Vaill v. McPhail

87 A. 188, 35 R.I. 412, 1913 R.I. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 25, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 87 A. 188 (Vaill v. McPhail) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaill v. McPhail, 87 A. 188, 35 R.I. 412, 1913 R.I. LEXIS 52 (R.I. 1913).

Opinion

Vincent, J.

This is a bill in equity brought by Julia M. Vaill, of Pelham Manor, New York, against Dr. Donald T. McPhail and the complainant's nephew, Theodore V. Barton, both of the city of New York.

The complainant seeks, by her bill, to have a certain bond, together with two mortgages securing the same, executed and delivered by her to the respondent McPhail and covering certain property in the town of New Shoreham, Rhode Island, declared to be void and ordered to be de *414 livered up and cancelled; that said respondent McPhail maybe enjoined from enforcing said bond, foreclosing said mortgages, and from exercising any powers granted to him thereby or therein; that the respondent McPhail be ordered to reconvey said premises and property and that the respondent Barton be ordered to pay to the complainant such ,sum or sums of money as may, upon a proper accounting, be found to be due to her from him.

The complainant asks this relief on the ground that if ¡she did execute said bond and mortgages she did so unwittingly and without consideration, at the request of and for -the benefit of the respondent Barton, who at the time was her ■confidential agent, by whom she was influenced in the execution of these instruments and that the said respondent Mc-Phail, at the time of the execution and delivery of said bond .and mortgages, had full notice of all these facts.

The complainant's bill also sets up her ownership of the ■property in New Shoreham and her transaction there of a ¡summer hotel business under the name of “Vaill Cottages;'' that she is seventy-two years of age, unmarried, in failing health, and entirely inexperienced in and ignorant of business .affairs and incapable of attending to and understanding the .same; that she was consequently obliged to entrust the management of her hotel business to agents; and that said respondent Barton is a nephew of the complainant and •during the greater part of his minority he was given a home with and supported by her. That their relations were intimate, substantially those of parent and child, and that .said respondent Barton enjoyed her entire trust and confidence. That on account of her confidence in Barton and her •own inability to transact business, she constituted him her agent for the management of said hotel business and in that capacity he acted for her at different periods, aggregating, some seven years, and that during the month of September, 1910, and for more than a year prior thereto, the said respondent Barton was still acting as her agent under the same ■conditions of trust and confidence, she accepting his advice *415 and believing that he would conduct the business solely with a desire of furthering her best interests, trusting him to enlighten her upon matters connected therewith.

The complainant avers, upon information and belief, that the “Vaill Cottages” during each of the seasons of 1909 and 1910, yielded a profit of about $1,000; that she has repeatedly requested an account thereof, with which request the respondent Barton has failed to comply, and that when he was discharged as agent on November 1, 1910, he left unsatisfied a large indebtedness incurred by him in the conduct of the business during those years.

That on or about November 7, 1910, the attention of the ■complainant was called to two instruments purporting to be mortgages covering her real and personal estate in said New Shoreham, executed by her, during the incumbency of said Barton as her' agent; in favor of the respondent McPhail, securing the payment of $8,000; that the complainant is not and never has been indebted to said McPhail in the sum of -$8,000 or in any other sum; that previous to November 7, 1910, she was not aware of the existence of said bond and mortgages and that she has no knowledge of having executed the same, but that if she did execute such instruments she ■did so unwittingly, at the request of the respondent Barton, who was acting as her confidential agent, and without any knowledge of their contents or purport, influenced by her confidence in Barton, believing that if he requested her to execute papers they must be proper papers for her to execute and that there was no necessity for inspection or understanding upon her part; that the complainant received no consideration for these instruments nor has she derived any benefit or advantage therefrom and if there was in fact any consideration it passed from the respondent McPhail to Barton and was for the sole benefit of the latter; that the respondent McPhail was, at the time when these instruments were executed, an intimate acquaintance of Barton and had full notice and knowledge of the facts regarding the consideration as well as the agency of the respondent Barton and the *416 incapacity of the complainant for transacting business; and that the complainant is informed and believes that the interest in said mortgages is overdue and that the said respondent McPhail is about to foreclose the same.

The respondents, in and by their answer, deny the inexperience and ignorance of the complainant in business affairs, her inability to attend to and understand the same and her failing health; they deny that the relations between complainant and Barton were confidential or other than those of principal and agent; they deny that the complainant had implicit trust and confidence in Barton, accepted his advice in all matters and trusted him alone to enlighten her, whenever proper, upon all matters connected with said hotel business; they deny that the “Vaill Cottages” for the seasons of 1909 and 1910 yielded a'yearly profit of $1,000, or that the complainant has requested an account thereof or that the respondent Barton was discharged as agent on November 1, 1910, leaving a large indebtedness, etc.; they deny that the complainant is not now and never has been indebted to the respondent McPhail; that she was not aware of the existence of the instruments referred to and that she had no knowledge-that she had executed them; they deny that the complainant executed said instruments unwittingly at the request of Barton; they deny that at the time said instruments were executed Barton was acting as complainant's confidential agent and that she executed said instruments without-knowledge of their contents or purport and was influenced in so doing by her implicit trust and confidence in Barton; but on the contrary they aver that complainant executed the papers well knowing their contents; and that she well understood them at the time they were executed. They deny that said complainant received no consideration and derived no benefit or advantage therefrom and that said instruments were solely for the personal benefit of Barton; they deny that said respondent McPhail had full notice and knowledge of the facts alleged by the complainant regarding the consideration for said instruments and the agency of Barton *417 and that said respondent McPhail had knowledge of the incapacity of complainant for transacting business; and they deny that the respondent McPhail is about to foreclose said mortgages or exercise any power of sale contained therein.

The other allegations of the complainant’s bill are admitted by the respondents and the respondents, further answering, set forth details of the various loans made by McPhail to Barton and the circumstances connected therewith.

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Bluebook (online)
87 A. 188, 35 R.I. 412, 1913 R.I. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaill-v-mcphail-ri-1913.