Tartar v. Eaton

138 S.W.2d 342, 282 Ky. 219, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 150
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 8, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 138 S.W.2d 342 (Tartar v. Eaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tartar v. Eaton, 138 S.W.2d 342, 282 Ky. 219, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 150 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Tilford

— Reversing-

Simpson Plielps was a member of tbe Bar and apparently continued to practice Ms profession until a few days before Ms death., which occurred on December 19, 1937. At that time he was over seventy years, of age, and for some years previously had been subject to moments of forgetfulness and guilty of idiosyncracies of conduct which caused many people, including two physicians, one of whom had treated Mm, to believe that his mental faculties were impaired. Probably the worst of Ms lapses occurred in the fall of 1937, when, upon the resumption of an adjourned hearing of a law suit in which he was counsel for an old negro woman, he denied that he had been employed or knew anything about *221 the case. Shortly afterward, however, he tried the law suit, which appears to have been a complicated one involving a boundary line, and won it. It also appears that he sometimes lost his bearings and was unable to find his way home without direction, and that upon two occasions he attempted to change his clothes in a room in a house occupied by himself and his nephew’s family, seemingly unaware of the fact that there were women present. The record is too voluminous to admit of a detailed discussion of all the peculiar actions with which he is charged, and uncontradicted, would be sufficient to justify the conclusion that he did not possess sufficient mental capacity on June 9, 1937, to execute the deed which is the principal subject of this controversy. However, the proof that he did possess sufficient mental capacity to execute the deed in question is of such a nature as to convince us that many, if not all of the peculiarities of his conduct were the result of infirmities of age, or, perhaps the use of liquor. In any event, many witnesses testified that they regarded him as of sound mind, and it is conclusively shown that during May and June, 1937, he filed suits and successfully practiced his profession, and in September, 1937, he was appointed by the Judge of the Pulaski Circuit Court to defend a man indicted for a felony. Moreover, Mr. J. Tanner Ottley, Commonwealth’s Attorney for the Twenty-ninth Judicial District, testified that on November 22, 1937, Phelps attended a trial in Burksville, Kentucky, as a witness, stayed there for three days in communication with Mr. Ottley, was sworn in as a member of the Bar at Burks-ville, gave his testimony and displayed no evidence of mental incapacity. Phelps’ wife had died in 1932, and for six years prior to his death he had occupied office space with the appellee, Eaton.

On January 4, 1938, Eaton instituted this suit against the appellant Eliza Tartar and Felix Phelps, Administrator of Simpson Phelps, alleging that on “the -day of-, 19 — ,” Phelps, with Eaton as surety, had executed a note to the Citizens National Bank at Somerset for $500, payable six months thereafter, and that on “the - day of-, 19 — ,” Eaton was compelled to pay the note, and that at that time in order to indemnify Eaton against loss, Phelps had executed to him a mortgage on a tract of land containing about *222 fifty acres, which mortgage Phelps promised to have recorded, and that only $100 had been paid on the note. Neither the note nor the mortgage was filed, and it may he here remarked that no witness was introduced to prove either the writing or the acknowledgment or the delivery of the mortgage, and it is conceded that no such mortgage was ever recorded. It was further alleged in the petition that Phelps had executed a deed to the appellant, Eliza Tartar, which had been duly recorded, and that this deed was executed to the said Eliza Tartar without consideration, and at a time when Phelps “was of unsound mind, and acting under fraud and duress from the said Eliza Tartar;” and “that the said defendant, Tartar, at the time she received said deed from the said Simpson Phelps knew that the plaintiff was the •owner of said mortgage given him by reason of his having signed said note to the said Bank.” The prayer •of the petition was that the plaintiff be awarded judgment against the administrator for the alleged debt; that plaintiff be awarded a lien on the land to secure it, and that the deed from Phelps to Eliza Tartar be can-celled. Eliza Tartar answered, traversing the allegations of the petition; and thereafter, L. B. Phelps and others, claiming to be heirs of Simpson Phelps and his wife, Pina Phelps, from whom Simpson Phelps had received the property under a will giving him full power <of sale and disposition, filed an intervening petition which they made a cross petition against Eliza Tartar, ■and in which they likewise sought a cancellation of the •deed in question upon allegations similar.in effect to those contained in Eaton’s petition. To this intervening petition, the appellant filed her answer and counterclaim, traversing the allegations of the intervening petition, and affirmatively pleading her purchase of the land from Phelps for $3,000. By reply and agreed order traversing all the affirmative allegations of the pleadings not otherwise traversed, the issues were joined, and under an agreed order the testimony was heard orally by the Chancellor and reported by the official stenographer. The result of this hearing was that the Chancellor cancelled the deed and awarded Eaton a judgment for $400 with interest from the “- day of --, 19 — ■, ’ ’ and a lien on the land to secure its payment.

As before indicated, the testimony in this case is *223 voluminous, and it would be impossible within the limits of this opinion to set it forth with any degree of particularity. It is, however, necessary to add to what we have already written concerning the testimony, the following particulars relative to the deed, the circumstances under which it was executed, and the alleged payment of a consideration therefor by the appellant.

Phelps, it seems, owned other real estate, and appellant also appears to have possessed some property. Phelps apparently twice sold the farm in litigation, but in each instance had been compelled to repossess it. On January 16, 1937, he had leased part of one of his other properties to appellant for the year 1937, for a cash ■consideration of $300. In April, 1937, while the title to the farm in litigation was in one of the two persons to whom Phelps had sold it, appellant, under some arrangement with the title holder, moved into the residence. The rental contract for the other property was for some reason abandoned, and shortly after she had moved on to the farm in litigation, appellant entered into negotiations with Phelps for its purchase. In the meantime Phelps took up his abode with appellant and her husband, who, it seems, had other lodgers. The deed conveying the property was written by Phelps in his office in Somerset on June 9, 1937, acknowledged before the County Court Clerk at the latter’s office, and immediately recorded. It is a properly drawn deed and discloses no weakness in the intellect which composed it. The recited consideration was $1000.00 and “other valuable considerations,” and following the description of the farm was inserted this paragraph:

‘ ‘ Grantor is to have a home in said house and place as long as he lives or as he wants said home.”

It also contained this clause:

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Related

Caldwell v. Hatcher
248 S.W.2d 892 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1952)
Sullenger v. Baker
176 S.W.2d 382 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1943)
Lausman v. Brown
168 S.W.2d 579 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1943)
Johnson v. Johnson
166 S.W.2d 285 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 S.W.2d 342, 282 Ky. 219, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tartar-v-eaton-kyctapphigh-1940.