Wilcox v. Wilcox

191 N.W. 242, 221 Mich. 290, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 705
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1922
DocketDocket No. 3
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 191 N.W. 242 (Wilcox v. Wilcox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilcox v. Wilcox, 191 N.W. 242, 221 Mich. 290, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 705 (Mich. 1922).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Plaintiffs are the son and daughters of David Wilcox, deceased, who died intestate in Batavia township, Branch county, on January 30, 1918. They filed this bill to set aside a deed of a 40-acre farm in said township given by him to defendants, his brother Griffin Wilcox and wife, in 1910, under an agreement that they would care for and support him during the remainder of his life. Deceased was then 64' years of age and a widower. He thereafter lived with them upon the land in controversy until his death. The grounds alleged in plaintiffs’ bill for the relief asked, are mental incompetency, undue influence, want of consideration by reason of defendants’ failure to properly care for and maintain deceased during the remainder of his life, and that the papers were never delivered to defendants. Defendants duly answered in denial, and the case was heard on pleadings and [292]*292proofs taken in open court. After listening to the testimony produced by the respective parties and arguments of counsel the court dismissed plaintiffs’ bill, saying in part:

“I am not persuaded that David Wilcox was mentally incompetent nor that he was unduly influenced in consummating the transaction in question in this case. I was quite impressed that he, David, made a good bargain when he made his arrangements with defendants in this case; and the evidence shows that defendants did not fail to perform their contract.”

The 40-acre farm in controversy had been the home of deceased and his wife from the time they were married in 1865 until both were dead. At the time of their marriage it belonged to his wife. When they moved there it was mostly timber land, the scant improvements consisting of a small clearing and a poor upright of a house with a front room and two bedrooms downstairs. An old neighbor then living near described it as a “green 40” then worth from $400 to $600. In the years which followed deceased cleared the land, erected buildings, fenced and made an improved farm of it, upon which they made their living, and raised their three children, who are plaintiffs here.

Their son Elvin, the oldest, left home when 21 years of age and was 56 years old when this case was heard. Sarah, next younger, testified she was married in February, 1887, and left home the next fall. Serena, the youngest, was 41 years of age, married in 1898, then left home with her husband, returning after he deserted her in 1902, where she remained until she secured a divorce from him and was remarried to her present husband in 1904 when she again left and has since lived with him and their children.

In 1901, after their children were grown up, married and gone elsewhere to establish their homes, deceased’s wife so conveyed title to the 40 acres in controversy as to create a joint estate between them [293]*293as husband and wife with right of survivorship. She told a neighbor she had done this to fix matters to secure her husband a home, for “if she didn’t do something David would be turned out doors if she died first.” She died in February, 1910, leaving him alone in their old home. The deed to defendants in issue here was executed October 1, 1910. At that time the place was worth from $3,200 to $3,500.

On the death of his wife David Wilcox personally attended to selecting a cemetery lot for her burial, paid the cost and fees, taking a receipt therefor. Later he procured a monument for her grave, obtaining time for a portion of the purchase price on which he afterwards obtained a discount of $3 by paying the same before it was due. The monument dealer with whom he transacted the business said: “I could not'see anything wrong with him. He was about as close a buyer as I had at that time.” In August of that year his son Elvin, who now claims his father was then mentally incompetent, lost a child and purchased a half of his father’s cemetery lot, paying him $50 therefor and taking a deed.

Early in 1910, after the death and burial of his wife, deceased rented his farm for a year, making the deal himself, and held an auction sale of his personal property, also privately sold certain of his effects and some grain hauled to market. From these he realized over $700 in notes and cash which he deposited in the bank. In his auction and transactions in that connection his son Elvin assisted him. He conserved his funds deposited in the bank, and at his disposal, so that his account showed $396.03 to his credit when he died some 8 years later.

After disposing of his personal property and renting his farm he spent most of that spring and summer visiting his brothers and sister and his three married children. Elvin lived within a few miles of his old [294]*294home, his oldest daughter, Sarah McIntosh, in Flint, and the youngest daughter, Serena Baylis, on her husband’s farm in Calhoun county. His brother Griffin was a mason by trade living in Coldwater-and between his visits elsewhere he several times returned to Griffin’s home. While visiting his sister at Mendon he wrote his son Elvin inquiring if he could live with them. Elvin replied his wife had recently left the hospital in which she had undergone an operation and they were not keeping house, but when she became able to do so he could live with them. He made a similar proposal to his daughter in Flint, but, as she explained, she did not think best to make any such arrangement so long as there was liquor in Flint. He also made his brother Albert a proposition similar to that he consummated with Griffin, but Albert had a place of his own and declined. He then told Albert he was going down to his brother Griffin, and eventually the agreement involved here was entered into. In the meantime he told certain of his old friends and acquaintances of his plans and arrangement with Griffin. During that summer he talked about it with a prominent citizen and former mayor in Coldwater whom he had long known and for whom his brother Griffin had done mason work, telling him of the death of his wife, that he had unsuccessfully tried to get some of his children to go on the old farm and keep him, and finally had arranged with his brother Griffin to go there and keep him for the rest of his life, for which he would have the place. Some time after his wife’s death he told the undertaker, with whom he was well acquainted, that he was going over to Union and live with one of his children, and later in the season he called on him and said:

“Well, Charlie, I am back, I am going back to the old place where I will be at home. I have made arrangements with my brother Griff., who is going up [295]*295there to live with me and I am going to live with him, and whenever I am through whatever there is Griff, is to have.”

These and similar statements to other old acquaintances and neighbors were made prior to the execution of the deed and accompanying agreement.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hillman v. Huitt
227 N.W. 729 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1929)
Reuther v. Ziegenfus
225 N.W. 490 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 N.W. 242, 221 Mich. 290, 1922 Mich. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-v-wilcox-mich-1922.