188 Mo. App. 667 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
Plaintiff began this suit in the probate court of Miller county under section 74, Revised Statutes 1909, against the administrator of her father’s estate to compel him to inventory ten shares of the capital stock of the Farmers & Traders Bank of Iberia as property of the estate. In answer to the interrogatories defendant, who is the brother of plaintiff, stated, in substance, that the stock which was evidenced by two certificates for five shares each belonged to him as a gift from his father. A trial in the circuit court, to which the cause was appealed, resulted in a judgment awarding half the stock to plaintiff and the other half to defendant. We reversed that judgment and remanded the cause on the ground that the only issue presented by' the pleadings and evidence was whether the stock in its entirety was the property of defendant, in virtue of the alleged gift, or belonged to the estate and should be included in the inventory thereof. [179 Mo. App. 240.]
The second trial ended in a verdict and judgment which decided this issue in favor of the estate and defendant appealed.
Thomas Doubikin died intestate in a hospital in St. Louis shortly after undergoing a surgical operation and was survived by his widow, defendant (his only son), and five daughters. On the day before his departure from his home in Iberia for St. Louis and in
Defendant was not allowed to testify, being disqualified as a witness, and there is no evidence of a delivery of the certificates to him by his father and no fact from which such delivery might be inferred, unless the fact that defendant had possession of the certificates on the day of his father’s funeral he regarded as such evidence. An unmarried daughter of Doubikin who lived with her parents testified that her father kept the certificates and other valuable papers at home in a box and that on the day before he went to St. Louis he had her bring the box to him and then, in a short time, had her return it to the place from which she had brought it and that he said to her: “I have signed the bank stock over to Walter to see after until I get back,” and further said that if he did not survive the operation, he wished the stock divided among his children. There are facts and circumstances referred to in the testimony of this witness from which it might be inferred that defendant secretly procured the certificates from the box after the death of his father. -
In a proceeding under the statute (sec. 74, R. S. 1909) against an administrator for withholding assets when the defendant admits having received the property but claims it as a gift from his intestate, either inter vivos or causa mortis, the burden is upon him to establish such fact. [Tygard v. Falor, 163 Mo. 234.] The most that may be drawn from the evidence in favor of defendant is that his father indorsed an assignment of the stock to him on the backs of the certificates, but there is no sufficient proof of a delivery of' the certificates by his father to him. It may be conceded that an assignment and delivery of the certificates with the expressed intention on the part of the assignor to bestow them upon the assignee, either as a gift inter vivos or causa mortis, would have been sufficient to complete such gift and to transfer the title to the shares to the assignee, but without such delivery the gift could not be completed. [Foley v. Harrison, 233 Mo. 460; Godard v. Conrad, 125 Mo. App. 165.]
The testimony of defendant’s witnesses is found not to support the view that the certificates were delivered or that a delivery was contemplated by Doubikin. Prom all the evidence it appears to have been his idea to keep them in his own possession as long as he lived, but to indorse an assignment upon them in order that if he should die his son might take them and handle them as the owner of the legal title. .Whether his purpose was to give them to his son for the latter’s sole benefit or as the trustee for all his children is immaterial now. If he intended to make a gift, either inter vivos or causa mortis, he did not do it, but died with the title to the shares still vested in himself. In not being able to show a delivery of the certificates, defendant failed in his proof and the court would have been justified in directing the jury to return the verdict they did return. In that view of the case it will not be necessary to discuss alleged errors relating to the instructions. The judgment is affirmed. ■