52 N.Y.S. 142 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
Hpon the trial the court found that there was a valid gift to the plaintiff, causa mortis, by the delivery of the bank book representing the moneys on deposit in the bank issuing the same. The court made a general decision without stating separately the facts found. Hnder the exception filed to such decision we are required to review all questions of fact and law presented by the record. (Code Civ. Proc. § 1022.) The rule of law which governs the disposition of cases involving gifts i/nter vivos and causa mortis, so far as cogency of proof is concerned, is somewhat different from the strength of' evidence usually found sufficient for the establishment of contracts, the rights of parties arising thereunder and of other similar questions. The reason for this rule is found in the fact that fraud may be quite easily perpetrated, that weakness and uncertainty of will
“ Whoever alleges a gift must prove it satisfactorily. A doubtful case will not do.” (Doty v. Willson, 47 N. Y. 580.)
“ As there is great danger of fraud in this sort of gift courts cannot be too cautious in requiring clear proof of the transaction. This has been the rule from the early days of the civil law (which required five witnesses to such a gift) down to the present time.” (Grymes v. Hone, 49 N. Y. 17.)
“ Whoever alleges a gift, must establish it by satisfactory proof. Where the matter is left in doubt upon the whole case the case must fail.” (Matter of Rogers, 10 App. Div. 593.)
Applying these rules to the evidence in this case brings us to the conclusion that the plaintiff has failed to meet the requirement and that the testimony offered fails in fairly supporting the conclusion reached by the learned trial court. In applying the evidence and making a disposition of the case it is proper that we take a general survey of the claimants to the fund and their relation to the deceased, and of the deceased himself. The plaintiff is a married woman, the wife of Alexander Tilford, a machinist. Neither wife nor husband was in any wise related to the deceased, and so far as is disclosed by the record, had no acquaintance with him until he went to .their home to board, on the 1st day of February, 1896, where lie continued until the fifth day of October, when he died. The deceased paid Mrs. Tilford five dollars a week for his board, and this sum seems, to have been ample compensation for all the services which were rendered in caring for the deceased during that
The defendant McElwoe is a son of the deceased. In October, 1893, he came to live with his son. Prior thereto the deceased had met with an accident in which he had broken his jaw, arm and nose and lacerated his head; he had been taken to a hospital and "was removed therefrom to his son’s house, where he remained in bed and under the doctor’s care for about two months. During this time he required a muzzle to keep his jaw in place, was unable to feed himself, could only take liquid food which was fed to him with a spoon, and he required constant care in cleansing his mouth, keeping the supports in place and otherwise nursing him. The condition of his month was quite offensive, requiring constant care in spraying with an antiseptic dressing, and nursing him was a disagreeable duty. The defendant McEhvee was kept from his business in attendance upon the deceased, and does not seem to have omitted anything which was requisite for his proper care. The deceased continued to reside with his son up to February, 1896, when he left his house and went to board with the plaintiff. It does not appear that the deceased paid anything to his son for the care which he received or for his board, or that he "was expected to pay anything. Neither - does it appear that the parties had any difficulty during this period, except that the son, shortly before his father left his house, objected to having liquor .in the house, and objected upon one occasion to the father’s sending his boy of tender years for liquor. There is some testimony of declarations made by the deceased to several witnesses, that he was not happy at his son’s house; that he did not receive proper attention, or get enough to eat, and that he did not intend to give him any of his money, or more than a dollar “ through law.” Aside from these declarations there is no testimony that he did not receive proper care and attention at the sou’s house, while the testimony is abundant to show that during his illness he received the best of care, and it is quite probable that such care so continued after his recovery and until he left. Indeed, the case is destitute of any proof that he had any difficulty with the son, aside from the remonstrance as to the liquor, up to the time when he left the son’s house.
Another physician testified that he saw and examined the deceased in the winter of 1893-1894. “ I found that he was suffering from mental and nervous enfeeblement; he acted peculiarly, irritably; I might fill a volume, almost, to detail it.” This witness was asked and permitted to testify that the condition of mind in which he found deceased would lead him to be “ easily influenced and persuaded.” If this testimony was competent, and we think it was, the ruling preceding it was wrong. There was other testimony by later witnesses tending to corroborate this testimony.
It appears, without dispute, that after the deceased left his son’s house lie drank much more than while he remained with him; that the plaintiff gave him liquor, as he called for it, mostly in the form of milk ¡lunches, but in any form or quantity as the deceased wished. The physician who attended him at the sou’s house stated
None of these statements were denied by the plaintiff. Upon this testimony the court felt constrained to say that he “should assume he (deceased) left that (son’s) house because he could not get liquor there.” We quite agree with the learned court in this view of the proof, and are convinced that the testimony clearly establishes that this was the reason why the deceased left the son’s house. It is easy to see that the mental condition of the deceased was affected, and doubtless was aggravated by the excessive use of liquor, and that such a condition might prompt him to disinherit his son. It is not sufficient, however, to establish mental in competency to make a gift, but it does impose upon the court the duty of a very careful scrutiny of the proof relied upon to establish it and is relevant upon the question of intent and understanding in determining the purpose of the deceased, and in the weight to be attached to the testimony as a whole. That the deceased felt unkindly toward the son is apparent, occasioned mainly, in all probability, by the opposition of
We have disclosed the relative relations of the parties in order to get a clear view before applying ourselves to a review of the evidence upon which rests the finding of the court. The diversion of the property from the son by the father, to a stranger, is repugnant to the natural claim of affection and is so far unusual that courts adopt belief in such intention with hesitancy. We do not deny that such purpose may exist, and that it may be evidenced quite satisfactorily, and if the donor intend to thus dispose of his property, is legally capable of forming such intention and has made the same effectual by actual delivery, it must be upheld. Under the circumstances presented by this record, such result must rest upon no uncertain case, and proof, before it can be deemed preponderating, must be clear, strong and satisfactory.
This brings us to a consideration of the evidence which is relied upon to establish and support the gift in the present case. It rests mainly upon the testimony of Samuel Goodbody, Alexander Tilford, the husband of the plaintiff, and Elizabeth Galt. Goodbody had known the deceased for about two years and had met him socially about once in two weeks during that time. He testified that on the night before the death of deceased he met him, and was requested by him to see about his burial. The deceased requested a drink of water, and Tilford went for it. In his absence the deceased took from under his pillow an envelope and handed it to Mrs. Tilford, saying, “ Here, mother, this is for you, and see that I am buried,” and he said to the witness, “ Good bye, Goodbody, yon take charge of my remains when I die, and,” he says, “ the balance of the money will pay you for your trouble and kindness towards me.” “ Q. Pay who for the trouble ? A. Mrs. Tilford. I saw the book. This is the envelope. Mrs. Tilford took out the book. I couldn’t say whether this is the book; I guess that is it. This is the one she took down to the lawyer, I guess. I was present when she took it to the lawyer. I went along. She took the book ■—■ Mr. Tilford returned — * * * When he returned, the old gentleman said to Mr. Tilford, * * * ‘I done the right thing with mother,’ * * "x" and she showed him the bank book; * * * that is about all I can remember him saying.”
Elizabeth Galt testified that on the first day deceased wont to board with plaintiff he gave her the hank book. 1£ He told her to keep it for him, and in the event of his death it was hers. She said she didn’t want this money; that he should put it in an institution, if he wished. He said no, he wished her to have it.”
It is to be noticed that the complaint is framed upon the sole theory that the gift in this case was a gift causa mortis, and was consummated a short time before the death of the deceased. The testimony of the witness Galt was incompetent for the purpose of establishing such a gift as was pleaded, as her testimony only tended to establish a gift inter vivos, and it was not effectual for any other purpose. (Curry v. Powers, 70 N. Y. 212.) It was also strong testimony not only against the theory of the complaint, but also against the claim of a gift causa mortis, for it was claimed by the plaintiff that she never had possession of the bank book- pi'ior to the time when.it was delivered to her by the deceased on the night before his death, and this testimony tended to show that it was delivered before, and would, therefore, account for the possession of the book in plaintiff’s hands without any gift being intended. This testimony was admitted for a limited purpose, i. e., as bearing upon the probability of the gift causa mortis. It si difficult to see how it operated to that end, except as it might show a disposition to make a gift. Its effect, however, as a whole, is opposed to the theory of the plaintiff as now relied upon. The testimony of the witness Goodbody leaves the matter in a state of doubt as to whether he had an interest in the funds represented by the book, to the extent of the charge for funeral expenses, or whether the plaintiff was to pay him from the book. That the expenses of the burial were to be paid by Goodbody is quite consistent with his testimony, and that he was to receive the money from the sum represented by the book is clear. But whether plaintiff was to pay, or Goodbody was to take from the funds this sum, is not clear. The deceased gave no direction about that, and the matter is left to inference. If plaintiff was.
So far as the testimony of the husband is concerned it is, by reason of his relation to the plaintiff, the subject of suspicion, and if the case depended upon the testimony of the husband alone, the court might well hesitate in upholding the gift. (Ridden v. Thrall, 125 N. Y. 572.) If, however, this were all there was of the case, we might conclude that this evidence, coupled with the possession of the bank book, the declarations testified to by other witnesses of an intent to give plaintiff the money, and of a desire to deprive the son of any portion of it, would be sufficient to support the judgment which has been rendered. But such a state of facts is far from being the case. The physician who attended the deceased, and who appears to have been a disinterested witness, testified that on the morning of the death of the deceased he had a conversation with the plaintiff in which she stated: “ It was too bad there was no will made; she said she would put in a bill for five hundred dollars for nursing him. I was alone with her at the time. She said she was in possession of the bank book; I think she said there were two others that she did not have, but she knew of them.”
In addition to this was the testimony of Ward B. Smith, a police officer, who was present at the house on the day following the death. He testified that he heard a conversation between McCaffrey, a lawyer who represented the defendant McElwee, and the plaintiff and Goodbody, when a demand was made for the body of the deceased, and the bank books and a pawn ticket, and the plaintiff in response said, “ She knew nothing of any pawn ticket or any bank books; that if there was anything left by the old man it belonged to him, and that he could have it; that she would be glad to get rid of the body and the trouble of burying the old man.” And further she said, “ Why make a fuss ? If there is anything left by the old man it is yours, pointing to McElwee, Jr.” This witness further testified that Goodbody said, “ If the old man had lived one day longer, there would have been a will made, and you (pointing to John McElwee, Jr.) would be cut off with one dollar.”
John W. Earl, the undertaker who prepared the deceased for
Mary McElwee, a daughter of the defendant McElwee, testified that she was present at such conversation and heard McCaffrey “ ask Mrs. Tilford if the body owed her anything, and she said £Ro; that body does not owe a single cent; ’ and then Mr. Goodbody said this, £ If the old man had lived one day longer, there would have been a will made out leaving you with only one dollar.’ ”
. McCaffrey was called as a witness for the plaintiff. He testified that he went with the defendant McElwee to make a demand for the body for purposes of burial. In the course of the conversation the defendant McElwee said to the plaintiff, ££ We want those bank books and pawn ticket,” and plaintiff replied, “ There is one bank book; I have given it to my attorney, Mr. Rockwell, he has it now; if you want to find out anything about that, you may go and see him.” He was asked specifically if the plaintiff did not say to McElwee, Jr., .that “ the money would be all yours,” and replied that he did riot recall any such remark. He further testified that he asked plaintiff if Mr. McElwee, Sr., owed her anything, and she replied no, that he had paid his board. He denied asking her if there were any charges on the body. He was asked if she did not state that££ the money is all yours or anything of that kind,” and replied that he did not remember any such thing being said, but remaiked that that was a matter for subsequent consideration. He was asked if Mr. Goodbody stated “ that if Mr. McElwee had lived one day more that there would have been a will made by which Mr. McElwee, Jr., would have been cut off without a cent or with a cent,” and replied, “ There was something said about a will; there was to that effect; I paid very little attention to it; I will not be positive as to w-ho said it; my impression is it was stated by some male participant in the conversation.”
It is quite evident, taking this testimony as a whole, coupled with the other circumstances of the case, that the plaintiff has failed to sustain the burden of proof which rested upon her. The fair preponderance of testimony in respect to the declarations which were made by the plaintiff and Goodbody, which have been already
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.
All concurred, excejit Cullen, J., absent.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.