43 Ky. 535 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1844
delivered tlio opinion of the Court.
In 1837, James Brown became the security for the plaintiff in error, on a note to Peter Atherton for $700, borrowed money. In the spring or early in the summer of 1838, the note was paid off and taken in by the security, who shortly afterwards died intestate. His widow and J. G. Thomas administered on his estate, and in September, 1838, the plaintiffs in error executed their note to the administrators for the amount so paid by their intestate in discharge of the note to Atherton. Some time afterwards the widow of James Brown married the defendant, Carpenter, and the note of the plaintiffs in error to the administrators fell into his hands. The plaintiffs having made partial payments thereon, in 1841, took it in and gave their note to Carpenter for the residue, being $715 86. Upon this note Carpenter subsequently brought suit and recovered judgment. The plaintiffs in error then exhibited their bill alledging, in addition to the foregoing facts, that they were the natural sons of James Brown, deceased, and had been always so acknowledged and recognized by him-,- that being engaged in the mercantile business iá a small way, they applied to him, in 1837, for some pecuniary assistance, and not having the money on hand himself, he had aided them
The defendants answer and deny that the payment of the note to Atherton by the decedent was a gift or so intended by him.' And Carpenter insists that whatever equity the complainants' may have originally had, it was too late to set it up against him; that the claim had been received by the administratrix, his wife, on account of her interest in her former husband’s estate.
The Court below dismissed the complainants bill and they have brought the case before this Court for revision.
Whether the money paid by James Brown, deceased, to Atherton, was or not a valid' gift to the complainants is the main question for consideration.
That he always recognized the complainants as his children; manifested for them a good deal of parental re. gard and attachment; repeatedly expressed much solicitude for their welfare and his intention to give them a start, to assist them in their pecuniary affairs, is very conclusively established by the testimony. So far as appears from any thing in the record, the payment to Atherton was voluntary; there was no coercion nor was the decedent even requested to pay off the note. It is proved that he had a very ample estate, and was regarded in the section of the country where he resided, as a wealthy man. He had a wife, by whom he had several children,
In this case it is urged that there was no delivery; but in order to determine what delivery was requisite, it may be inquired in what the gift consisted. The payment of the money in discharge of the note, we think, constituted the gift; the act was complete when the money was paid, if paid, as we have assumed, as a gift. The benefit was thereby conferred and was virtually received by the donees. The donor had parted with the possession of the thing, and with all control and dominion over it; he could not recall the money paid nor change the nature of the act. To render the gift perfect, it was not necessary to deliver the note to the donees. When paid, the note was functus officio; the liability upon it of those who had executed it, was extinct; no action could be maintained upon it against the donor or the donees. It was not the note or the delivery that constituted the gift, but its payment. If paid as a gift, the donor acquired thereby no right to demand the amount paid from the donees, nor did any cause of action .thereby accrue to-him against them. In this view of the case, we are of opinion that the administrators of James Brown had no claim against the complainants for the money paid Atherton by their intestate, and that so far as the note executed to them by the complainants embraced the amount and interest so paid, it was without consideration. The subsequent note given by the complainants to the defendant, Samuel Carpenter, and the judgment thereon at law, ought not to affect their right to relief. Upon the inter, marriage of Carpenter with the administratrix, he appears to have assumed the management of the estate; he and his wife are still connected with the administration of the estate, and he should be regarded, under all the circumstances, as occupying the attitude, in reference to the'claim in contest, of his wife as administratrix.
We are, therefore, of opinion that the Court below erred in dismissing complainants’ bill. The judgment at law should have been perpetually enjoined. And, upon
The decree is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded, that a decree may be rendered, perpetually enjoining the defendant, Samuel Carpenter, from the collection of his judgment at law against the complainants, and that the administrators of James Brown may be decreed to pay the complainants such sum as has been paid by them on account of the money paid by said James, in discharge of the note to Atherton, and to ascertain the sum so paid, a commissioner may be appointed.
As it appears a claim for about $60, which the administrators had against the complainants, was included in the first note they gave the administrators, that claim will be considered as discharged out of what has been paid by the complainants, and the decree against the administrators will be for the residue actually paid by complainants on account of the discharge, by the deceased, of the note to Atherton.