Weakley v. Weakley

198 S.W.2d 699, 355 Mo. 882, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 506
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 13, 1947
DocketNo. 39473.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 198 S.W.2d 699 (Weakley v. Weakley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weakley v. Weakley, 198 S.W.2d 699, 355 Mo. 882, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 506 (Mo. 1947).

Opinion

LEEDY, J.

Action to set aside a general warranty deed to approximately 260 acres of land in Clinton County. Other relief was prayed, but the ease has been briefed as though involving that one question, and it will be so treated. The chancellor denied cancellation, and plaintiff appealed.

William C. Weakley and his wife, Rose, were the grantors in the challenged deed, which bears date of May 27, 1931, was signed and acknowledged the same day, and filed for record July 13, 1931. The consideration is recited as “assumption of deed of trust [for $10,-500.00] and Five Thousand Dollars . . . and the assumption of a debt of $2650 due by Willard C. Weakley to Rose Weakley.” Reserving an estate for life in Willard C., the deed conveyed the fee to his sons, defendants John Melvin Weakley and Elmer Weakley, who are half-brothers of plaintiff, Price. The father, Willard C., was thrice married, each of which marriages having terminated through death. John Melvin and Elmer are children of the first marriage; Price is a child of the second marriage; no children were born of the third. The controversy is really between plaintiff, Price, and his half-brothers, defendants John Melvin (sometimes hereinafter referred to as Mel or J. M.) and Elmer, it being agreed that the interests of the other parties-defendant are merely nominal.

The petition alleges as grounds for setting aside the deed: (1) That defendants, John Melvin and Elmer “with the intent to cheat and *884 defraud this plaintiff . . . fraudulently and unlawfully caused the said Willard C. Weakley to make execute and deliver” the deed in question, and that the same was'“procured by an over-powering of the mind and intention and the purpose of said Willard C. Weakley;” (2) That said defendants “well and truly knew the said Willard C. Weakley was mentally incompetent to transact any business or to understand the effects thereof, or to know and understand what he was doing at the time . . . and was wholly and totally unable to understand and comprehend either the legal or the actual effect of . . . the execution of the deed;” (3) “That the execution and delivery of said deed was wholly and totally without consideration. ’ ’

The answer of John Melvin and Elmer averred that the consideration recited in the deed had been paid by them, and that it was greatly in excess of the value of the land; that their father had made advancements to, and had paid off and discharged debts in large amounts owing by, Price,- and by reason of which he had, on May 27, 1931,. become insolvent; and that he agreed with these defendants to convey to them his lands in consideration of their assuming and discharging his indebtedness, and that he called to his home his attorney, D. H. Frost of Plattsburg, whom he directed to prepare the deed in question, which was executed and delivered by their father. In addition to what amounted to a denial of their father’s want of mental capacity to make the deed, other matters were pleaded, but as they are not relevant to the present inquiry, they will not be stated.

Willard C. Wealdey was a farmer, as are Price and Mel. The land in question constituted the home place, a single farm, located southeast of, and relatively close to the town of Gower. Elmer, who is engaged in business at Plattsburg, left the farm at an early age. Mel, a bachelor about 60 years of age, never left the farm. Price lived on the home place (except for an absence of four or five years in Ohio in the early 20’s) until after the death of his father. It appears that a business venture under the name of “Weakley Motor Company”, engaged in by Willard C. and Price Weakley at Gower, resulted in somewhat heavy financial losses to the former during the one year of its operation in 1920. There is considerable testimony in the record concerning this subject, but it bears only indirectly upon the issues for determination. Willard C., (sometimes hereinafter referred to as “grantor’*) owned part of the land in question when he started farming as a young man, and later acquired the rest of it, so that he had owned, lived upon and farmed the premises practically all his adult life. At the time the deed was made he was 72 years of age, and was living in the town of Gower. He died some two years and eight , months later on January 13, 1934, at State Hospital No. 2 in St. Joseph, to which institution he had been committed by court order of November 6, 1933. The hospital records show the cause of his death as “Broncho-pneumonia, cerebral arteriosclerosis. ’ ’ In the meantime, it appears grantor was taken *885 to Research Hospital in Kansas City, for observation and treatment. The records of that institution show he was admitted July 11, 1932, and on July 14,1932, “discharged into care of relatives as demented.”

On the issue of mental capacity it abundantly appears that there had been some impairment in the grantor’s mental faculties, culminating in the formal adjudication of incompetency about sixty days prior to his death. The evidence on this issue did not preponderate overwhelmingly in favor of either party. There were but two medical witnesses in the ease, one on each side — an expert for plaintiff, and the family physician for defendants. Several of the lay witnesses called by plaintiff detailed acts and conduct indicating unsoundness of mind on the part of grantor. The sharp contest was in relation to the dates of the latter, i. e., whether before or after May 27,1931, the date of the deed. Grantor contracted pneumonia in the late winter or early spring of 1931, and was quite ill. He was then living in Gower. He was attended by two physicians and a trained nurse, and later by practical nurses, or male attendants. His fever ran as high as 105 degrees, and for a time he became irrational, and difficult to keep confined to his bed.

It is not disputed that there were a few instances when the grantor became confused as to his whereabouts or events, even to the point of straying off or becoming lost. One of these involved these facts: One night while Price and Mel were moving sheep to the farm, their father who had retired, got out of bed, put on his overalls, and without shoes or socks, disappeared. Some neighbors and relatives were summoned, and he was found three-quarters of a mile away on the place from which the sheep were being moved. Price and his wife fixed the date of this incident as the last week in August, 1929. Of the neighbors just referred to (Mr. and Mrs. Graves), only the wife testified. She recalled the incident, but was unable to fix the date. She thought it was before the siege of pneumonia (1931), but was not sure, and on cross-examination declined to say whether it was in ’27, ’28, ’29, ’30, ’31, ’32 or ’33. Elmer very positively fixed this date as in 1933, and Mel was sure it was not earlier than 1932. Another time he wandered off, and was found by Mr. Schuster, who fixed the date as late in 1933.

Price put the noticeability of grantor’s impaired mental condition at an earlier time than any other witness, to-wit, January, 1927, at which time he testified his father started calling him “Charlie” (the name of his father’s brother who had died three years previously), and started calling Mel “John” (the name of another of his father’s brothers who was still living.) But he further testified that, at that time, his father was “becoming forgetful . . . getting his mules hitched up wrong,” but some days he would be all right; that he always worked.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W.2d 699, 355 Mo. 882, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weakley-v-weakley-mo-1947.