Court Opinion

ID: 7109208
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:24:23.937401+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:40.862310
License: Public Domain

Sherwin, J.
This is an action to set aside conveyances of real estate from husband to wife. It is alleged that Datus E. Sedgwick, the grantor, was of unsound mind on the eleventh day of December, 1895, when he conveyed the property in question to his wife, M. *746Frank Sedgwick. At the time of these conveyances Datus E. Sedgwick was eighty-four years of age, and the wife well along in years, "íhere had been some litigation between Datus E. Sedgwick and one Anderson over a small piece of land, prior thereto. The wife evidently conceived the idea that Anderson was maturing plans for a general assault upon her husband’s estate immediately upon his death. She seems to have been entirely sincere in this belief, and to have entertained it until it became thoroughly fixed in her mind. There was no foundation for it in fact, and nothing upon which to base it, except the previous litigation between her husband and Anderson, which had been determined in favor of Anderson. She claimed that Anderson had forged deeds to all of hex-husband’s property, and that he was awaiting his death, ready thereafter to assert title thereto. She pressed this subject xxpon her husband, who was in feeble health, time and again. It seems to have been the one subject in her mind for a long time. She prayed for strength and for guidance to thwart Anderson in the scheme of villany she firmly believed he contemplated, and she insisted that the way to do this was to have the title of the property transferred to her, which was done, after consultation with the family lawyex-. Both of these parties were afterwards adjudged insane, and both were confined in hospitals. Datus E. Sedgwick died therein after the commencement of this action. That the wife was acting in perfect good faith in this matter, we do not doubt. Nor do we doubt that it became and was an insane delusion with her for some time before the conveyances were made. A careful examination of the evidence has led us to the conclusion that the delusion which so firmly held possession of hex- mind was finally participated' in by her husband, and that the conveyances were the result thereof, axxd that they were not the acts of a sound mind. For this reason the conveyances are set aside, as prayed, and the case reversed.