167 S.W.2d 831 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1942
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *742 Reversing.
The question before us is whether the evidence to establish delivery of a passbook was sufficient to take the case to the jury on the issue of a gift of a savings account of $1,012.66. The trial court held it was not and directed a verdict against the claimant.
Mrs. Mattie Aubrey, of Lexington, died July 16, 1931, survived by her sister, Mrs. Nannie Coryell, who lived with her, and a number of nieces and nephews. One of these, Mrs. Mattie McClanahan, also a widow, lived on a farm in Fayette County; her sister, Mrs. Lizzie Wallace, living with her. In proceedings in the county court, instituted against Mrs. McClanahan by six of the heirs, it was shown that she had disbursed $280 principally for a doctor's bill and funeral expenses, which was about what she had received as administratrix disregarding the claimed personal gift. She reported that Mrs. Aubrey had had $1,000 on savings deposit which she had given her during her last illness, saying that she wished her and Mrs. Wallace to have it in payment for the attention and services they had rendered Mrs. Aubrey and Mrs. Coryell during the years, and requested that in consideration of the gift they care for the latter who was an invalid. This was controverted. In a response to a later motion respecting a settlement and to have the administratrix removed because of her adverse claim, Mrs. McClanahan joined issue on some of the charges and stated that the decedent and her sister were very old; that Mrs. Aubrey was deaf; that during the last months of her life she was practically helpless. She outlined the services and attention given her. The movants limited their denial to *743 the justification of the appropriation of the savings account as a gift. The rest of the allegations of the response, therefore, stand admitted. It appears that only the deposition of Mrs. McClanahan, taken as on cross examination, was filed in the county court. In this she testified that her aunt had given her the account. Exceptions to her report as administratrix and the response were overruled, but it was ordered she be removed as administratrix because of the adverse claim. In due course the complaining heirs filed an appeal to the circuit court from that part of the judgment which had the effect of sustaining Mrs. McClanahan's claim to the savings account. She never appealed from the order of removal, and so far as this record shows no other action was taken by her as personal representative.
The evidence of several neighbors is uncontradicted that these nieces, particularly Mrs. McClanahan, were very kind and attentive to their aunts. Mrs. McClanahan came there practically every day and kept them supplied with farm products and sometimes groceries. She looked diligently after their care and personal needs. Mrs. Aubrey would often have a neighbor call Mrs. McClanahan at night and she would always respond promptly. Time and again Mrs. Aubrey expressed her devotion of and dependence upon Mrs. McClanahan, and told her friends that when she died she wanted her and Mrs. Wallace to have her property. Sometimes she qualified the statement that it should be after her sister Nannie was one. To Mrs. Reynolds she had said: "If anything happens to me I have a thousand dollars Mr. Vaughn knows about it; it is insurance money; and I want Mattie to have it; I want her to have it." This, she said, was "because she has done more than any one else." There was no intimacy between Mrs. Aubrey and her other nieces and nephews, some of whom lived out of the state. They never came about her except one called at the hospital in her last days. When she died Mrs. Aubrey owned the house in which she lived, the furnishings and the savings account, and nothing more.
Sometime in the latter part of 1930, Mrs. Aubrey broke her hip and was taken to St. Joseph Hospital. While there she asked a neighbor, Mrs. Darnaby, to keep her passbook until she got home. After she was *744 taken home Mrs. Darnaby gave it back to her, saying she did not want to be responsible for it any longer. She saw Mrs. Aubrey take a black bag from under her pillow and put the book in it. After that, apparently a short time, Mrs. Aubrey broke her hip again. She also suffered from cancer. Mrs. Minnie Rose, her nurse, testified that on several occasions Mrs. Aubrey repeated what she had told others about wanting Mrs. McClanahan and Mrs. Wallace to have her property after her sister's death. Mrs. Rose testified:
"Q. Did you ever see Mrs. Aubrey give anything to Mrs. McClanahan? A. I don't know if I did or not. I know that one day when I was in her bed room and she was in her wheel chair she asked me to look under her pillow and give her her black bag. I got the bag for her from under the pillow and she took it and got something out of it and she either said 'Matt this is for you' or 'Matt I want to give this to you,' I don't remember which."
The witness did not see what the bag contained or identify what Mrs. Aubrey gave her. As to what she did see, as just related, she testified clearly and persuasively in an effort to develop something else from her under cross examination. As we read the record, this occurred after Mrs. Aubrey's leg was broken the second time and before she was taken to the Good Samaritan Hospital, where she died within a month.
On June 11, 1931, Mrs. Aubrey signed a will, but it was not probated because attested by only one witness. She undertook to give one-half of her personal property to her sister; certain articles of furniture to three friends; dishes to a grand niece; her watch to Mrs. Wallace; other dishes to Mrs. McClanahan; $25 each to four other nieces, and concluded: "If there is anything left when my sister dies it is to be divided equally between my nieces, Mrs. Lizzie Wallace and Mattie McClanahan, provided they have taken care of their Aunt Nannie." This was done by them until Mrs. Coryell's death a year or so afterward.
Virgil McClanahan, appellee's son, testified that a week or ten days before Mrs. Aubrey died, he saw her savings account passbook and her will in his mother's dresser drawer.
To perfect a gift of personal property there must *745
be a delivery of possession, actual, constructive or symbolic, with the intention to transfer title — permanently if inter vivos, either conditionally or permanently if causa mortis. The delivery of a savings account passbook consummates its gift and transfers the money on deposit to the donee if that was the intention and purpose of the donor. This, it is generally said, is because such book is equivalent to a certificate of deposit, the presentation of which authorizes withdrawal of the funds. Stephenson's Adm'r v. King,
The ease with which a fraud may be perpetuated in cases of this character has always called for close scrutiny by the courts. So it has been reiterated in nearly every case involving a gift asserted to have been *746
made by one since deceased that there must be clear and satisfactory proof of every element requisite to a gift. Combs v. Roark's Adm'r,
In the recent opinion of Stark's Adm'x v. Herndon's Adm'r,
In Chipman's Adm'r v. Gerlach, supra, the rule for regarding indirect evidence was applied in the case of a claimed gift of a ring in possession of the fiancee of a deceased man who had expressed his purpose of giving it to her. We there said [
"The fact of manual possession of a chattel obviously is not in and of itself sufficient to warrant the presumption that there had been an actual delivery of it and an irrevocable and unconditional transfer of title. But possession is always an element in the donee's favor and an undisputed record of often repeated statements of the donor that he intended to give or had given something to the one who has possession of it gives rise to a factual presumption or inference that that intention had been consummated. Possession is open to explanation *748 and the force of the inference to uphold the claim of the donee of an executed gift is weakened if the donor is dead and the donee had ready access to his property and effects. Of course, circumstances alter cases and the peculiar facts of each determines the strength or weakness of the inference of a consummated gift which possession affords. They may create the antithetical presumption that there was no gift. Thus, in Moore's Adm'r v. Edwards, supra [
248 Ky. 517 ,58 S.W.2d 915 ], to cite an extreme instance, although the claimed donee had possession of some securities which had belonged to a deceased person, the circumstances afforded the clear inference that the possession was obtained by fraud and undue influence and that there had not been a valid gift inter vivos."
In relation to the possession of a savings deposit passbook, in Union Trust Savings Bank v. Tyler,
As shown in the notes of 40 A.L.R., 1257, 1262, and 84 A.L.R. 565, there are many cases holding that while mere possession of a bank book is not conclusive evidence of delivered possession, it is a fact to be weighed in considering ownership of the deposit.
Appellant cites two cases in which the transactions were much like that presented, but the identity of a *749
passbook in each was clear. The courts held gifts causa mortis had been proved. Brooks v. Mitchell, supra; In re Swade,
The only evidence in the record of anything opposed to the claim of a gift (the evidence of the heirs not being presented because of the peremptory instruction given at the conclusion of the claimant's proof) is the statement of Mrs. McClanahan in her response filed in the County Court to the effect that the deceased had given the savings account both to her sister, Mrs. Wallace, and herself in payment for their attention and services, and the inclusion of Mrs. Wallace in the deceased's general statement of her wishes in respect to her property. Obviously, this goes to the credibility of the present claim; but in any event no one but Mrs. Wallace could raise any question of a right to a division.
On a motion for a peremptory instruction, the court of trial and court of review must regard all inferences that may be fairly and rationally drawn from the evidence favorable to the party opposing it. The direction of a verdict against him is not authorized unless after regarding every reasonable inference to be deduced from the testimony it can be said there is no evidence to support the cause of action sufficient to sustain a verdict in his favor. Nelson v. Black Diamond Mining Co.,
That part of the judgment which requires Mrs. McClanahan to make a settlement as administratrix is not authorized. She had been removed by the County Court, and this is not a suit to settle the estate. The issue was not raised and there was no prayer for a settlement.
Judgment reversed.
Whole Court sitting. *750