Whittington v. McMasters

1940 OK 421, 109 P.2d 228, 188 Okla. 334, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 466
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 8, 1940
DocketNo. 29147.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1940 OK 421 (Whittington v. McMasters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whittington v. McMasters, 1940 OK 421, 109 P.2d 228, 188 Okla. 334, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 466 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

WELCH, V. C. J.

This action was commenced in 1938 to cancel a mortgage and foreclosure proceedings and to recover the real estate, and is based upon the theory that the mortgage executed thereon in 1922 was void for the reason that same was at the time the homestead of the owner, and at the time of the execution of the mortgage the wife of the owner was incompetent and incapable of understanding the nature of her act when she joined her husband in the execution thereof. The action is prosecuted by or on behalf of Mollie P. McMasters, surviving widow, and several surviving children of Walter W. McMasters, deceased, former owner of the land involved.

Shortly after the execution of the mortgage the owner died, and the same was foreclosed in 1928, and the defendant here purchased the same at sale upon foreclosure.

Plaintiffs prevailed in the trial court, and defendant has appealed.

Defendant urges here that plaintiffs are pursuing an equitable remedy, citing Warner v. Coleman, 107 Okla. 292, 231 P. 1053, and Moors v. Sanford (Kan.) 41 P. 1064, and that the findings of fact of the court and jury are not supported by the evidence, and are against the clear weight thereof.

We have examined the record with respect to the question thus presented *335 and agree with defendant’s position as to the finding by the court that the wife was without understanding of the nature of her act at the time she joined in the execution of the mortgage.

Since 1908 to the time this suit was brought, the wife has suffered a number of attacks of a mental disorder described as manic depressive psychosis. Between such dates she was committed to the Central Oklahoma State Hospital for the insane at Norman several times. She would remain in the hospital for varying periods of time of a few months to several years, and would be discharged and return to her home and family for approximately equal periods.

At the time the mortgage was executed, on November 22, 1922, she had been out of the hospital since October 2, 1916. She was returned to the hospital on December 2, 1922.

Several of plaintiffs’ witnesses were her children, most of whom were quite young when the mortgage was executed. One of the eldest of these, who was 17 years of age at the time the mortgage was executed and who was present when the same was signed, testified that his mother refused to sign for several days, and resisted his father’s efforts to persuade her to sign the same for several days before she did sign it; and that she cried about signing; that from the date the mortgage was signed to the time she was returned to the hospital she was in a very bad condition; would get mad at the smaller children; would get up in the middle of the night and start washing, and tried to get the other folks up at any time of the night to go to work; and at times would have to call in the neighbors to help protect the smaller children from her. He also testified that his mother was sick at the time the mortgage was signed, and that although she signed some of the papers, she refused to sign all of them, and that he signed her name on some of the papers at his father’s direction. The trial court found, however, that the wife signed the mortgage. No other of the witnesses for plaintiffs were present at the time the mortgage was signed, but others of the children testified that plaintiff’s general mental condition was bad about the time it was signed; she would act very rude and try to hurt the children; that the father begged the mother to sign a mortgage and that she did not want to do so. The testimony of plaintiffs’ witnesses generally was to the effect that at times the mother acted as a normal person and at other times she fought the children and would rave.

Other witnesses testified that occasionally they would be called in to help control her and keep her frpm hurting the children.

The witness who represented the loan company when the mortgage was signed testified he was present and that he did not observe any unsual conduct on the part of the wife when the mortgage was signed; that she conducted herself in all respects as would a normal person.

The evidence, largely on the part of plaintiffs, shows that the mother was again at home in 1925-26-27, and that during such time she transacted the business of operating the farm, borrowing money at the bank, etc. (her husband being then deceased), and that on at least two occasions she personally wrote the loan company seeking leniency in the matter of payments due on the land loan, and that she talked with her son regarding the mortgage. The communications to the loan company admittedly written by her are in evidence and appear rational and disclose full knowledge of the existence of the mortgage, with no suggestion of a question concerning its validity. She and her children continued to occupy and till the land and make payments on the loan until shortly before the mortgage was foreclosed.

Dr. D. W. Griffin, the medical superintendent of the Central Oklahoma State Hospital for some 30 years, after qualifying as an expert on mental diseases, testified that he had treated the alleged incompetent in his institution during the periods of her commitment since 1908.

*336 He testified further:

“A. She is what we know as a manic depressive type of individual, that goes along and gets all right and returns back to her home, and goes along until another attack comes on, another cycle; then she is back again. In the meantime, however, those patients as a rule are in good health while they are at home. They are different from most any other class of individuals, because they are in good mental condition during this lucid interval. Q. During the lucid interval? A. Yes, sir. Q. Was it during the lucid intervals that she was paroled from the hospital? A. Yes, sir. Q. Why did she have to be recommitted? A. Another attack, another cycle, came on, and she would have to be recommitted. Q. Doctor, you have just testified that this lady was paroled October 2, 1916, and returned December 2, 1922. A. Yes, sir. Q. That is a period of six years and two months? A. Yes, sir. Q. The issue in this case is whether Mollie McMasters was mentally competent on November 22, 1922, to understand the nature of the transaction of the giving of a note and mortgage for $1,000 by herself and her husband, on their farm. I will ask you to assume that she signed the note and mortgage; then I will ask you to state whether or not in your opinion she was mentally competent to understand the nature of such transaction on said date? A. I think she was. * * * Q. Do you recall about when that was that you discussed this with her; how long ago? A. This morning. Q. This morning? A. Yes, sir. * * * Q. Assuming that she was a farm woman all of her life please state whether or not on November 22, 1922, she knew what a iportgage of a farm was? A. Yes, she did. Q. Dr. Griffin, does her ability to recall and discuss the giving of this note and mortgage back there 16 years ago have any significance to you as a medical man as to her mental competency to understand the nature of such transaction when it occurred? A. I think she did, because she talked to me about, as mentioned a few moments ago, this morning. Q. The question is what significance is it? Do you think it significant, if she can recall it, that you think she was competent at the time she signed the note and mortgage? A. Yes, sir. Q.

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Bluebook (online)
1940 OK 421, 109 P.2d 228, 188 Okla. 334, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittington-v-mcmasters-okla-1940.