179 A. 16 | N.H. | 1935
The administrator not having elected to testify, the plaintiff's testimony was not admissible. P.L., c. 336, s. 27. Surviving parties are competent as witnesses when the estate of the decedent has no interest in the subject-matter, as where the decedent's title to real estate is in question. Crowley v. Crowley,
The testimony of the plaintiff was properly disregarded, and the only question is whether the remaining evidence incorporated in the findings sustains the decree as a matter of law. The finding is in *315 effect that the plaintiff owned all of the five bonds because the decedent admitted that she did and marked them as her property. The court ruled that it was not necessary for the plaintiff to show how she acquired title. This ruling was erroneous.
The situation is not so simple as the one where nothing appears except the fact of possession and the admission by the possessor that he is bailee for somebody else. In his opening statement, the counsel for the plaintiff relied on a gift to her by the deceased of three of the bonds in the latter's possession when he died. The plaintiff offered herself as a witness to the fact, and, although her evidence was later rejected, actually testified that the deceased delivered them to her by way of gift. She thus presented her case on the theory that her only source of title as to the three bonds was by gift from one whose prior title was admitted and whose possession at the time of his decease was also admitted.
The admission by a bailee who never had title (Bradley v. Spofford,
There are comparatively few cases where a thorough attempt has been made to analyze a declaration such as we have here. In Davis v. Zimmerman,
The reasoning of Davis v. Zimmerman has its parallel in a few other cases, notably Gross v. Smith,
To say that a declaration, she has some bonds "which I gave her," unsupported by any other evidence of a delivery, includes the statement "I delivered them to her as a gift," seems to us to assume a declaration of the fact of delivery which is not in evidence. The declarant may have been wholly ignorant of the law that no gift is valid without delivery, and the trier of fact is left to mere conjecture that the declaration involved anything more than a mistaken belief that a valid gift had been made. Until the declaration may be seen to include a statement of delivery as a matter of fact, it is not evidence of a delivery.
Chambers v. McCreery, 106 Fed. Rep. 364 was a case where certain bonds in the safety deposit box of a decedent at the time of the decease were claimed by his wife to have been given to her. The court said: "On that point [delivery] the evidence should be clear and positive, and in the absence of proof of absolute possession . . . by the donee, free from the control of the donor, the mere declarations of the latter will not be sufficient to establish delivery."
"To a mind unacquainted with the technical rule that in law an actual or symbolical tradition of the chattel is necessary to transfer the title, such an act [tradition or delivery] would ordinarily not appear important. A statement, therefore, that a gift had been made would not, I think, of itself, import a compliance with all the technical requirements of a legal gift." Smith v. Burnet,
"It seems to us that the declarations of the alleged donor, that not only had he given the note, but had actually delivered it, would be evidence to be considered upon the issue of fact as to whether or not the note had been actually delivered, but the testimony does *317
not bring the case within that rule. We have present declarations by the alleged donor only that he had given the note to Mrs. Rimmer, and, unless it can be inferred from that statement that actual delivery had been made, there is no competent proof of its delivery to her. . . . We believe the better rule, the one sustained by reasons of public policy and the greater weight of the authorities is that the fact of delivery must be shown by other evidence than the mere declaration of the donor, when the declaration can go no further than to express a gift, and it does not either distinctly state a delivery or facts from which actual delivery may be inferred." Atchley v. Rimmer,
The declarations in the case at bar do not include any statement of actual delivery, as in Kenistons v. Sceva,
Two of the Amoskeag bonds may possibly stand differently. If the money of the plaintiff in fact paid for them, there would be a resulting trust unless a contrary intention appeared. On that issue the declaration of the decedent would be competent. Since no finding was made on that issue, there can be no final order as to those two bonds.
Judgment for the defendant administrator as to the Texas-Louisiana bond and two Amoskeag bonds: new trial as to the other two bonds.
BRANCH, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *318