Stearns v. Beckham

31 Va. 379
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 23, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 Va. 379 (Stearns v. Beckham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stearns v. Beckham, 31 Va. 379 (Va. 1879).

Opinion

Burks, J.

On the 29th day of November, 1862, John Minor Botts and Franklin Stearns, of the city of Richmond, undertook to purchase from James A. Beckham, of the county of Culpeper, his valuable landed estate'in said county, containing by estimation about 1,940 acres, and also some personal property, at the gross price of $100,000 cash, payable in Confederate States treasury notes. The contract was in the form of a written proposition of Beckham, under his hand and seal, to sell, and a written acceptance under seal, signed by Botts for himself and Stearns, and is in these words:

“I now offer to sell to Messrs. Franklin Stearns and the Hon. John M. Botts my Auburn estate, more or less, by my deeds, including the detached woodland below Brandy, with all the stock of all kinds belonging to me on the estate, all the farming implements of all kinds, together with all the new corn in the [382]*382new corn-house, all the wheat in the stacks, and straw, a^ wlieat straw, corn, provender, fodder and on the farm as it now stands; also three negroes, viz: Spencer, Randall and John, for one hundred thousand dollars cash, in bankable funds, with the following reservations, viz : five choice hogs, the grain not enumerated above, one set of the blacksmith’s tools; and the said Stearns and Botts shall agree to purchase at valuation all of the furniture that I shall not desire to keep for my own use. The hay shall be estimated and- paid for at fifty cents per hundred, the fencing plank at seventy-five cents per hundred feet, and the locust posts at twelve-and a half cents apiece.

“ "Witness our hands and seals this 29th Kovember, 1862.

“ James A. Beckham, [l. s.]

“I accept the above proposition.

“ J. hi. Botts, for himself and

“ Franklin Stearns, [l. s.]

“Attest:

“ W. B. Ross,

“ 1). W. Kennedy.”

At the date of the contract Botts paid to Beckham, on account of the purchase-money for the property, forty-five thousand dollars in the check of Stearns on the Bank of Virginia, to his own order, endorsed by him to the order of Botts, and by the latter to the order of Beckham, for which payment he took the receipt of Beckham, signed by him, and endorsed on the contract- in the following words:

“ Culpeper County, November 29th, 1862.

“In confirmation of the within contract, I have this day received' the sum of forty-five thousand dollars [383]*383from the within named John M. Botts with the understanding that the balance of fifty-five thousand dollars is to he paid within the next ten days, on. delivery of the deed. '

“ J. A. Beckham.

W. B. Boss,

“ I). W. Kennedy.”

On the night of the third day of December following, James A. Beckham had a severe stroke of paralysis, which, for the time being at least, utterly prostrated him in body and mind. On the 10th day of the same month, Botts claims to have paid the fifty-five thousand dollars in the checks-of Stearns, and took from Beckham a deed conveying the Auburn estate, which was admitted to record in the county court of Culpeper on the 15th day of that month.

On or about the 20th of the same month, Beckham was removed to Culpeper Courthouse, and Botts and Stearns took possession of the Auburn estate, claiming title under the deed and contract aforesaid.

At the September rules, 1866, of the circuit court of Culpeper, J. Thomas Beckham, a son of the said James A., who, at the next preceding August term of the county court of said county, had by said court been appointed committee of the said James A., adjudged to he a person of unsound mind, filed his hill as such committee against Botts and Stearns, praying a rescission of the deed and contract aforesaid and a restoration of the Auburn estate upon the grounds that at the dates, respectively, of the deed and contract the said James A. Beckham was mentally incompetent to enter into, execute and bind himself by such instruments; that they were procured by the fraud, imposition and circumvention of the said Botts [384]*384for an illegal and grossly inadequate consideration, and were therefore null and void.

Botts and Stearns severally answered the bill, denying the alleged in competency of Beckham, the illegality and inadequacy of consideration of the contract and deed, and all matters of fraud charged in the bill, and insisting on the validity of their title under the deed.

Many depositions were taken on both sides, and the case being brought to a hearing on the 24th day of August, 1868, after being revived in the names of the administrator and heirs-at-law of James A. Beckham, who had died since the last term, the circuit court dismissed the complainant’s bill, declaring its opinion “that there was no fraud or undue influence in the procurement of the contract of the 29th November, 1862, in the bill mentioned; the consideration upon which it was founded was neither illegal nor in any legal or equitable sense inadequate; and that at the time of negotiating and signing the same the said James A. Beckham was neither insane nor in any sense of unsound mind, hut was capable in law of contracting; and the said contract must therefore he held valid and binding. As to the deed of the 10th December, 1862, also mentioned in the bill and’ proceedings, the court deems it unnecessary to decide upon its validity except so far as to declare, as it does, that there was no fraud in the procurement thereof; for if it be void because of the grantor’s mental incompetency at the time of executing the same, as to which the court expresses no opinion, still this court will not, under all the circumstances of the case, set aside the same, and thereby compel the defendants to sue for the legal title on a hill filed for the specific performance of the contract. Moreover, if the deed aforesaid he void in equity, for the reason mentioned, [385]*385it is equally so in law, and there was no necessity for the plaintiffs to have come into this court with the view of putting it out of their way in any proceeding they might have instituted at law in order to force the plaintiffs to their suit for specific performance.”

From this decree the Beckhams applied for and obtained an appeal from the district court of appeals, from which court the case was removed into this court for decision, and being heard here on the 25th day of November, 1875, this court pronounced the following decree:

“This day came again the parties by their counsel, and the court having maturely considered the transcript of the record of the decree aforesaid and arguments of counsel, is of opinion that the circuit court erred in not passing upon the validity of the deed of the 10th December, 18G2, in the bill and proceedings mentioned. That court, upon the evidence before it, ought to have declared such deed null and void. At the time of the pretended execution the grantor, James A. Beckham, was prostrated by an attack of almost total paralysis (having previously had three attacks of partial paralysis), and could neither speak nor write, nor could he move without assistance, and was utterly incapable, mentally and physically, of executing a deed or of entering into or consummating any important contract. The very ‘mark’ intended for a signature was made by another holding his dead and useless hand and guiding the pen so as only to make a cross-mark.

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Related

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137 S.E. 519 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
31 Va. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stearns-v-beckham-va-1879.