delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff, as administrator of the estate of Mary Kirchner, deceased, filed a petition in the county court of Cass county for a citation against the defendants, Frank Kirchner and Mae Kirchner, to recover from them the possession of certain United States Postal Savings Certificates in the principal amount of $2,200 alleged in said petition to belong to the estate, which certificates defendants claimed to own by a gift causa mortis thereof.
It was stipulated on the trial that the certificates were delivered under such circumstances as to constitute a valid and complete gift causa mortis provided that such certificates could be made the subject of a gift causa mortis. The certificates were manually de- . livered without indorsement.
The county court ordered that the certificates be delivered to the plaintiff. On appeal the circuit court found the defendants to be the owners of the certificates and dismissed the petition. Plaintiff has perfected this appeal.
The only question for us to decide is whether the certificates which were given to the defendants by the decedent could be the subject, of a gift causa mortis.
The certificates, issued in 1937 and 1938, each bore the name of the decedent as depositor and, so far as is material, had on the face thereof the following language :
“Not Transferable
Not Negotiable
This certifies that the sum of-Hundred Dollars has been deposited with the Postal Sav- . ings System and will be payable to the Depositor at the above named Depository Office with: interest at the rate of two per cent per annum payable annually on the presentation of this certificate properly indorsed.”
Plaintiff contends such certificates constituted a contract exclusively between the Government, and the decedent as the depositor named in the certificates, and that defendants could not acquire the depositor’s rights to secure payment from the Government because the certificates themselves provided that they were not transferable and not negotiable.
As a general rule, every species of personal property capable of delivery, either constructive or actual, may be the subject of a gift causa mortis (28 C. J. page 696, par. 114). It is generally recognized that choses in action, including negotiable notes, may be the subject of a valid gift, without indorsement or assignment (Rothwell v. Taylor,
The fact that a promissory note has on its face the words “This note is not negotiable,” does not prevent the note being assigned. In such a case the assignees may recover on the indebtedness, subject to equities between the maker and payee (See Prins v. South Branch Lumber Co.,
We do not consider that the fact that the postal certificates in question were non-negotiahle by their terms interfered in any way with their being, made the subject of a valid gift.
The next question is whether the use of the words “not transferable” places the certificates out of the class of personal property which may be the proper subject of a gift causa mortis by delivery.
We have not been referred to any Illinois case in which the court has considered the effect of the words “not transferable” upon the rights of a donee of postal savings certificates. However, in the case of Weber v. Rosenheim,
We do not think that the situation in the case at bar differs in principle from that presented by a gift of stock certificates which provide on their face that no transfer of the certificates shall be effective unless registered on the books of the company. In this situation it has been held that as between the parties a gift may be made of such certificates by delivery and be effective irrespective of the provision as to transfer contained in the certificate. (Talbot v. Talbot, 32 R. I. 72,
There are cases from other jurisdictions in which the courts have considered the precise question before us and have held that postal savings certificates may be the subject of a valid gift by delivery.
In the case of Williams v. Letton,
A similar gift was upheld in Dietzen v. American Trust & Banking Co.,
The same question was considered by the court in In re Diskin’s Estate, 105 Pa. Sup. 519,
The case chiefly relied on by plaintiff to defeat the gift made to defendants is In re Estate of Wallace,
By stipulation the judge of the circuit court wrote the Postmaster General asking the following two questions :
“1. Does the Division of Postal Savings System recognize a gift causa mortis oí postal savings certificates 1 "
“2. If a valid gift causa mortis of postal savings certificates is established will the Division of Federal Savings System pay the amount represented by the certificates1 to the donee of the same?”
In reply the Postmaster General wrote such judge that the Department would
“Recognize a decree of judicial determination issued out of a court of competent jurisdiction, adjudicating the funds represented by the postal savings certificates of a deceased depositor to be a gift causa mortis, provided ... no appeal therefrom has been taken and that the time for taking such an appeal has expired. (39 USCA 767.) In the absence of such a decree the funds on deposit in a postal savings account, as a part of the assets of the depositor’s estate, may be disposed of in the same manner as any other assets of an estate.
‘ ‘ On the receipt in this office of a duly authenticated copy of the decree of judicial determination, payment of the postal savings account may be authorized to the donee named therein.”
By stipulation the answer of the Postmaster General was received and considered by the trial court as evidence.
We have examined the federal statute applying to postal savings and the Postal Laws and Regulations and both the statute and the Regulations contain this provision:
“The final judgment, order, or decree of any court of competent jurisdiction adjudicating any right or interest in the credit of any sums deposited by any person with a postal savings depository if the same shall not have been appealed from and the time for appeal has expired shall, ... be accepted and pursued by the Board of Trustees as conclusive of the title, right, interest, or possession so adjudicated, and any payment of said sum in accordance' with such order, judgment, or decree shall operate as a full and complete discharge of the United States from the claim or demand of any person or persons to the same.” ' (39 USCA, ch. 20, sec. 767; Postal Laws and Regulations, 1940, par. 1624.)
From the foregoing it appears that the federal statute and the postal regulations affecting postal certificates, do not present any bar to the eventual recovery by the defendants on the certificates given to them by the decedent.
It is our opinion the certificates were the proper subject of a gift causa mortis. The judgment of the circuit court in upholding such gift is accordingly affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
