Soule v. Wyatt

159 P. 447, 30 Cal. App. 778, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 97
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 19, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1515.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 P. 447 (Soule v. Wyatt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soule v. Wyatt, 159 P. 447, 30 Cal. App. 778, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 97 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Plaintiff commenced 'the action to set aside and have declared void a certain deed conveying to his daughter, Lottie M. Wyatt, one of the defendants, certain real property situated in the town of Washington, Yolo County, on the ground that “said deed was procured to be executed by the said defendants through the frauds and misrepresentations of said defendants, and by the undue influence exerted by the said defendants upon the said plaintiff at a time when he was enfeebled in mind and health and incompetent to make a deed or to dispose of his property, ’ ’ and that “plaintiff’s title to said property be quieted against said defendants and each of them.” The cause was tried by the court and plaintiff had judgment in his favor, from which defendants appeal.

The court made the following findings of fact: “1. The court finds all and singular the allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint to be true. 2. That the attorney who prepared *779 the deed for the signature of the plaintiff was in no manner a party to the plan under which the said defendants procured the making of said deed, and the said attorney acted wholly without knowledge of the manner in which defendants did procure the making of the said deed by the said plaintiff.” Plaintiff was a pensioner of the Southern Pacific Company in 1911, residing on the premises in question in the town of Washington, sometimes called Broderick. His family consisted of his wife and grandchild, Flossie Conrad, daughter of defendant Lottie Wyatt by. her first husband. When Flossie was an infant she was taken into plaintiff’s family and reared as their own child. Plaintiff was seventy-seven years old and was suffering grievously with a painful disease of the eyes, and finally lost the sight of one of them. He was feeble from the infirmities of age and was afflicted with heart trouble, which at unexpected moments would cause him to lose consciousness and fall to the ground as in a fit, lying there rigid “and as though dead,” as one witness described his condition. On July 13, 1911, his wife died and Flossie’s mother took Flossie away to her own home at Rutherford, Napa County, and plaintiff went to the home of his son, Charles C. Soule, in Broderick. The loss of his wife, the taking from him his grandchild, Flossie, to whom he was devotedly attached, together with the excruciating pain caused by the disease of his eyes and his general weak physical condition, so affected plaintiff as to make him an object of pity and commiseration. He was ill for some time after the death of his wife. He testified: “I lost my eyesight, then worrying about my wife and my baby [he called Flossie “his baby”] that I thought a good deal of took away from me, and all things together made me sick, that is about all I can remember at the present. . . . Q. What effect, if any, on your feelings or your mind did the death of your wife and the breaking up of your family have? A. Well, it made me what you might say crazy; in fact, I think I am so yet. ’ ’ He visited his daughter, Mrs. Wyatt, occasionally for some time after his wife’s death. “Q. What took you down there, what was the cause of your going? A. Well, in the first place I didn’t want to go down; I rather be at my old home, it is natural, but they took my baby away and caused me to go down there, my daughter did, thought if I would come down there I would be better off where Flossie was, and so I made up my mind *780 I would go down there; I like to be where she was, so I went down and stayed there a while and came back awhile and kept going.”

The deed in question was executed on July 30, 1912, three weeks after he went to Rutherford to live with defendants. He testified as to his then physical condition as follows: “I was pretty sick; I was weakened down, discouraged, my eyesight was failing, and I felt weak; one-half of the time I couldn’t rest nights; they gave me whisky with some stuff in it to make me sleep, one thing and another, so,' therefore, I got pretty weak for quite a while, but I got better. ’ ’ Several witnesses testified to his weakened condition; that his eyes gave him great pain; that he was subject to fainting spells from heart trouble; that he constantly grieved; “and was brooding” over the loss of his wife and having his granddaughter taken from him. Besides defendant, Mrs. Wyatt, his children were Mrs. Annie Lindsay and two sons, Charles C. and John G. Plaintiff testified that after he came to Rutherford, and before the deed was made, defendant Mrs. Wyatt told him she learned through two letters written to Mrs. Addie Barry, residing at Rutherford, sister to plaintiff’s deceased wife, that his son John and Mrs. Lindsay were going to get all his property. “She [Mrs. Wyatt] said they were going to have it all, them two, and I remarked I didn’t want them to have it all. I wanted to divide it amongst the four of them.”

Mrs. Barry testified that this representation by Mrs. Wyatt was false and that Mrs. Lindsay had not written any such letter. Plaintiff testified: “Q. What did she keep saying to you? A. She say they made their brags they were going to have it all because they done the most work on it. I admitted they did, but at the same time I didn’t think it was right for them to have it all. Q. What did you say on the subject of dividing your property? ■ A. I say I wanted to divide it, want it equally divided. Q. What way? A. Each one of them to have their share. Q. Where and when did you tell her that? A. Well, about the time we were talking about it; I don’t know exactly when it was. Q. But it was before the deed was made? A. It was before the deed was made. Q. Was anything said by her when you stated you wanted to divide it up among them all? A. Well, she said I couldn’t do it, because they were going to have it all, Annie *781 and John was; of course, I couldn’t divide it if them two going to get it all, and I didn’t like that idea. • Q. Was anything said about a will? A. Yes, sir; I did. Q. What did you say? A. I said, ‘Well, then I will fool them; I will make a will, then they can’t get any more than the others’; and she said, ‘A will can be broke.’ Q. Where was her husband during the talk? A. One time we were talking about it, I couldn’t say at the dinner-table or supper-table, talking about the will, and she turned around and says to Harry— we call him Harry — ‘A will can be broke, can’t it?’ and he says, ‘Yes.’ That finished it for that evening. Q. At that time you were living down there? A. At that time I was living down there. Q. That was before the deed was made? A. That was before the deed was made. Q. At the time of that talk about saying a will could be broke, was anything said about a deed? A. Yes. Q. Who said it? A. She said a deed — no, he said a deed would be the best, because can’t break a deed. Q. What did she say, if anything? A. I don’t remember she said anything, in reply to that or not at that time, but talked about it afterward, but not at that time. . . . Q. After these talks you have referred to was there any further talk between you and them regarding your property and disposing of it in any way? A. Why, about, making the deed? Q. Yes. A. Well, she said — I said, ‘Well, if a will can be broke, I would like to have Charlie and you and Flossie have a share of it, because if the rest want it all that looks kind of hoggish to me; they so mean probably they won’t get any of it.’ So she says, ‘Well, you can’t mention Flossie because what belongs to me belongs to Flossie.

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113 P.2d 295 (California Court of Appeal, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
159 P. 447, 30 Cal. App. 778, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soule-v-wyatt-calctapp-1916.