133 N.Y.S. 529 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
Joseph Huber, the defendants’ testator, purchased ten unregistered bonds of the Brooklyn Union Elevated Railroad Company. Upon his death the bonds were found in his safe deposit
The opinion of Mr. Justice Lehman, who decided the case at Special Term, adequately deals with the question involved. We agree with the views well expressed by him, and desire only to point out a distinction between this and the case of Govin v. De Miranda (140 N. Y. 474), which appears to have been overlooked. That case was decided solely upon the written declaration of the testator to the effect that certain bonds belonged to the plaintiffs. There being nothing to explain or contradict, it was assumed that it was true and that the bonds “came to the ownership of the plaintiffs in some legal way — by purchase or gift from some one.” The serious question considered in the case was whether the positive declaration that the bonds belonged to the plaintiffs was qualified by the last clause of the statement, viz., “No person shall have the right to oppose this declaration, because it is founded on conscience and justice. I reserve this money only for what I may consider proper.” It was held that all of the statements contained in the declaration must be harmonized if possible and that, reading them together it was to be assumed in the absence of proof to the contrary that the bonds were the property of the plaintiffs, as the testator had unequivocally declared, and that they were in his possession “under some agency or possibly upon some trust.” In this case the established facts are that the testator was himself the owner of the bonds, and that he put them in an envelope, wrote across the face of it the words first-above quoted, and deposited them in his safe deposit box to which no one else had access. Ooncededly, the essential element of delivery to constitute a gift was wanting. The court found, what the surrounding circumstances indicate was the fact, that the testator intended his declaration to speak only from his death. He doubtless supposed that he could thus make a testamentary disposition, but there is nothing to suggest that he intended a trust, and the courts should not
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughlin and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.