84 S.E. 349 | N.C. | 1915
The plaintiff, D. B. Zollicoffer, brought this action as guardian, to recover for his ward, Catherine A. Zollicoffer, who is his daughter, a certain certificate for ten shares of stock in the Roanoke Bridge Company of the par value of $1,000. The bridge company has no interest in the action, being only a nominal defendant, and agreeing to transfer the stock on its books and issue a certificate therefor to whomsoever the court may direct. The stock stands upon the books of said company in the name of Mrs. S. A. Thomas, the defendants' testatrix. The plaintiff claims the stock as the property of his ward, for the reason that the defendants' testatrix, some seven months prior to her death and about four months prior to the making of her last will, gave the (327) certificate of stock to his ward. The defendants admit that their testatrix intended at the time to give the stock to the ward of the plaintiff, her granddaughter and their younger sister, but contend that she failed to complete the gift and afterwards revoked her intention; made a will giving the ward of the plaintiff $1,000 in cash, which has been paid, in lieu thereof, and bequeathed the stock to defendants as residuary legatees and devisees under her will.
The plaintiff married the only child and daughter of the defendants' testatrix. They had eight children living at the time of the defendants' testatrix' death. Mrs. Thomas left a will giving legacies to her daughter and each of her other grandchildren and bequeathing the rest and residue of her estate, after paying the debts and legacies, to the defendants, who are her executor and executrix, and the two eldest of her grandchildren. There was some evidence that Mrs. Thomas placed the certificate of stock, after she had indorsed it to Catherine A. Zollicoffer, in her Bible, and it is admitted that it disappeared therefrom, in some way unknown, prior to her death. Before placing it in the Bible, she had requested the plaintiff, who was not then guardian, to take it and keep it for his daughter, Catherine Zollicoffer, but he declined to do so, stating that she was the one to hold it for her. *399
At the trial, upon an issue submitted to the jury, they found that plaintiff is the owner of the certificate of stock, and from the judgment on the verdict the defendants appealed.
It seems to us, after making a careful analysis of this case, that the question presented by it is largely one of fact. Defendants contended that there was no evidence of a delivery of the certificate of stock to Catherine A. Zollicoffer or to any one for her. If there was such evidence, then it was the province of the jury to pass upon it and decide the issue. The certificate had been issued to Mrs. Thomas, and it does not appear to have been denied, and it would be vain to deny that she wished to give it to her granddaughter, the ward of the plaintiff. She failed to do so in the best way conceivable, that is, by indorsement to her and delivery of the certificate, either to her personally or to some one for her. Her effort to do so miscarried because the plaintiff would not receive the certificate, at Mrs. Thomas' request, and hold it for his daughter, thinking that for some reason it was best for Mrs. Thomas to hold it for her. At any rate, Mrs. Thomas retained the certificate and placed it in her Bible for safe-keeping, but some one either abstracted it therefrom or it was lost or destroyed accidentally. It can make no material difference, in our view of the case, how it disappeared, if there was a delivery or valid transfer (328) of the certificate ever made. The whole case turns upon what Mrs. Thomas said or did in regard to it. There was testimony to the effect that she stated, after the stock was placed in the Bible, that she had given it to her granddaughter, Catherine Zollicoffer, and whether she had done so or not was manifestly a question for the jury. The judge submitted it to the jury, with proper instructions to find the fact, placing the burden of proving the issue upon the plaintiff. The evidence of the fact may have been very slight, but it was more than a scintilla, and when this is so it carries the case to the jury. Wittkowsky v.Wasson,
As to the question of evidence, we think the court confined the testimony of plaintiff, D. B. Zollicoffer, to what occurred between Mrs. Thomas and the defendant E. T. Zollicoffer, and in this view there could be no valid objection to it, as the witness was not speaking of any communication or transaction between him and Mrs. Thomas, but of one between her and a third party. Johnson v. Cameron,
The introduction of the will of E. I. Thomas did not prejudice the defendants, as the court charged the jury that no trust was created thereby in the certificate, but only as to his own estate, for he had no interest in the stock. Exceptions were taken to the statement by the court of the contentions of the respective parties, but we can see no valid ground for objection. It was fair to both parties, and tended to present the case more carefully and clearly to the jury and to aid them in weighing the arguments.
(330) The issues were sufficient to present all the matters involved, and, therefore, there was no error in rejecting those tendered by the defendants. Hatcher v. Dabbs,
The other exceptions require no special comment, as they are covered by those already discussed.
No error.
Cited: McNeeley v. Shoe Co.,