41 So. 854 | Ala. | 1906
The original and amended hills in the case, filed by appellant, set up the claim that J. W. Thomas, the father of the complainant, J.-M. Thomas, in'his lifetime gave to complainant a certain note and mortgage, which- is admitted to be due, by J. L. Tilley and O. A. Tilley, defendants; and .the prayer is that the court establish the transfer as valid and foreclose the mortgage. The widow and heirs of said J. W. Thomas controvert the fact of the assignment and transfer of said note and mortgage.
The testimony for the complainant, beyond his own, which Avas properly objected to as violative of section 1794 of the code of 1896, Avas, first, by the Avife of the complainant, who testified that, shortly after the execution of the Tilley mortgage, John W. Thomas told her that he had sold the land to Tilley and. taken the mortgage, in order that he might give it to complainant; also that on one occasion her said husband and his father came to her home together; that her husband had the mortgage and note, and handed it to her, telling her to put it aAvay; that she placed -it in a trunk, wherd it remained until after the death of J. W. Thomas; that other papers of J. W. Thomas Avere subsequently brought by her husband and placed in the same trunk, which are not claimed by said J. M. Thomas-; that on the occasion in question said J. W. Thomas remained at his said son’s house from Friday evening until Monday morning, and told her several times “that he had given the paper to Johnny,” and as he Avas leaving told her not to let John (her husband) forget to get other papers which he had left at the courthouse, and he told her again as
Gilbert Meadoavs, a aví tness for the defendants, a son-in-law of J. W. Thomas, testified to a conversation Avith said decedent in January or February, 1901, not long before his death, in Avhich said Thomas wished him to take care of the Tilley mortgage and other papers for him. W. K. White, a, Avitness for the defendants, testified to a conversation in the presence of himself and Capt. James White, between J. W. Thomas and his son, J. M. Thomas, shortly after the Tilley mortgage was made, in which said son was trying to persuade his father to let him have the Tilley land, or land notes, and the father replied that he could not let him have the property, because it would be doing too much for one child and none for the rest. He testified, further, that said J. W. Thomas came to the camp Avhere Avitness and said Capt. White Avere on that night, and had a conversation Avith said Capt. White, in which Thomas said that he did not let his son have the Tilley notes or land, and that he was going to treat all his children alike. Francis Cooper, Avitness for defendants, testified to a conversati on Avith J. W. Thomas, shortly before he died, in AAdiich said Thomas said that he had not given the Tilley mortgage and other papers to his son, but had merely placed them in his hands to take care of them for him,
The testimony as to the mental condition of J. W. Thomas was conflicting, and probably not sufficient to show that he was incapable of sensibly disposing of his property. The1 burden of proof was upon J. M. Thomas to show by clear and convincing proof that the note and mortgage which John W. Thomas held against Tilley had passed from said J. W. to him by a valid and effective gift. “The quantum of proof requisite to support a gift in any case is that which, talcing into consideration the situation and relation of the parties and the nature of the subject-matter of the gift, clearly and fully estabishes every fact necessary to constitute a valid and complete gift.” — 14 Am. & Eng, Encv. Law (2d Ed.) p. 1049. It is stated, also’, that where the claim is not asserted until after the death of tin1 donor the evidence must be as clear, strong, and convincing as in a gift causa mortis. —Id., and note 4.
It is undoubtedly the laiv that, in order to1 constitute a complete gift of personal property, it is necessary that the article be delivered to the donee. In an early case in this court, where a special verdict was found that O. had executed a deed conveying slaves to his son, and the jury further found that “a formal delivery of the slaves was subsequently made,” the court held that not enough to justify a judgment in favor of said donee, but reversed the case, in order that a venire facias cle novo could be issued. — Sewall v. Glidden, 1 Ala. 52.
Realizing how- easy it is, after the death of the supposed donor, to gather up detached expressions, particularly in the presence of interested witnesses, we recognize the wisdom of the rule that strict proof should be made of all the ingredients of a perfected gift before the same can be established. While in this case the proposed donee had possession of the paper, yet it is proved at the same time that he had all the other papers of the decedent in the same trunk, merely for safe-keeping, and, while it is not, in every sense, absolutely necessary that a note should be endorsed (to pass from one to another), yet it is significa,nt in this case as a circumstance. In addition, it may be noted that even the declarations, such as they are, were, contradictory. We hold that the evidence in this case ivas not sufficient to establish the gift, and the decree of the court is affirmed.
Affirmed.