Vice v. Morris

208 P. 1020, 58 Cal. App. 442, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 273
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 3, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 4202.
StatusPublished

This text of 208 P. 1020 (Vice v. Morris) 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
Vice v. Morris, 208 P. 1020, 58 Cal. App. 442, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 273 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J., pro tem.

George B. Clifford executed two deeds, dated August 24, 1918, and November 7, 1918, re *443 spectively, purporting to convey to the defendant, Sadie L. Morris, certain real property situate in Napa County. Clifford died on June 22, 1919. This action was commenced hy his surviving wife, individually, and in the capacities of guardian of her son and executrix: of Clifford’s will, to set aside those deeds, upon the ground of the insanity of Clifford. The action was tried hy the court sitting with a jury. A general verdict was rendered for the plaintiffs, and judgment entered accordingly. The defendant, Sadie L. Morris, has appealed.

Clifford, the grantor, and Grace L. Clifford, the plaintiff, were married on May 17, 1912, and there was horn to them one child, Gerald B. Clifford, who, at the time of his father’s death, was five years of age. Clifford and his wife lived unhappily, having separated on some five different occasions. Finally, on April 2, 1919, Mrs. Clifford, as the result of a divorce proceeding commenced by her, was granted an interlocutory judgment of divorce from Clifford, upon the ground of extreme cruelty, and was awarded the custody of the child.

Three grounds are urged by appellant for a reversal of the judgment, namely: that the amended complaint is fatally defective, insufficiency of the evidence to prove that Clifford was insane, and error in the instructions to the jury.

Appellant claims that the amended complaint fails to state a cause of action because it contains no allegation that the grantor, at the time of the execution of the deeds, Was ‘entirely without understanding. ’ ’ It should be stated, however, that appellant did not demur to the complaint, and, so far as the bill of exceptions discloses, did not make any objection whatever to the admissibility of any part of the proof upon that or any other ground. It may therefore be assumed that the case was tried, by the defendant, upon the theory that the amended complaint was good.

However, as stated by appellant, if the amended complaint wholly fails to state a cause of action, this point may be raised, even for the first time, on appeal, and we have therefore proceeded to examine the points made by appellant against the sufficiency of the amended complaint.

It is alleged that for two years prior to Clifford’s death he was “physically unwell and mentally incompetent; that during all of said time he brooded over his physical condi *444 tion, and was possessed of many delusions.” Among the delusions alleged are that his wife was untrue to him; that she was endeavoring to acquire his property and deprive him thereof; that in the event of his death his son would not he taken care of by his wife and that if he left his property to his son it would be improperly managed; that his wife and her family were endeavoring to poison him, in order to acquire his property. It is further alleged that “while acting under said insane delusions herein above mentioned and while so mentally incompetent,” etc., said deeds were executed.

The above allegations, we believe, are sufficient in law to create an issue of insanity and also to sustain the judgment as rendered if those allegations have found support in the evidence.

In the Estate of Redfield, 116 Cal. 637 [48 Pac. 794], it is said: “It is commonly held that aside from those cases of dementia where the patient has not mental power to form any conceptions whether true or false, of the relations of things, the true test of insanity is mental delusion; that if a person persistently believes supposed facts which have no real existence, and against all evidence and probability conducts himself upon the assumption of their existence, he is as to that belief under a morbid delusion, and delusion in that sense is insanity.”

While in the Redfield case, supra, the delusions alleged and proved wei^e held to be insufficient to invalidate the will because they related to subjects foreign to the testamentary act, yet it may be taken as the law of that case that, if insane delusions do relate to the persons or objects affected by the testamentary act, or if they relate to the kindred or property of the testator, or to the disposition of his property, they may be held sufficient to invalidate the testamentary act.

.Here the amended complaint, in effect, alleges that the deeds in question were the product of insane delusions, and it is obvious, we think, from the nature and character of the delusions alleged, relating as they do to the family and property of the grantor, that, if proved, they had a direct bearing upon the very matters and things concerning which the grantor, in the disposal of his property, should have had a sane and rational mind.

*445 Under such circumstances it was not essential, in our opinion, that there should have been a direct allegation that the grantor was “entirely without understanding.”

We do not consider any of the cases cited and relied upon by appellant (More v. Calkins, 85 Cal. 177 [24 Pac. 729]; Castro v. Geil, 110 Cal. 292 [52 Am. St. Rep. 84, 42 Pac. 804]; Jacks v. Estee, 139 Cal. 509 [73 Pac. 247], and McNeese v. McNeese, 37 Cal. App. Dec. 452) in point, for the reason that in none of them was the question of delusionary insanity involved. The distinction drawn between the two classes of cases is made apparent in Crowther v. Rowlandson, 27 Cal. 377.

The evidence on the issue of insanity admittedly presents a conflict, and, therefore, if the verdict of the jury finds any substantial support in the evidence, the judgment based thereon will not be reversed. (Estate of Ross, 179 Cal. 630 [178 Pac. 510].)

The proof offered by plaintiffs on the question of insanity extended beyond the limits of the particular delusions alleged in the complaint and tended to show general insanity. It appears from the testimony of Mrs. Clifford that Clifford’s mind began to fail at the time of the birth of the child, and from that time on he seemed to grow gradually more excited and irrational. She related many incidents which occurred during their married life, which, it is claimed, tended to show insanity. In this she was corroborated by the testimony of her mother and sister.

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Related

Jacks v. Estee
73 P. 247 (California Supreme Court, 1903)
Masterson v. Shelton
62 P. 606 (California Supreme Court, 1900)
Estate of Ross
178 P. 510 (California Supreme Court, 1919)
More v. Calkins
24 P. 729 (California Supreme Court, 1890)
Castro v. Geil
42 P. 804 (California Supreme Court, 1895)
In re Estate of Redfield
48 P. 794 (California Supreme Court, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
208 P. 1020, 58 Cal. App. 442, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vice-v-morris-calctapp-1922.