Bolles v. Toledo Trust Co.

4 N.E.2d 917, 132 Ohio St. 21, 132 Ohio St. (N.S.) 21, 7 Ohio Op. 60, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 240
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1936
Docket25895
StatusPublished
Cited by125 cases

This text of 4 N.E.2d 917 (Bolles v. Toledo Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolles v. Toledo Trust Co., 4 N.E.2d 917, 132 Ohio St. 21, 132 Ohio St. (N.S.) 21, 7 Ohio Op. 60, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 240 (Ohio 1936).

Opinion

*23 Zimmerman, J.

Opposing counsel agree that the important question in this controversy is whether there was a valid and completed gift inter vivos of the designated securities from George A. Bolles to Clara C. Bolles, and have made their arguments accordingly.

It appears from the record that George A. Bolles and Clara C. Bolles were married in the summer of 1920. She was the widow of Harrison W. Blevins and had two'minor children, Robert and Carolyn Blevins, who were legally adopted by Mr. Bolles in the fall of 1920. In August of 1921 Mr. and Mrs. Bolles became the parents of a daughter who was named Barbara Ruth Bolles, and this completed the family.

Mr. and Mrs. Bolles lived together in a seemingly harmonious relationship until his death. Her former husband, Harrison W. Blevins, had been the owner of one-half of the capital stock of The Blevins Realty Company, Incorporated, which came into her possession and control after his death. In 1921 Mr. Bolles acquired the remaining half of this stock by purchase. Sufficient stock was transferred to other individuals to constitute a legal board of directors.

During the year 1927, by authority of a resolution of the board of directors of The Blevins Realty Company, a safety deposit box was rented, in the name of the company, in the Ohio Trust Company of Toledo, to which both Mr. and Mrs. Bolles had access, possessing separate keys.

Later on, in 1931, a safety deposit box was rented under the same conditions in The Toledo Trust Company, being the box in which we are presently interested. In it were kept securities Mr. Bolles had purchased with his own funds. When the box was opened after his death such securities were found in a folder, on the outside of which was inscribed'the name or initials of George A. Bolles. They all stood in his name, were unassigned and unendorsed, and bore dates *24 of issuance from May 7, 1929, to December 27, 1932, excepting the certificates of stock of The Blevins Realty Company which had been acquired in June of 1921. In another and separate folder in the same box were other securities, indisputably the property of Mrs. Bolles or of the Harrison W. Blevins estate. Some of these were represented by certificates of stock which Mr. Bolles had bought for his wife and which had been issued in her name.

According to the records of The Toledo Trust Company, Mr. Bolles visited the safety deposit box described on some forty-eight or forty-nine occasions between the time of its rental in December of '1931 and July 28, 1933. According to the same records Mrs. Bolles visited the box some three times between the date of its rental and Mr. Bolles’ death. No direct evidence was produced that they were ever there together, and it would seem certain that neither Mr. nor Mrs. Bolles made use of any other safety deposit box.

Mr. Bolles kept a book account of his investments, and the receipt of dividends and interest from the securities mentioned was included therein. He collected such returns and deposited them to his individual account in The Toledo Trust Company. The record is silent as to whether he listed them in his income tax returns to the federal government, but Mrs. Bolles did not in hers, covering the calendar years of 1932 and 1933.

So far as the record discloses, Mrs. Bolles had the securities in her hands but twice during the lifetime of Ceorge A. Bolles. The first time was in November of 1932 when she went to the box alone and made a list of its contents, denoting some of the securities “good” and others “doubtful.” The other time was in July of 1933 when she and her daughter, Carolyn, *25 went to the box at the direction of Mr. Bolles to look for some guardianship papers relating to Carolyn.

William Bolles, a brother of George A. Bolles, was indebted to The Toledo Trust Company on a loan of money. Additional collateral was demanded and George A. Bolles furnished the same from the securities in the safety deposit box referred to, accepting a receipt from the bank reading as follows:

“The Toledo Trust Company
“Toledo, Ohio, June 28, 1933.
“Received from George A. Bolles 600 shares Libbey Owens Ford Glass Co., common stock to be held by ns as collateral to Loan of Wm. Bolles this stock to remain the property of Geo. A. Bolles and to be surrendered to him upon payment of note of Wm. Bolles. Stock represented by 6 certificates of 100 shares each numbered T.1128 to 1133 inclusive.
“By W. J. Pankhurst, asst, treas.”

However, in connection with this transaction, there is testimony by William Bolles that his brother desired the receipt for the stock “because I took it out of Clara’s box.” And Mrs. Bolles testified, “He (George A. Bolles) suggested taking 600 shares of the LibbeyOwens stock out of the box to put up as additional collateral on this loan and asked me if I thought it was all right.” “I said I wanted to help Will in any way we could.”

To sustain the'fact of a gift, Mrs. Bolles places much reliance on the testimony of seven witnesses who narrated statements attributed to Mr. Bolles over the span of years from 1927 to 1932. Those statements and the persons who testified to them are as follows:

Albert P. McKee, friend and one-time office associate: “He told me that he had added another block of Libbey-Owens stock and had salted it in the deposit box for 01a,ra.”'

*26 William Bolles, brother: “The substance of his talk to me there was that he gave his wife some securities and he put them in her safety deposit box.”

Sadie Crissey Foreman, friend: “He said, ‘I have been working very hard with Mrs. Bolles’ real estate but I couldn’t carry on with it if it wasn’t for our good stocks which I have had to use to carry it. * * * I have given her the stock and we keep it in her safety deposit box so that if anything would ever happen to me, she would have the stock and could give the other two children their share of it.’ ”

Charles J. Danberg, former employee and friend: “He said, ‘I planted that stock in that deposit box for Mrs. B.’ and he wouldn’t touch that or loan me any of it.”

Mrs. Charles J. Danberg: “Well, he talked about having created a trust for Barbara and the deposit box —the contents of the deposit hox was Mrs. Bolles.” Russell M. McCown, chauffeur: “Mr. Bolles said, ‘Well, Clara, I am glad that is settled, it is just salted down in case.’ And then he added, ‘Everything in that box is yours.’ ”

Carolyn Bolles, adopted daughter: “Well, dad told me that he wanted me to go with mother to the safety deposit box and we were to look for my guardianship papers, that is what we were looking for, and he said he wanted me to go with mother because he wanted her to prove she could get in the box without him, because everything that was there was hers.”

Perhaps the most extended and comprehensive definition of the necessary elements to constitute a completed gift inter vivos found among the decisions of this court is contained in the case of Flanders v. Blandy,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 N.E.2d 917, 132 Ohio St. 21, 132 Ohio St. (N.S.) 21, 7 Ohio Op. 60, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolles-v-toledo-trust-co-ohio-1936.