Ambler v. Boone

3 Ohio App. 87, 24 Ohio C.C. Dec. 512, 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 281, 19 Ohio C.A. 281, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 191
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 9, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 3 Ohio App. 87 (Ambler v. Boone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ambler v. Boone, 3 Ohio App. 87, 24 Ohio C.C. Dec. 512, 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 281, 19 Ohio C.A. 281, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 191 (Ohio Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Pollock, J.;

Metcalfe and Norris, JJ., concurring.

The defendant in error, J. C. Boone, as administrator, brought an action in the court of common pleas of this county against the plaintiff in error on two promissory notes. The first note reads as follows:

“Salem, Ohio, November 23, 1898.
“On demand after date for value received, we promise to pay Frances Ann Phillips, the sum of [88]*88seventy-seven hundred and fifty ($7750) dollars without interest.
“This note is not negotiable, and is absolutely void in the hands of any other party than Frances Ann Phillips, as against the maker hereof. In case no demand is made for the payment of this note by Frances Ann Phillips, the payee herein, before her death, this note shall be considered as paid in full, and after the death of said Frances Ann Phillips, payee herein, shall be void as against the makers herein or his estate. The only way in which demand for the payment of this note can be made by the payee herein before her death, shall be by leaving this note with the cashier of The First National Bank of Salem, Ohio, or the cashier of The Farmers’ National Bank of Salem, Ohio, with instructions to said cashiers, given in person by said payee herein to collect the same.
“Hannapi L. Tolerton,
“Sarah E. Buck,
“Zilpha Roselle Tolerton.”

No payments are endorsed on this note.

The second note is the same as the one first mentioned except that it calls for $3,000, with interest at the rate of five per cent, per annum, payable annually. Payment of interest is endorsed on this note up to November 23, 1903.

One of the makers of these two promissory notes, Hannah L. Tolerton, was the widow or James Tolerton, and the remaining makers are the daughters of James Tolerton. James Tolerton died about December 17, 1897, leaving a will, and by his will he devised all of his property to his wife and [89]*89two daughters — the makers of these promissory-notes.

Frances Ann Phillips, the payee of these notes, was a sister of James Tolerton, and she was married to A. H. Phillips in 1866. They continued to live together as husband and wife from that time to the time of her death in November, 1904. At the time of her death she had no children living nor their direct heirs. Prior to the death of James Tolerton Mrs. Phillips gave to him the amount of money represented by these two notes, and Took from him two promissory notes exactly like the notes signed by the defendants below.

After the death of James Tolerton Mrs. Phillips told the defendants below that if they were going to divide up the estate of her brother she wanted live notes, and the present notes were then given by the defendants in lieu of the ones she held given by James Tolerton.

Mrs. Phillips gave this money to her brother, intending, unless it should be demanded by her during her lifetime, that it should be a gift to him. About the time that she gave this money to her brother James, she gave something near the same amount to her remaining brother, taking from him notes similar to the ones in suit. She said that she gave this money to her brothers because she wanted her money to remain in the Tolerton family, and did not want any of it to go to her husband. She even sought legal advice whether she could make a will and deprive her husband of all rights in her property. At the time the notes in suit were executed by the defendants below no money was paid to any of them, and the only consideration for the [90]*90giving of these notes was the release by Mrs. Phillips of her claim against the estate of James Toler-ton. The making of these notes was intended by Mrs. Phillips and the widow and daughters as a transfer of the gift made to James Tolerton to his widow and daughters, upon the same conditions as he had received the money.

The notes involved in this action, after the death of Mrs.' Phillips, were found in her private box in The Farmers’ National Bank in Salem, Ohio, with other private papers belonging to Mrs. Phillips. These notes were in a sealed envelope marked “H. L. Tolerton.” Mrs. Phillips died while in the city óf St. Louis. Before leaving home she had given Mrs. Ambler, one of the defendants below, the key to this private box, and an order on the bank to deliver the box to Mrs.' Ambler, with directions to Mrs. Ambler that in case of her death Mrs. Ambler should secure the box and destroy these notes. These directions were not carried out by Mrs. Ambler.

A. H. Phillips, the husband of Mrs. Phillips, had no knowledge during her lifetime that she had given her money to her brothers. Neither had he any knowledge of the notes given by her brothers or of the notes given by the defendants below to her as evidence of this money. James Tolerton left an estate sufficient to pay all of his indebtedness, including the notes held by Mrs. Phillips referred to above.

A jury was waived in the court below and the case submitted to the court, resulting in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff below.

[91]*91In giving this money to her brother Mrs. Phillips intended to make a gift to him, unless during her life she should for some reason change her intention and should personally demand the payment of these notes. She was unwilling to part with her property at that time or to surrender her right to demand its return. The question then arises, did the giving of this money, unrevoked by the personal act of Mrs. Phillips prior to her death, make a valid gift, or did the retention by Mrs. Phillips of the right to demand payment destroy the necessary elements of the gift inter vivos and leave nothing more than the intention to make a gift ?

In order to make a valid gift inter vivos there must be a voluntary and absolute delivery of the property, and all control and dominion over the property must be relinquished. Phipps v. Hope, 16 Ohio St., 586; Flanders v. Blandy, 45 Ohio St., 108; Worthington v. Redkey, 86 Ohio St., 128.

In the case last cited Justice Davis, in the opinion, on page 134, says: “Whether a gift is inter vivos or causa •mortis * * * there must be such a distinct and absolute delivery of the property as to show a relinquishment of all dominion over the property by the donor.”

Of the many cases in other jurisdictions which have affirmed this rule we will only note the following: Daubenspeck v. Biggs, 71 Ind., 255; Richardson v. McNulty, 24 Cal., 339; Walsh’s Appeal, 122 Pa. St., 177, 15 Atl. Rep., 470; Liebe v. Battmann, 33 Ore., 241, 54 Pac. Rep., 179, 180; Lisenbigler v. Gourley, 56 Pa. St., 166, 94 Am. Dec., 51; Smith, Admr., v. Dorsey, 38 Ind., 451, 10 Am. [92]*92Rep., 118; Calvin v. Free, 66 Kans., 466, 71 Pac. Rep., 823.

In the opinion in this last case, on page 470, the court, after quoting the definition of a gift inter vivos, as given in 14 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 ed.), 1015, say:

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3 Ohio App. 87, 24 Ohio C.C. Dec. 512, 19 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 281, 19 Ohio C.A. 281, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ambler-v-boone-ohioctapp-1914.