Watson v. Watson

227 S.W. 270, 190 Ky. 270, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 423
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 21, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 270 (Watson v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Watson, 227 S.W. 270, 190 Ky. 270, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 423 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

The appellees and plaintiffs below, J. A. Watson, et al., are three of the surviving children of Savannah Wat[271]*271son, who died intestate on November 19, 1917, a resident of Pulaski county at the age of 71 years; and appellant and defendant below, Joe Watson,, is the fourth and only other surviving child of the decedent. Plaintiffs, after the death of their mother, filed this suit against defendant to cancel a contract which he obtained from her on September 25, 1917', wherein she agreed to pay him the sum of $800:00 cash at the time, and to convey to him all of her property which she o'wned at her death, in consideration that he would furnish her “A comfortable home and food with himself and family and all necessary service that she may require for her well being and comfort . . . during the remainder of her natural life, or as long as the party of the first part (the mother) desires to make her home with the party of the second part,” who was the defendant. The ground for the relief sought was that the consideration agreed to be paid by the mother was grossly excessive for the services agreed to be rendered by the son; that the mother was unduly influenced by the defendant to execute the contract, and that she was mentally incapacitated at the time to do so, and that defendant took advantage of her age and of her physical and mental condition and coerced her into executing it. The petition prayed that the contract be set aside and held for naught and that defendant be required to account for the $800.00 paid at the time it was executed, and also the value of the property owned by the decedent at the time of her death, for distribution among the heirs as in case of intestacy. The answer denied the averments of the petition and the court after hearing the evidence upon final submission set aside the contract and granted the relief prayed in the petition, but allowed defendant the sum of $100.00 for services rendered for the time (less than two months) between the execution of the contract and the death of the mother. Complaining of that judgment defendant appeals and his counsel argues for a reversal only the one question of fact presented by the pleading.

' In July preceding the execution of the contract, and prior to the death of Mrs. Watson, her husband died owning a farm in Pulaski county upon which he and his wife had lived for many years and had reared to manhood and womanhood their four children; the husband having other children by a former marriage. De[272]*272fendant appears to have been the youngest of the four children and was married and lived in a separate house upon the farm, which was located but a short distance from the Watson homestead. The mother of plaintiffs and defendant was very much attached to her husband and his death grieved and disturbed her very much. She was also, like most old people, extremely attached to the old home place where she had spent many happy days in association with her husband and with her children, and she wanted to spend the rest of her days therein. Defendant knew these facts, and he also knew that his mother was entitled to dower in the lands of her deceased husband, but notwithstanding that, he seems to have joined with his older half brother, and perhaps others of the heirs, in persuading his mother to sell the homestead, including her dower therein, and he purchased from her and the other heirs all their interest and became the sole owner thereof. It furthermore appears that prior to or about the-time of the sale the mother expressed an abiding desire to continue to reside at the old place with defendant, although her other children lived not far away, in the same neighborhood and whom she visited at times, but she made only one such visit after the death of her husband, and upon returning therefrom to the home of defendant she was stricken with some physical ailment (she being already crippled so that she had to use crutches), and this with her advanced age confined her from that time until her death in her son’s home, and the most of that time she was confined in bed and was so confined on the day the contract in question was executed when she had to be lifted or propped up in order to sign it. Mrs. Watson from the time of her husband’s death drew a pension of $35.00 per month and her savings from this source, with the amount she received for her dower in the homstead, went to make up the $800.00 cash which she paid at the time the contract was executed, and at her death she had cash and personal property amounting to between $500.00 and $700.00, making a total consideration paid to defendant of between $1,300.00' and $1,500.00. It furthermore appears that another contract for the same services was executed by Mrs. Watson about two weeks before the one in contest, both of them being drafted by Dr. Price at the solicitation and request of defendant, which he [273]*273made at the home of the doctor and in the absence of Mrs. Watson. In the first contract defendant agreed to render the services for $800100 cash to be paid at the time, but Dr. Price, with whom that contract was left, having misplaced or lost it, a second one (being the one in contest) was drafted and Mrs. Watson agreed therein to pay defendant, in addition to the $800.00 stipulated in the first contract, all of the property which she might own at her death.

Quite an array of witnesses were introduced by both sides to the controversy and there is considerable contrariety, as is usual in such cases, in their testimony. In fact, the testimony of all the witnesses is extremely unsatisfactory, growing largely out of the fact that attorneys for both sides grossly violated the rule against asking leading questions, and indulged in much inquiry about trifling and immaterial matters, overlooking the investigation of material and more vital ones. Sufficient facts appear, however, to convincingly show that. Mrs. Watson, especially after her husband’s death, was very feeble physically (but it did not appear that she was troublesome to care for) and that she was very forgetful of names of persons and would wander in her conversation, frequently changing the subject in the midst of an unfinished conversation, and in the main the witnesses introduced by plaintiffs testified that from their acquaintance and knowledge of her she was not at and about the time of the execution of the contract mentally capacitated to understandingly execute it. On the other hand some of the witnesses introduced by defendant say that “her mind-appeared to be as good as it had been for several years,” while others say in substance that if there was anything the matter with her mind they did not discover it. Clearly such evidence is of the weakest character and possesses but little convincing force. If, however, we should put aside entirely the express testimony of the witnesses as to their opinions concerning the mental capacity of Mrs. Watson we are convinced that the undisputed facts and circumstances appearing in the record are amply sufficient to support the judgment appealed from.

It will be observed that the instrument attacked here is not a last will and testament, which ' requires less mental capacity, and in the execution of which the law tolerate® the exercise of .more influence on the maker [274]*274than, is required or permitted in the execution of a contract inter partes;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 270, 190 Ky. 270, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-watson-kyctapp-1921.