Hannan v. Larsen
Hannan v. Larsen
Opinion of the Court
The bill of complaint in this cause is filed by complainant, as administrator of the estate of Helen R. Hannan; its purpose being to secure the cancellation of a bill of sale purporting to convey to defendant certain household furniture, the property of said decedent in her lifetime, and to compel defendant to account for the proceeds of certain promissory notes sold by defendant to said decedent.
The record discloses the following facts: Complainant was married to said Helen R. Hannan in the year 1894. She had become'addicted to the use of drugs prior to her marriage, but was supposed to have overcome her habit at that time. Later she resumed the habit, and seems to have ultimately become confirmed in the use of such drugs as chloral and sulphonal.
It appears- that decedent was a woman of considerable property, and that upon the resumption of marital relations in November, 1909, she loaned to complainant $8,600, taking from him his promissory note for that sum secured by a certificate of stock for $10,000 in the Grainger-Hannan Company, which concern complainant had assisted in organizing.
When the final separation occurred, Mr. Hampton, complainant’s solicitor, represented the decedent, while Mr. Alfred Lucking represented complainant, in the settlement of the financial differences between the parties. By the terms of the settlement complainant’s indebtedness was ascertained and divided into a series of notes of $150 each, payable monthly.
Decedent sought and secured a divorce from complainant December 15, 1911. In the same month decedent signed an order authorizing defendant to dispose of the unpaid notes (48 in number), who, after attempting to sell them elsewhere, finally, about January 13, 1912, sold them to complainant for the sum of $4,675. Of this sum defendant paid to decedent $3,500, retaining the balance and taking a receipt in full from decedent covering the transaction.
On April 12, 1912, decedent executed a formal bill of sale to defendant of her household furniture, which at that time was in storage in a Chicago warehouse. The expressed consideration is stated as “$1 and other valuable consideration,” but defendant claims to have
On April 25, 1912, decedent, having in the meantime gone from Chicago to Mt. Clemens and thence to Detroit, was discovered, in her room at the Hotel Pontchartrain, dead. Complainant was appointed administrator of the estate of his divorced wife, and this suit followed. Broadly the bill charges, and complainant by evidence sought to establish, the fact that on January 13, 1912, and on April 12, 1912, decedent was mentally incompetent to transact the business evidenced by the instruments she signed on those days. Bearing upon this question much and conflicting testimony was introduced.
Comment upon this feature' of the case is unnecessary, except to point out that much of the evidence introduced on behalf of complainant, if true and capable of sustaining the inferences drawn therefrom by complainant, would tend to establish the fact that decedent was mentally incompetent for several years prior to her death. Yet we find that during this period and after the adjudication of insanity, now strongly relied upon by complainant, complainant did not hesitate to do much and important business with decedent, evidently treating (if not considering) her as compos mentis. In 1909 he borrowed from her $8,600, and thereafter lived with her for more than a year after having filed a bill for divorce. Ordinarily' husbands do not seek to divorce insane wives. In January, 1911, he dealt with her as a sane woman in the settlement of his indebtedness to her, and Mr. Hampton, complainant’s solicitor, represented her in that transaction. It is inconceivable that either complainant or Mr. Hampton believed her incompetent at that time.
In December, 1911, decedent secured- a divorce.
On January 13, 1912, but three months before her death, complainant himself bought from her through defendant, at a heavy discount, the notes he had given her. In all his dealings with his wife, we must assume that complainant honestly believed her to be sane, otherwise he would stand convicted of the grossest imposition, not only upon her, but upon the court. His acts in the premises are, in our opinion, more convincing of her sanity than his testimony to the contrary. A careful examination of the record convinces us that the decedent sometimes, perhaps frequently, while under the influence of drugs, acted irrationally, but that up to the day of her death she continued to be possessed of such mental vigor as to enable her to transact her business affairs,- some of which were of very considerable magnitude and importance, without exciting a doubt as to her sanity in the minds of those with whom she dealt. It is true that her lawyers in Chicago testified that in their opinion she was mentally deficient in the early part of the year 1912. It is, however, significant that these same attorneys rendered her professional services and received compensation therefor during this- identical period, and that their opinions given in evidence were based upon facts ascertained after the services were rendered and upon subsequent reflection.
It is urged by complainant that the consideration (8700) for the household goods and rugs is so grossly inadequate as in itself to require relief. These goods had been in use some 15 years. The learned circuit judge held, and we are disposed to agree with his finding, that the consideration was not inadequate.
The decree is affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- HANNAN v. LARSEN
- Status
- Published