Smith v. Jackson

214 N.W. 92, 239 Mich. 197, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 744
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1927
DocketDocket No. 110.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 214 N.W. 92 (Smith v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Jackson, 214 N.W. 92, 239 Mich. 197, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 744 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Steers, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a decree of the Muskegon circuit court, in chancery, refusing to set aside her deed conveying realty to defendants who were then husband and wife, the latter being plaintiff’s daughter. At that time they were living with and caring for her in her own home. The value of this realty does not appear, but it was all plaintiff owned. It is described in her deed to defendants, executed on August 24, 1922, as folio,ws:

“The south half (%) of the northwest quarter (%) and twelve (12) acres off the west half (V2) of the west half (%) of the northwest fractional (%) of section (1) one; also the north half (%) of the southeast quarter (%) of the northeast fractional (14) of section (2) two, all in town twelve (12) north, range eighteen (18) west; also lot eight (8) of block two hundred fifty-two (252) of the revised plat of the city of Muskegon, Michigan. The said party of the first part retains the use of said premises and the rents and profits thereof during her natural life.”

About two years later defendants separated and were subsequently divorced. At the time of this trial Rose Jackson had disappeared. Her whereabouts was *199 unknown to plaintiff and is not disclosed. George Jackson remarried shortly after Rose had obtained a divorce from him, and lived with his second wife in plaintiff’s home until early in 1925. She had owned this place for many years. It was a comfortable home with modern conveniences, “furniture and bath and all those things.”

Plaintiff alleges in her bill that she was crippled and infirm at the time of executing the deed, and defendants then promised to care for, maintain, and treat her kindly during her lifetime, and in consideration of their promises she executed the deed in controversy. Her alleged grounds for setting it aside are that subsequent to making it defendants became unkind, abusive, left her home, and failed to support her.

Defendants made separate answers by separate attorneys, each denying plaintiff’s charges of cruel treatment or making promises to support her, averring the deed was a voluntary act on her part. Defendant George Jackson further avers that plaintiff later willed him the balance of her property, in. December, 1924, and made him the beneficiary of a life insurance policy the following month, attaching a copy of the will and policy to his answer.

Rose Jackson was not present at the hearing. Owing to her age and physical condition, plaintiff’s testimony was taken by deposition and read at the hearing, counsel for the defense making no objection, as he had attended the taking of her deposition and cross-examined her.

It appears from the record that defendants quarreled and separated some time in October, 1924, and about the same time both left defendant alone in her home uncared for. George left first. His reason for going is: “Rose got so bad after a while that I didn’t care to live with her any longer, and we separated.” Rose *200 left soon thereafter. Where she went or what she did is not disclosed. Plaintiff testified that while she was living with defendants in her own home after they had secured the deed from her their .attitude towards her changed; they neglected to properly care for her, were unkind and cruel, heaped indignities upon her in various ways; on one occasion pulled her out of bed between 4 and 5 o’clock in the morning, dragged her over the furnace register, cutting her face and arms and abusing her in other ways, until she fled to the neighbors. Her testimony is not at all times entirely clear or harmonious, but her story may fairly be said to condense in substance to the following excerpts from it:

“They didn’t support me; I supported them. I had enough property other than that which I conveyed to them, so they could live on my hands. * * * After the deed was signed he didn’t behave himself. I and George got along well before the deed was signed. It was about 30 days after this deed was obtained that Rose, my daughter, and George here, dragged me out of the bed. * * * They kept treating me worse and worse after that. They got all the money out of me.”

After defendants had separated and left plaintiff’s home, Rose Jackson never returned to care for or live with her mother. George later returned, as he states, to see that plaintiff was cared for. This was followed by plaintiff resuming friendly relations with him. He established his home with her and brought a woman there as housekeeper. It was during this period she signed a will giving him all her property and designated him as beneficiary of a $750 life insurance policy. Shortly after that was done, George married the housekeeper and with her lived in plaintiff’s home and cared for her until some time in March, 1925.

George’s second wife was a divorced woman, as to whom there is testimony tending to show he was un *201 duly intimate before he married her. Soon after his second marriage he and his second wife concluded to get out of that neighborhood, and she commenced looking for rooms to rent elsewhere, visiting one on Peck street some distance from plaintiff’s home. Some time later they rented the Peck street rooms and moved there, taking plaintiff with them, where she was given a small room upstairs with a sanitary cot to sleep on because her room would not accommodate a large bedstead. She found, as she claims, both her accommodations and treatment there intolerable. A few days later she left there and returned to her own home, sending for her son, Mathew Smith, who had been absent from Muskegon for some time, to come there and live with her. He testified that he had always been friendly with his mother, and she got him to go there because “she had nobody to support her.” In compliance with her request he had lived there since, saying:

“My mother needs the care of somebody. She is an old woman and a cripple. She is not doing anything for me or paying me for taking care of her. I am supporting her.”

In dismissing plaintiff’s bill, the trial court said, in part:

“I am of the opinion that the plaintiff is not entitled to a decree.^ I am satisfied that she voluntarily made the deed with full knowledge of the situation. I am satisfied that the plaintiff has not made out any cruel treatment on the part of the defendants toward her. * * * The burden of proof is on the plaintiff to establish her case, and she has failed in doing so.”

Conceding, as the court found, that she voluntarily made the deed with full knowledge of the situation as conditions then were, we are unable to agree in the conclusion that she had shown no cruel treatment on the part of defendants and failed to establish her case. On August 24, 1922, when she executed the *202 deed to defendants she was 77 years of age, crippled and infirm, living in her own home of many years, with her own daughter and her- husband, who at that time were apparently kindly caring for her. In her physical condition and at her time of life continuation of such care and assistance was an imperative consideration. Under then existing conditions it was but a natural impulse for her to desire and seek to secure continuation of such services and association. .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 N.W. 92, 239 Mich. 197, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-jackson-mich-1927.