property rights. “I don’t mean to say he was a regular lunatic. He never had a mind of transacting business, he had no recollection of nothing.” “He couldn’t count money, I have tried him, he couldn’t count it correct.” Seventeen or eighteen years ago witness bought two little pigs from him. He was asked:

“Was he able to take care of himself in that trade?”

He responded:

“Well, I got the pigs under their worth, of course.”

Tilford Pearson testified that “He just about knew enough to go to the field and work by having a leader. He was a fine old gentleman in his way. And when the hogs needed slopping and when he was told he would get up right then, he just wasn’t a bright minded man.” He was a good man to pull the other end of a saw. “My best opinion is he wasn’t capable of doing no kind of trading or no kind of business, any kind of business.”

*517 Lola Stewart testified that she was a niece of the decedent and lived on the same tract of land with him up until the time when she was married. Asked if she noticed anything wrong with his mind, she answered:

“Well, if any of us grandchildren couldn’t go to the store we had to send him and when he took eggs he couldn’t tell how much a dozen he got for them when he got hack.”

He had a mind “like a child about eight or ten years of age.” “He never was capable of trading.”

S. L. Stewart testified that decedent did not have as good a mind after the alleged paralytic "stroke as he did before. He was never competent to transact business. “It just seemed as though he had a child’s mind instead of a grown person’s.”

Nettie Rucker testified that she married Martin Rucker’s brother. She had taught school for a year before she was married. “After I was married Mr. Rucker told me if I would learn Martin to -read and write he would pay me for it but I didn’t have any luck with him I couldn’t téach him, he couldn’t remember. I tried to teach him the alphabet. I tried to teach him to write, would set copies for him and he would make by them but I never could get him to know what they were.’’ Martin Rucker had a mind like a child’s and “he did just what somebody else told him.”' “His mother raised the children he was only there and helped to nurse them, and the estate left he heired it.” “He worked some, he helped his mother about the house such as churning, keeping stove wood and probably went to the fields and worked some there by having a leader.”

William Rucker testified that he was a brother of Martin Rucker. Martin Rucker went to school, but somehow or other he could not learn.

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168 S.W.2d 579 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.2d 770, 272 Ky. 513, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rucker-v-rucker-kyctapphigh-1938.