Opinion by
Thе appeal raised the question whether negotiable securities found after death in decedent’s safe deposit box in envelopes inscribed by decedent as the property of
claimant
were owned by claimant, or whether they were the property оf
decedent
which he intended to transfer to claimant as a gift. The court ruled that the transaction constituted an ineffective gift and
Appellee complains that appellant has failed to comply with Rule 40 of this Court, in that she has failed to print all of the evidence introduced at the audit. An examination of the voluminous original record discloses that at the audit of the account four separate issues were litigated; the testimony is 482 pages in length, with large bundles of exhibits, etc.; all testimony relating to the present claim has been printed, together with the auditing judge’s opinion. The exhibits were not photostated and attached to the printed record in appellant’s paper book. There appears to be no controversy relating to such exhibits. Appelleе has made no motion to quash and disclaims such desire. We will, therefore, review the case upon the record as presented.
At the audit of the account of the executor, Emma W. Sherwood, a woman over eighty years of age, a resident of the State of New York, claimed specified securities found by the fiduciary, after the death, in decedent’s safe deposit box. James O. Carr, the decedent, was a lawyer, a member of the Allegheny County bar; he did not actively engage in the practice of his prоfession; when he died testate May 23, 1949, his estate as shown by the schedule of distribution amounted to $446,365.84; he Avas survived by a wife, but no issue.
The auditing judge found: “The securities claimed by Emma W. Sherwood are set forth in the Inventory and Appraisement in a separate schedule. The aрpraised value of the securities is $12,256.58. They consist of sixteen separate items of which thirteen are coupon bearer bonds and three are certificates for shares of stock. Two of the stock certificates are registered in the name of James O. Carr and are endorsed by him in blank. The other stock certificate is regis
The record does not disclose when and how the securities in the marked envelopes were acquired, and whether by decedent or claimant.
The court below ruled: “The fact that the securities were in the possession of the decedent at the date of his death raises a presumption that they are his property ... In the case at bar no evidence was adduced which overcomes the presumption of law that the securities claimed by Mrs. Sherwood were the property of James O. Carr at the date of his death.”
We are unable to agree with this ruling. A
presumption of ownership
does not arise
solely
because property is in the
possession
of decedent at death. Many circumstances may exist under which property is in the possession of a decedent without the presumption or inference of decedent’s ownership. The burden of proof is on anyone who claims property in the possession of anоther to establish facts essential to the validity of his claim of ownership:
Henes v. McGovern,
Curiously enough Shober Estate, 67 D. & C. 251, 257, is cited by both appellant and appellee in support of their respective positions. It has many features similar to thosе in the present case. Judge Ladner (later Mr. Justice Ladner of this Court) was the auditing judge. In decedent’s safe deposit box was found a sum of money in a sealed envelope whereon decedent had written, but not signed, “This belongs to [claimant].” Claimant contended that the money was his and he had given same to decedent for safekeeping; he did not claim the money as a gift from decedent. Incompetency of claimant as a witness was waived. He attempted to prove the claim by his own oral testimony. The auditing judge rejected the claim because he disbelieved claimant’s testimony. Claimant having failed to establish his claim, it was properly rejected.
Henes v. McGovern,
“In the case of Abrath v. N. E. Ry. Co., 32 W. R. 50, 53, Lord Justice Bowen said: ‘In order to make my opinion clear, I should like to say shortly how I understand the term “burden of proof.” In every lawsuit somebody must go on with it; the plaintiff is the first to begin, and if he does nothing he fails. If he makes a prima facie case and nothing is done by the other side to answer it, the defendant fails. The test, therefore, as to burden of proof is simply to consider which party would .be successful if no evidence at all was given, or if. no more evidence was given than is given
In the present case
claimant
had the
initial
burden of proving that she was the owner, or presumptive owner, of the securities which she claims. Because a surviving party to the transaction, she is incompetent to testify: Act of May 23, 1887, P. L. 158, sec. 5 (e), 28 PS 322;
Swieczkowski v. Sypniewski,
To sustain her
initial
burden of proof claimant relies upon the following: decedent was an attorney-at-law; while not in active practice, he did рrepare or assisted in preparing her federal income tax returns from 1944 until 1949; on January 25, 1949, decedent mailed claimant the income tax return for the year 1948
This established a presumptive or prima, facie ownership of the securities in claimant. It cast the burden upon the executor of decedent’s estate to prove that decedent had owned the stocks and bonds shortly before his death and that decedent, with the securities still in his possession, was attempting by means of his written declaration to consummate a gift. This proof the executor did not produce.
The court below ruled that the relationship of attorney and client was not established. With this we do not agree. While decedent may not have been an
Three cases are cited by the learned auditing judge as authority for the principle that “securities ... in the possession of the decedent at the date of his death raises а presumption that they are his property: Criswell’s Estate,
The appellant made out a
prima facie
case and because nothing was done by appellee to answer it, the case of the appellee falls. Since the claimant established her title to the securities, the executor is directed to surrender them to claimant:
Paxson’s Estate,
The decree of the court below is reversed, at appellee’s cost, the securities in controversy to be delivered to appellant, with necessary transfers.
