Basket v. Hassell

107 U.S. 602, 2 S. Ct. 415, 27 L. Ed. 500, 17 Otto 602, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1255
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 26, 1883
Docket170
StatusPublished
Cited by177 cases

This text of 107 U.S. 602 (Basket v. Hassell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Basket v. Hassell, 107 U.S. 602, 2 S. Ct. 415, 27 L. Ed. 500, 17 Otto 602, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1255 (1883).

Opinion

Me. Justice Matthews,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

It is apparent that the sole controversy is between Basket and Hassell, the present parties to the appeal. By the delivery of the certificate of deposit to the clerk the attorneys of Basket-are exonerated from all responsibility ; and the payment of the money by the bank to Hassell equally relieves it and’its officers; for, not being parties to the appeal, and the execution of the decree not having been superseded, the decree will always furnish them protection, whether affirmed or reversed, because, if reversed, it would only be so as between the parties to the appeal. So that the omitted parties have no legal interest, either in maintaining or reversing the decree, and, consequently, are not necessary parties to the appeal. Forgay v. Conrad, 6 How. 203 ; Cox v. United States, 6 Pet. 182; Germain v. Mason, 12 Wall. 261; Simpson v. Greely, 20 id. 152. The motion to dismiss the appeal is accordingly overruled.

It is claimed on behalf of the appellant that the delivery of the certificate under the circumstances mentioned in the statement of the case constitutes a valid donatio mortis causa, which entitles him to the fund; and whether it be so, is the sole question for our determination.

The general doctrine of the common law as to gifts of this character is fully recognized by the Supreme Court of Tennessee as part of the law of -that State. Richardson v. Adams, 10 Yerg. 273; Sims v. Walker, 8 Humph. 503; Gass v. Simpson, 4 Cold. 288.

In the case last mentioned, that court had occasion to consider the nature of such a disposition of property, and the several elements that enter into its proper definition.

Among other'things, it said: —

. “A question seems to have arisen, at an early day, over which there was much contest, as to the real nature of gifts causa mortis. Were they gifts inter vivos, to take effect before the death of the donor, or were they in the.nature of a legacy, *609 taking effect only at the death of the donor. At the termination of this contest, it seems to have been settled, that a. gift causa mortis is ambulatory and' incomplete during the-donor’s life, and is therefore revocable by him and subject to his debts, upon a deficiency of assets, not because the gift is testamentary or in the nature of a legacy, but because such is the condition annexed to it, and because it would otherwise be fraudulent as to creditors ; for no man may give his property who is unable to pay his debts; and all now agree that it has no other property in common with a legacy. The property must pass at the time and not be intended to pass at the giver’s death; yet, the party making the gift does not part with the whole interest, save only in a certain event; and until the event occurs which is to divest him, the title remains in the donor. The donee is vested with an inchoate title, and the intermediate ownership is in him; but his title is defeasible, uiitil the happening of the event necessary to render it absolute. It differs from a legacy in this, that it does, not require probate, does not pass to the executor or ^administrator, but is taken against and not from him. Upon the happening of the event upon which the gift is dependent, the title of the donee, becomes, by relation, complete and absolute from the time of the delivery, and that without any consent or other act on the part of the executor or administrator; consequently, the gift is inter vivos.” In another part of the opinion (p. 297) it is said: “ All the authorities agree that delivery is essential to the validity of the gift, and that, it is said, is a wise principle of our laws, because delivery strengthens the evidence of the gift; and is certainly a very powerful fact for the prevention of frauds and perjury.”

In the first of these extracts there is an inaccuracy of expression, which seems to-have introduced some confusion, if not an apparent contradiction, when, after having stated that “ the property must pass at the time and not be intended to pass at the giver’s death,” it is added, that “ until the event occurs which is to divest him, the title remains in the donor.” But a view of the entire passage leaves no room to doubt its meaning; that a donatio mortis causa must be completely executed, precisely as required in the case of gifts inter vivos, subject to be divested by the happening of any of the con *610 ditions subsequent, that is, upon actual revocation by tbe donor, or by tbe donor’s surviving the apprehended peril, or outliving the donee, or by the occurrence of a deficiency of assets necessary to pay the debts of the deceased donor. These conditions are. the only qualifications that distinguish gifts mortis causa and inter vivos. On the' other hand, if the gift does not take effect as an executed and complete transfer to the donee of possession and title, either legal or equitable, during the life of the donor, it is a testamentary disposition, good only if made and proved as a will.

This statement of the law is, we think, correctly deduced from the judgments of the highest courts in England and in this country; although, as might well have been expected, since the early introduction of the doctrine into the common law from the Roman civil law, it has developed, .by new and successive applications, not without fluctuating and inconsistent decisions.

“ As to the character of the thing given,*’ says Shaw, C. J., in Chase v. Redding, 18 Gray (Mass.), 418, 420, “the law has undergone some changes. Originally it was limited, with some exactness, to chattels, to some object of value deliverable by the hand; then extended to securities transferable solely by delivery, as bank-notes, lottery tickets, notes payable to béarer or to order, and indorsed in blank; subsequently it has been extended to bonds and other choses in action, in writing or represented by a certificate, when the entire equitable interest is assigned; and in the very latest cases on the subject in this Commonwealth, it has been held that a note not negotiable, or if negotiable, not actually indorsed, bxxt delivered, passes, with a right to use the name of the administrator of the promisee, to collect it for the donee’s own. use,” citing Sessions v. Moseley, 4 Cush. (Mass.) 87; Bates v. Kempton, 7 Gray (Mass.), 382; Parish v. Stone, 14 Pick. (Mass.) 198.

In the case last mentioned — Parish v. Stone — the same distinguished jxxdge, speaking of the cases which had extended the doctrine of gifts mortis causa to include choses in action, delivered so as to operate only as a transfer by equitable assignment or a declaration of trust, says further, that “ these cases all go on the assumption that a bond, note, or other *611

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Bluebook (online)
107 U.S. 602, 2 S. Ct. 415, 27 L. Ed. 500, 17 Otto 602, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/basket-v-hassell-scotus-1883.