Sander v. Savage

75 A.D. 333, 78 N.Y.S. 189
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 75 A.D. 333 (Sander v. Savage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sander v. Savage, 75 A.D. 333, 78 N.Y.S. 189 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Hirschberg, J.:

The complaint was dismissed upon the opening of the case by counsel. The action is for trover. The plaintiffs sue as the committee of Victoria Berger, ail incompetent person, and the complaint alleges that on the 22d day of October, 1900, the defendants unlawfully took and removed from her possession certain chattels then belonging to her, -for the value of which judgment was demanded. On the opening of the case the counsel for plaintiffs stated that the incompetent had been judicially declared insane during a period of time overreaching the transaction in question; that the property had been taken by the defendants pursuant to a conspiracy and under color of a chattel mortgage which the incompetent had executed to secure a loan of less than ten per cent of the value of the property; that when she executed the chattel mortgage she was “ wholly and absolutely insane and unable to understand the nature of any business transaction, and that the defendants knew this at the time the chattel mortgage was executed.” The dismissal of the complaint was based upon the theory that such a mortgage was not absolutely void, but was subject to the election of affirmance or repudiation by the insane person upon recovery, or by the committee when appointed; and that up to the time of such election, the instrument being valid and binding as to them, no act of the defendants authorized by the terms of the mortgage could be regarded as tortious. ■

While the authorities are not entirely harmonious on the question whether the cotitracts of a lunatic are absolutely void or merely voidable, I think it may' be said that where both insanity and the legal presumption of insanity exist, the act of procuring the possession of the property of the lunatic by one having full knowledge [335]*335of the actual existence of the infirmity, by inducing the execution on the part of the lunatic of a deed, mortgage or other conveyance thereof is a tortious act which neither deprives the grantor of title nor transfers it to the grantee. The general rule is that sanity is to be presumed until the contrary be proved, and, therefore, by the common law a deed made by a person non compos is voidable only and not void.” (2 Kent’s Com. [14th ed.] * 451.) The chancellor followed Blackstone in this assertion (2 Black Com. 291), but it has been suggested by high authority that the rule is stated in broader terms than the common law warranted. (See Dexter v. Hall, 15 Wall. 9, 24.) Be this as it may, it is settled that after one has been judicially declared a lunatic, any contract he assumes to make is absolutely void and the presumption of the continuance of the lunacy is conclusive as to all dealings with him until the inquisition has been superseded. (Carter v. Beckwith, 128 N. Y. 312.) And this presumption of insanity attaches to the period overreached by the finding of the jury in the lunacy proceedings, although the presumption in that case is not conclusive, but may be overcome by satisfactory evidence of sanity. (Hughes v. Jones, 116 N. Y. 67.) “ Contracts,” said the court (at p. 73), “ however, made by this class of persons before office found, but within the period overreached by the finding of the jury, are not utterly void, although they are ■pi'esumed to he so, until capacity to contract is shown by satisfactory evidence. (Id.;

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Bluebook (online)
75 A.D. 333, 78 N.Y.S. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sander-v-savage-nyappdiv-1902.