Hamby v. Brooks

86 Ark. 448 | Ark. | 1908

McCulloch, J.

Appellee, Mae C. Brooks, presented and filed her claim on verified account in the aggregate sum of $950, exclusive of interest, against the estate of her deceased husband, J. T. Brooks. The case was tried in the circuit court on appeal from the probate court, and, after all the testimony had been introduced, the court instructed the jury to return a verdict in her favor for the full amount claimed. Judgment was rendered accordingly, and the administrator appealed to this court.

The account sued on contained three separate items, as follows :

1. - Amount collected by J. T. Brooks on 12 notes executed by one B ringle to plaintiff and proceeds used under promise to pay same to plaintiff on demand ..........................$ 600.00
2. Amount paid by plaintiff for J. T. Brooks on life insurance premium under promise to repay same to plaintiff on demand ............... 225.00
3. Amount proceeds sale of horse belonging to plaintiff collected by J. T. Brooks under promise to pay on demand .................... 125.00
Total ................................$ 950.00

The undisputed evidence introduced established the claim. The defense offered by the administrator to the first item of the account was that the amount collected by Brooks was used by him in the purchase of a lot for his wife (appellee) and in building a house thereon; and to the second item that it was barred by the statute of limitations.

The defense offered to the first item was, in effect, a plea of payment, and it devolved upon appellant to establish the defense by preponderance of the testimony. He assigns as error the exclusion of certain testimony of witnesses Regan, Hinton and Carrington. The substance of the excluded testimony of Regan was a statement made to him by Brooks at the time he purchased the notes in question from the latter to the effect that he intended to use the proceeds of the notes in purchasing a lot from Hinton. The ex parte statements made by Brooks as to what he intended to do 'with the money which the evidence shows he had promised to repay to appellee on demand were not binding on her, and were not admissible as evidence.in the case. They were purely hearsay, and were properly excluded.

Appellant offered to prove by Hinton that he sold a certain lot to Brooks for a cash consideration of $500 and executed the deed in the name of appellee. Appellant also offered to prove by Carrington that he built a house on the lot in question for Brooks in consideration of the sum of three hundred and ten dollars. This was excluded by the court. If there had been any evidence offered tending to show that Brooks repaid the money due appellee by purchasing the lot and building the house, and that she authorized him to expend the money in that way, the evidence would have been competent for the purpose of showing that he purchased the lot and caused the building to *be constructed and paid for same. The mere fact, however, that he purchased the lot, taking title in her name, and built a house thereon, raised no presumption of payment, and would not have been sufficient to warrant a finding of repayment of the money due. The exclusion of the testimony was therefore not prejudicial. When a husband purchases property, and has it conveyed to his wife, or expends money in improving her property, the sum ^so expended will be presumed to be a gift. The law will not imply a promise on her part to repay the amount, nor will it raise a presumption that he intended thereby to create a trust in his own favor. Neither will there be a presumption that he intended thereby to repay a debt which he owed his wife. Ward v. Ward, 36 Ark. 586; Milner v. Freeman, 40 Ark. 62; Chambers v. Michaels, 71 Ark. 373; O’Hair v. O’Hair, 76 Ark. 389; 21 Cyc. p. 1297.

The second item of appellee’s account was not barred by the statute of limitations. The statute does not run against claims existing between husband and Wife during the continuance of the marital relation. This upon the ground of public policy, “which .discountenances controversies between husband and wife and encourages inaction as to claims inter sese during the existence of the marital relation.” See 19 Am. & Eng. Ene. Law, p. 186, and numerous authorities there collated.

No prejudicial error is found in the record, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.