Seawel v. Dirst

66 S.W. 1058, 70 Ark. 166, 1902 Ark. LEXIS 39
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 8, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 1058 (Seawel v. Dirst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seawel v. Dirst, 66 S.W. 1058, 70 Ark. 166, 1902 Ark. LEXIS 39 (Ark. 1902).

Opinion

Riddick, J.,

(after stating the facts.) This is an action brought by certain creditors of A. L. Dirst to foreclose a trust deed upon 160 acres of land, executed by Dirst and his wife to secure the payments of notes given by him to plaintiffs, and also to set aside and declare void a previous mortgage executed by Dirst and his wife to Margaret S. Williams upon the same land.

Plaintiffs contended that, as the land mortgaged was the homestead of Dirst and his wife, the mortgage to Mrs. Williams was invalid, because the wife did not join in the execution and acknowledgment of the same as required by the statute. But the mortgage on its face appears to be the joint deed of A. L. Dirst and J. W. Dirst, his wife, the names of both of them appearing in the body of the deed as grantors. It is true that the certificate showing the acknowledgment of the deed on the part of the wife was defective in that it did not show that she acknowledged the execution of the deed, but only that she acknowledged that she had signed and sealed a relinquishment of dower. This defect in the acknowledgment was, however, cured by the subsequent act of March 8, 1895. Plaintiffs say that this act was evidently intended to cure defects in the certificate of acknowledgment resulting from clerical oversight and omissions of the officer taking the same, and that it does not apply here for the reason that there is no proof to show such a defect or omission. But this same argument was made in the recent case of Williamson v. Lazarus, 66 Ark. 226, and overruled, on the authority of the decision in Johnson v. Parker, 51 Ark. 419. In the latter case Chief Justice Cock-rill, who delivered the opinion of the court, said that instances of obvious omissions of words from certificates of acknowledgments may have given rise to the act in question, but he said that the terms of the act “are comprehensive, and enunciate a general rule applicable to all eases in which the acknowledgment is insufficient to give full legal effect to the terms of the conveyance.” These cases are conclusive of the question here, and show that the ruling of the circuit judge on this point was correct.

The next question as to whether the trust deed executed by Dirst to Floyd to secure the debts due from him to the plaintiffs in this action was void by reason of the fact that Dirst was insane at the time of its execution is largely a question of fact, the legal questions involved being well settled. It is unnecessary to set out the testimony in the record bearing on this point in full. It shows clearly that Dirst, the grantor in the trust deed, was partially insane, both before and after it was executed. He was subject to insane delusions on certain subjects. The presence of this form of insanity in Dirst became first distinctly noticeable in the spring of 1896, some two or three months before the trust deed was executed-The following circumstances first attracted attention to his malady: Dirst was the owner of a shepherd dog, to which he seemed much attached, but about the time referred to, without any sufficient reason, he became possessed of the idea that the dog was mad, and killed it. The next day he killed a chicken cock belonging to him, and, upon being asked why he did so, replied that “it was mad, and had been chasing him around, and that he was not going to be killed by a ten-eent rooster.” A physician was called in, and found Dirst laboring under great mental excitement, and possessed with the delusion that his wife was insane. He said to the physician: “There is nothing the matter with me, but my wife is crazy.” “I concluded,” said the doctor, “that he was a monomaniac on the subject of his wife’s insanity.” Ten or twelve days later the physician saw him again, and found him still laboring under the same nervous derangement, but not to sucli an extent as-before. Dirst at this time was engaged in the business of a nurseryman, and was also the proprietor of a country newspaper. Though at times afflicted in this way, he continued to look after his business affairs to a limited extent for over a year after the trust deed was executed. But the delusions continued. At times he believed that certain of his former neighbors who had died were not in fact dead, and asserted that they had been buried alive to fool him. He often asserted that events known to have occurred in the neighborhood were only myths. To one of his sons he said on one occasion that the Mountain Echo, the Baxter County Citizen and the Harrison Times were only myths; that no such papers were published, but that a few sample copies had been sent out to fool the people. Haunted at times by these delusions, with signs and symptoms of insanity increasing and accumulating against him, it was nearly three years after the execution of the trust deed before Dirst was finally adjudged to be insane by the county court, and sent to the state asylum for the insane.

The evidence, as we have before stated, makes it very plain that Dirst was afflicted with some form of insanity, but we think it is equally plain that he was only partially insane, and that on some subjects he was rational. This is shown by the testimony of the witnesses introduced to prove his insanity. “On some subjects,” said one of them, “he seemed sane, and on others he seemed wild. Railroads and minerals seemed to be his hobby. He seemed crazy on those subjects, but on fruit culture and some other subjects he seemed rational.” Two of his sons, who were of age, deposed as witnesses for the defendants to acts of insanity on his part, but both admitted on cross-examination that he was rational on some subjects. “It was owing to the subject of conversation,” said one of them. “There were some subjects on which he was rational at all times.” Even the testimony of his wife, one of the defendants, shows that he ivas only partially insane. “He seemed,” she said, “rational on some subjects, and irrational on others. As long as we talked on agricultural subjects or mineral outcrops, he seemed rational, but when we talked on the subject of railroads or his neighbors he seemed irrational, and would indulge in wild and unreasonable statements.”

The fact that he was only partially insane, and that there were intervals when his'mind was rational, is also shown by the fact that nearly a year after the deed of trust was executed he was still engaged in his nursery business, and in taking orders for the sale of his fruit trees. It is no doubt true that an insane man might, if allowed to do so, undertake to continue the business that he had followed previous to his insanity. The insane physician might endeavor to heal the sick, the insane minister might still try to preach, and so might the insane nurseryman endeavor to carry on his business when his mind was no longer able to comprehend it but this is not a case of that kind. The testimony of every witness here is that on questions concerning fruit trees and the business of nurseryman Dirst was always sane. It was on other and different subjects that his mind was unbalanced.

Coming now to his conduct on the day the trust deed was. executed, the evidence shows that on that day two attorneys, J. C. Floyd and S. W. Woods, who between them represented these creditors, and had the claims for collection, called to see him about the payment thereof. They found Dirst and his young son in the field hoeing corn, lie seemed to be in good health and perfectly rational. When they explained to him the object of their visit, Dirst expressed a desire to pay off the indebtedness, and said that he would do so in the future, but that he had no money at. that time.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 1058, 70 Ark. 166, 1902 Ark. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seawel-v-dirst-ark-1902.