Stewart v. Woodruff

505 P.2d 1081, 19 Ariz. App. 190, 1973 Ariz. App. LEXIS 475
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedFebruary 2, 1973
Docket2 CA-CIV 1246
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 505 P.2d 1081 (Stewart v. Woodruff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Woodruff, 505 P.2d 1081, 19 Ariz. App. 190, 1973 Ariz. App. LEXIS 475 (Ark. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

HOWARD, Judge.

Plaintiff-appellee, Kenneth Woodruff, filed an action to quiet title by reformation of three deeds in which the descriptions were erroneously set forth and for an accounting of rents and profits against his uncle, Relus E. Stewart, defendant-appellant, based on a quit claim deed in which Stewart conveyed to Woodruff his interest in certain real property located in Pima County, Arizona.

The defendant counterclaimed for an adjudication that the property be deemed his and that the plaintiff account for rents and *192 profits from the property and improvements, claiming failure of consideration, misrepresentation, and want of capacity.

The facts considered in the light most favorable to upholding the judgment of the trial court are as follows. Relus E. Stewart is an unmarried man, 85 years of age. He acquired the subject property, presently a trailer court, in 1942, and has lived there since that time. He has approximately fifteen nieces and nephews, however, the only relative with whom he appears to have had a close relationship is Woodruff.

In 1961, Stewart visited Woodruff in Oklahoma. He asked Woodruff to consider coming to Tucson to rebuild his trailer court and knew that Woodruff was experienced in electrical and plumbing work. Stewart told his nephew that if he did so, he would certainly try to make it worth his while. Woodruff took this conversation to mean that Stewart would deed the trailer court to him.

In 1962, Woodruff went to Wickenburg, Arizona to work. On the way to Wicken-burg, Woodruff with his wife and two daughters, stopped to see Stewart. Stewart told Woodruff that the health department was after him and that the trailer court would have to be rebuilt and rewired. He wanted Woodruff to stay and commence the work immediately. Woodruff told Stewart that he could not do so since he had an obligation in Wickenburg, but would consider coming back later.

Stewart visited Woodruff in Wicken-burg and implored him to come to Tucson and work on the trailer court. Stewart stated that if the court wasn’t rewired and replumbed the health department was going to condemn the property. Stewart promised Woodruff that if he came to Tucson to do the work he would see that Wood-ruff got the deed to the property later.

Woodruff came to Tucson with his family and lived on the subject property for sixteen or seventeen consecutive months during which time he installed electric wiring, plumbing equipment, septic tanks, and performed other jobs to keep the property from being condemned. Woodruff received no monetary payment during this period for his work. He testified that he worked on the property and used approximately $3,000 of his own funds for construction materials by reason of affection for his uncle as well as Stewart’s promises that he was going to deed the property to Woodruff. Furthermore, during this period Woodruff’s wife washed and ironed Stewart’s laundry, prepared his meals, and worked in order to provide groceries for the Woodruff family as well as for Stewart.

After the work on the trailer court was completed, Stewart refused to deed the property to his nephew. Woodruff told his uncle that he would leave if Stewart did not keep his word. This had no effect on Stewart and the Woodruff family returned to Oklahoma.

Stewart telephoned Woodruff several times in Oklahoma and asked him to return to Tucson to take care of the property. Woodruff said that he would do so if Stewart would keep his word and sign a deed. Stewart refused to say that he would do this.

In July, 1968, Woodruff received a telegram from a trailer court tenant informing him that Stewart was sick and having trouble and was asking for Woodruff to come to Tucson. Within the same hour, Woodruff received a phone call from Pima County Hospital to the effect that Stewart was asking for him. Woodruff arrived in Tucson on July 7, 1968. He went to the hospital to see his uncle. When he approached Stewart in the hospital room, Stewart told him he was glad to see him and that he had made a great mistake. When Woodruff asked Stewart what he meant, Stewart said:

“I made a great mistake and after you left I got half mad and just give this property away. . . . Go get it back and have a new deed made and I will sign it to you. ... I want you to have it all the way through, ... I just got made when you left and just give it to them folks.”

*193 The “mistake” to which Stewart alluded occurred in April, 1968, when he deeded the property to an entity called the Free Will Aid Society which was to form a corporation, the purpose of which was apparently to provide shelter for indigent Christians on the subject property. The entity did not form a corporation or carry through with its plans.

Pursuant to his uncle’s request, Wood-ruff succeeded in obtaining a deed back from the Society. Woodruff was named the grantee in this deed. The trial court determined that the deed from Stewart to the Free Will Aid Society was void for want of a proper grantee and therefore the deed from the Society to Woodruff was also void.

One day prior to the securing of the deed from the Free Will Aid Society, while hospitalized and in the presence of an attorney who had previously represented both parties, Stewart signed a quit claim deed to the property which is the subject of this appeal. Woodruff testified that when the attorney went to see Stewart in the hospital the attorney, at one point, asked Mr. Stewart if he knew what he was signing and that his answer was “yes, I do. I always wanted him to have it all the way through.”

At trial Stewart testified that he did not recall signing the deed, and did not intend to sign a deed, thought that it was a will he was signing, but that the signature on the deed appeared to be his. Other facts necessary to the disposition of this case appear later in this opinion.

The crux of Stewart’s position on appeal is that he did not knowingly or intentionally convey his property to Woodruff, and he presents four questions for review.

I

DID THE TRIAL COURT ERR IN DECIDING THAT THE GRANTOR HAD THE CAPACITY TO EXECUTE THE QUIT CLAIM DEED?

In order for a deed to be valid, it must he made voluntarily by a person of sound mind. 26 C.J.S. Deeds § 54a (1956). The mental competence of the grantor at the time of delivery is a requisite element for the effective transference of ownership of land by deed. R. Powell, Powell on Real Property § 896 (1968). This court has stated that the determination of such competency depends upon whether or not the grantor understood and appreciated the nature of the conveyance and the court looks to all the circumstances of the deed execution in reaching this determination. Old age, sickness, eccentricity or senility alone do not amount to incompetency. Young v. Lujan, 11 Ariz.App. 47, 461 P.2d 691 (1969); Pass v. Stephens, 22 Ariz. 461, 198 P. 712 (1921).

At trial the attorney who prepared and notarized the deed signed by Stewart testified that he had known both parties for a number of years, was aware of their close relationship and knew that Woodruff had visited his uncle several times to help him repair his property.

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Bluebook (online)
505 P.2d 1081, 19 Ariz. App. 190, 1973 Ariz. App. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-woodruff-arizctapp-1973.