68 Ky. 591 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1869
delivered the opinion oe the court:
In the year 1854 John Southerland, a widower, sixty-five years old, with one child, William, nearly grown, intermarried with the appellant, then a childless wid,ow, he owning only a horse and a note on one Oflutt for eight hundred dollars; and she owning a small farm, a few slaves, and a comfortable and befitting personalty. By an antenuptial contract, indisputably established by oral testimony, and confirmed by the continued recognitions of both parties, neither was ever to claim or interfere with the property of the other any more than if they had never married each other.
After confinement with a loathsome disease for more than two years, nursed by her carefully and affectionately all the time, he died intestate on the 2d of January, 1863.
Without any marital right to any of her property, nothing ever owned by the intestate remained with the widow at his death except a horse and buggy, and the OiTut-t note, all of which she claimed as a gift, causa mortis. The circuit court, seeming to recognize the marriage contract as binding, adjudged against the validity of her asserted gift.
There being no creditors, the oral contract, which was one of the considerations of the marriage, is unquestioned and unquestionable between the parties, and all claiming as volunteers under them. And while there may be some doubt whether the buggy was paid for by husband or wife, it was recognized as hers; and the husband, during his fatal sickness, relinquished to her all his claim to both buggy and horse, which were in her possession, and afterwards remained under her dominion, and in her service. As between the present parties, we therefore adjudge the horse, buggy, and harness to be rightfully her property. We also consider the Offutt note as her property at her husband’s death.
The actual possession and legal title in trust were in Mark E. Huston, to whom the intestate, as beneficial
Now, it is clear that the intestate wished to give, tried to give, and believed that he had given, to the appellant, the Offutt note; and, though there was no formal delivery of it to her by his own hand, yet his dying declarations not only renounced his claim to possession and all interest, but vested her constructively with the use and possession, through his trustee, directed to hold it- for her. The motive assigned shows that it was a gift for her own benefit, accompanied by only a wish that she would, if needful, appropriate a small portion of it to the use of his son William, if he should ever return, which he never did. This, according to reason and principle, ratified by authority, was an absolute gift and delivery to her, with all the elements and characteristics of the aArailable “ donation causa mortis,” which the administrator has no right to take away.