72 N.J. Eq. 143 | New York Court of Chancery | 1906
This is a bill of interpleader filed bjr the administrator of John Whitehead, deceased, who has, under a decree of inter-pleader made in this cause, deposited in court four savings bankbooks, which were in Mr. Whitehead’s possession at the’ time of his death, and came into the possession of complainant as his
Minnie A. Harrison died intestate on December 16th, 1902, and on December 23d, 1902, Mr. John Whitehead was appointed her administrator. He subsequently had a new deposit-book issued to himself as administrator, for the deposit in the Franklin Savings Institution, and this book also is deposited in court. The defendant Mrs. Bonnot claims that the three deposit-books issued to.Miss Harrison belong to herself, by virtue of a gift or donation causa mortis made to her by Miss Harrison two days before her death, and that shortly after Miss Harrison’s death, and before Mr. Whitehead’s appointment as administrator, she delivered these three books to Mr. Whitehead in his personal capacity as her bailee or attorney. She subsequently brought a suit in replevin for the books against Mr. Whitehead personally, in which suit he set up title to the books in himself as Miss Harrison’s administrator. This suit was pending at the time of Mr. Whitehead’s death, and the defendant Mr. Frederick F. Guild, having been appointed substituted administrator of Miss Harrison, demanded of complainant, Whitehead’s administrator, the possession of the books, whereupon this bill was filed, the suit by Bonnot enjoined, and the defendants, after hearing, directed to interplead.
The three deposit-books issued to Miss Harrison belonged to her, and the question in the ease is whether Mrs. Bonnot has satisfactorily proved a gift or donation of them to her causa mortis. The alleged gift was made to Mrs. Bonnot personally by Miss Harrison during her last illness, about two daj's before her death, and in the presence of one of the daughters of Mrs. Bonnot, a young girl then about sixteen years of age. Under our Evidence act (Rev. 1900, P. L. p. 363 § 4), excluding testimony by any party to the action as to any transaction with the intestate, this daughter’s testimony is the only legal evidence of this transaction between Miss Harrison and Mrs. Bon
“When slie came in, Miss Iianison asked mother where she had put chem, and mother said, ‘I hung them outside near the blinds; they are safe out there.’ Miss Harrison looked through the window to see if they were there, and seemed rather anxious about their being out there, and then mother told her they would be all right there.”
Miss Harrison, as the witness says, during the afternoon laughed as if she were having a joke to herself. “Now,” she
“December 15th, 1902.
“St. Cloud, West Orange.
“This is my last wish. X wish that Madame Bonnot’s house be cleared of debt and anything- else she wants, books, furniture. She is to pay my lawful debts and whatever she disposes of is all right. Don’t wish my relatives, Mr. Flavel, nor, above all, Miss Davy, to meddle in my affairs. I wish Mr. John Whitehead to do it for Madam Bonnot.
“M. A. Harrison.”
A will was drawn by Mr. Whitehead, dated December 17th, 1902, brit was not executed, as Mr. Payne, the partner of Mr. Whitehead, did not reach Miss Harrison's until after her death, and perhaps not until the afternoon of Wednesday, the day the will was dated.
Mrs. Bonnot did not return to Miss Harrison's until Tuesday afternoon, about four or five o’clock, just after Miss Harrison’s death. As she came near the house she met her daughter, who had stayed there alone from the time of her mother’s departure on Monday until the end, and was then going away ill. Mrs. Bonnot went into the house and was there alone,'or with another daughter, until the body was removed the next day to an undertaker’s. She also remained on at the house from that time until about January 7th. On Thursday, the day of the funeral, she was at the home in Newark of another daughter, and the daughter Ernestine was also at the house. She says that she was in another room, and hearing an exclamation from her mother, went into the room where the latter was. Her mother then showed her the three bank-books. She said she had just opened the package, and it was on her knees. There was the dirty cloth around it, and there was something else wrapped around it—a paper or piece of chamois, or maybe another small cloth'. It was evident that the daughter did not at this 'time see the parcel or package in the original condition in which it was delivered.
On the case as submitted, therefore, the probabilities as to the contents of this parcel tend to support Mrs. Bonnot’s statement and to negative the conclusion or assumption that during the interval between Monday and Thursday she tampered with the parcel either by adding or exchanging securities. The case is one where these probabilities must be given due weight, and her entire evidence must also be considered. In reference to one important matter bearing on her conduct, she has not been, as it seems to me, candid or unequivocal. This relates to the draft of the will. In the conversation on Sunday and Monday relating to what Miss Harris on wished to be done, and the persons she wished to be remembered, persons were named and her wishes as to these stated, but the names of these persons were not on the written memorandum signed by Miss Harrison. Mrs. Bonnot, on reaching Newark with this paper, was in great haste to get to Mr. Whitehead’s office, as she proves by a Mrs. Wait, to whom she showed the paper before going. She went to Mr.
From some source, apparently, Mr. Whitehead did receive directions as to all of the persons who were to be remembered. These directions of Miss Harrison were made in the presence of only Mrs. and Miss Bonnot, and Miss Bonnot was not out of the house until after the death. In view of this coincidence, it is difficult, if not impossible, to resist the conclusion that in some way the provisions in the will, which included the directions of Sunday and Monday, were communicated by Mrs. Bonnot to Mr. Whitehead, and still more difficult to conceive that a devise of the entire residue of the estate would or could have been drawn without a direction from Mrs. Bonnot herself, after the memorandum was delivered. Her present statement that she will not say she didn’t see Mr. Whitehead, but only that she cannot at present recall it, is not, in my judgment, reliable. She could not have forgotten seeing Mr. Whitehead about drawing a will from this paper. After her departure from the house immediately on its receipt, her haste to reach Mr. Whitehead’s office with it, and her appointment for the next afternoon at Miss Harrison’s to meet a person with the will, and with this will drawn as it is, it is not credible that in some way not disclosed by her she communicated with Mr. Whitehead about the will to be drawn from this paper. The doubts thrown on her credibility by her testimony upon this subject, bearing as it does on her conduct in relation to the acquisition by herself, or for her famity, of the bulk of Miss Harrison’s property by will during the time she held the stocks in question, would seriously affect the weight to be given to her evidence as establishing the contents of the bundle if it were shown that after Miss Harrison’s death, and while she had the run of her house, there were other securities in the house. But this has not been shown, and as the delivery of the bundle, containing apparently valuable securities, has been satisfactorily proved by the evidence of another witness, and the'surrounding circumstances indicate that it was not improbable that all of the savings bank-books were in the bundle, I do not feel justified in rejecting her statement that the books were in the bundle merely on the ground that if they were not
I will advise a decree declaring that Mrs. Bonnot is entitled to the boobs in question.