Shelton v. Shelton

281 S.W. 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1926
DocketNo. 6915.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 281 S.W. 331 (Shelton v. Shelton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelton v. Shelton, 281 S.W. 331 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BAUGH, J.

On April 24, 1920, Mrs. Sarah Shelton, a feme sole, owned an undivided interest in 106% acres of land in Navarro county ; the remaining undivided interest therein being owned by her children and grandchildren. On that date she conveyed her interest in said-land to George W. Shelton, her son, with whom she was then living. On November 6, 1921, she died intestate, and on December 19, 1921, suit was filed by part of her children and grandchildren against George W. Shelton and Charlie Shelton, his brother (who had refused to become a party plaintiff), seeking cancellation of the deed from Mrs. Sarah Shelton to George W. Shelton, to recover rents and to partition said property. Some of the plaintiffs were subsequently dismissed from the suit on their own motion, and the others abandoned their suit for rents and for partition, on the trial seeking only the cancellation of the deed. The grounds alleged for cancellation were failure of consideration, mental incapacity of Sarah Shelton to make said deed, and undue influence over her by George W. Shelton. The case was submitted on two special issues, in answering which the jury found that Sarah Shelton did not have, at the time it was executed, mental capacity to make such deed; and that she was unduly influenced to do so by her son George W. Shelton. Whereupon *333 the court rendered judgment canceling said' deed, and the said George W. and Charlie Shelton have prosecuted this appeal.

Under their first and twenty-third propositions appellants assert error of the trial court in refusing, to permit the wife of George W. Shelton to testify concerning the mental condition of Sarah Shelton at the time she made the deed in question, and as 'to other facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction. There was no error in this. She and 'her husband continuously lived on the property in question and claimed it as their homestead. She had such an interest in it, therefore, as to be precluded under article 3690, It. S. 1911, from testifying as to her husband’s transactions with a deceased person, unless called by the opposite party. Simpson v. Brotherton, 62 Tex. 171; Tannehill v. Tannehill (Tex. Civ. App.) 171 S. W. 1051; Leahy v. Timon, 215 S. W. 951, 110 Tex. 73. For the same reason there was no error in refusing to permit the defendant Charlie Shelton, another son and heir of Mrs. Sarah Shelton, deceased, to testify as to said transaction.

We overrule appellant’s third proposition. The 10 witnesses offered by them after the rebuttal testimony of appellees, plaintiffs below, was closed was only cumulative on the issue of the mental capacity of Mrs. Shelton,‘on which they had already introduced 8 or 9 witnesses on examination in chief. Such matters are within the sound discretion of the trial court and not reviewable on appeal unless abused. Article 1952, R. S. 1911; article 2181, R. S. 1925; Delgado v. Gonzales (Tex. Civ. App.) 28 S. W. 459; Donaldson v. Dobbs, 80 S. W. 1085, 35 Tex. Civ. App. 439; Mass. Bonding & Ins. Co. v. Florence (Tex. Civ. App.) 216 S. W. 471; Cooper Gro. Co. v. Hamrick & Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 229 S. W. 356. However, since the case must be reversed, these witnesses can be introduced at the proper time on another trial and the question here raised need not again occur.

There was no error in excluding from the evidence the application of George W. Shelton for letters of administration upon his mother’s estate. This application was filed long after the suit at bar was filed and no further action ever had upon it in the probate court. There was no effort to establish any claim or debt against the estate of Mrs. Shelton. The only issues submitted on the trial were the capacity of Mrs. Shelton to make said deed, and whether she was unduly influenced to do so. No creditor of Mrs. Shelton was a party and nothing was in litigation requiring an administration.

Appellants’ propositions 6, 7, and 8 complain of the court’s charge on the issue of mental capacity; and propositions 9 to 14 complain of his charge on the issue of undue influence.

On the issue of mental capacity the trial court charged the'jury as follows:

“That by the expression ‘mental capacity’ to make a deed, as used in question No. 1, means: (1) In order to make a valid deed the law requires that a person shall be of sound and disposing mind and memory at the time; that is, at the very time when the deed is made, she must possess such mind and| memory as does enable her to then know and understand the nature and character of the transaction that she is then engaged upon, to recollect and know the amount and character of the property which is being disposed of by the deed, and to call to mind and appreciate the relation that exists between herself and those who are related to her by ties of blood and affection, as well as the relation which exists between herself and those who are named in the deed as grantees, and to understand the nature of the consideration named in said deed. One who has the mental capacity to make a deed has the legal right to deed her property to any one she may see fit for any consideration that is satisfactory to her.”

If the charge had stopped there, no very serious objection could be urged to it. From the first sentence thereof the jury might have inferred, however, as insisted by appellants, that it was incumbent upon George Shelton, grantee in the deed, to show that Mrs. Sarah Shelton was of sound and disposing mind at the time. But no such burden was upon him. The legal presumption was that Mrs. Shelton had the mental capacity to rhake the deed and that it was valid, and the burden rested upon appellees to prove otherwise. The court in his charge did, later on, place such burden of proof on appellees, but the portion complained of could reasonably have misled the jury on that point. '

After defining what constituted “mental capacity,” however, the trial court then undertook to define “want of mentál capacity." His charge thereon was as follows:

“Want of mental capacity to make a deed does not necessarily require that .the grantor shall be insane. Weakness of intellect, if any, arising from old age, or arising from bodily infirmities or sickness, or arising from all of these combined, may render a person incapable of making a deed, provided such mental weakness, if any, disqualifies her from knowing or understanding the nature and consequences of the act that she is doing. But neither old age, nor bodily infirmities, nor sickness, nor distress of mind or body will render a person incapable of making a valid deed, provided, at the time she does make it, she has possession of her mental faculties and understands the business that she is then engaged upon, and makes the deed of her own volition, free from undue influence. Also it is not sufficient to set aside a deed, even though you believe that the grantor, if you do so believe, might have lacked sufficient mental capacity, as herein defined to you, to make a valid deed at some time previous or subsequent to the time that the deed in question was executed, but you must believe from the preponderance of the evidence in this case that the grantor, Mrs. Sarah Shelton, at the very time she executed the deed in question on April 28, 1920, did not have sufficient mental capacity to make said deed.”

*334 In this we think the trial' court erred.

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281 S.W. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelton-v-shelton-texapp-1926.