Brooks v. Mitchell

161 A. 261, 163 Md. 1, 84 A.L.R. 547, 1932 Md. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1932
Docket[No. 32, April Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 161 A. 261 (Brooks v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. Mitchell, 161 A. 261, 163 Md. 1, 84 A.L.R. 547, 1932 Md. LEXIS 23 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Ob-btjtt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The principal questions presented by this appeal are (1) whether a gift causa mortis of a. deposit in a savings bank can be effected by the mere delivery to the donee of the passbook issued by the bank to the donor as evidence of his title to the same, where the donor sufficiently indicates an intention of assigning or transferring the fund to the donee but executes no written order for the transfer or assignment thereof; and (2) whether, assuming that such a gift can bo validly made in that manner, the evidence in this case is sufficient to support a finding that one Alton Brooks, late of the City of Baltimore, deceased, did in fact give to Judith Mitchell, the appellee, a fund deposited to his credit in the savings department of the Baltimore Trust Company.

The circumstances out of which those issues arise are these: Alton Brooks was a laborer, unmarried, frugal, careful, and industrious, with a horror of coming to old age and physical infirmity without adequate means of support. Consequently, by thrift and careful management, at his death he had accumulated what for him was a substantial estate, which included a deposit of $5,600 in the savings department of the Baltimore Trust Company. lie was born some fifty years ago in King and Queen County, Virginia, and he, his brother_ Junius Brooks, Judith Mitchell, and Stephen W. Mitchell, her husband, all grew up as children together in the same neighborhood. Alton came to Baltimore to mend his fortunes and to live in 1916, Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell followed shortly afterwards, and at or about the same time Junius also moved there. These four former Virginians kept up in their new surroundings their early friendship, met occasionally, and from time to time Alton and Junius, neither of whom was married, visited the Mitchells at their home. The Mitchells had before coming to Baltimore seen perhaps more of Alton than of Junius, for when they were first married they boarded with him at the home of an uncle of Mrs. *4 Mitchell at West Point, Virginia, although the connection between all of them was close and of long standing, Mrs. Mitchell’s grandfather having married the mother of Alton and Junius Brooks over forty years ago. The nearest of kin of Junius and Alton Brooks at the time of Alton’s death were a half-sister and two nieces of a deceased sister. Alton appears from the record to have been a somewhat aloof and reserved man, with few connections and no intimates in Baltimore, and when, in 1930, he was stricken with what proved to be a mortal disease, he turned to Mrs. Mitchell for help; and she accepted him as a boarder.

He came to her home on the first Monday in May, 1930, after he had been for a time at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. He remained there.until June 25th, 1930, when he entered the Baltimore City Hospital, where he remained eight weeks. He returned on August 20th and stayed until October 26th, when he entered the West Baltimore General Hospital. He came back to her home on November 10th and died on No-^ vember 12th, 1930, and was buried on November 11th, 1930, from an undertaking establishment. The cause of his death was cancer of the stomach, and the course of that disease, at least from the time he entered Mrs. Mitchell’s home in May, 1930, until his death, appeal’s to have been steadily progressive, and by October it had reached a point where consciousness of its inevitable outcome could not well be avoided.

After his death a black satchel containing a passbook for a deposit in the savings department of the Baltimore Trust Company was found in the Mitchell home, and at his request that book was delivered to Junius Brooks, who later administered oh his brother’s estate. Mrs. Mitchell stated that it was delivered to Brooks in the belief that it would be returned to her, and, upon his failure to return it, she, on December 27th, 1930, filed the bill of complaint in this case against Junius Brooks, administrator of the estate of Alton Brooks, in which she prayed that the deposit be declared to be her sole property, that the trust company be enjoined from paying it to-any other person, and that Junius Brooks be. *5 enjoined from withdrawing said deposit or transferring or otherwise disposing of the bank book pending the case. The theory upon which that relief was asked was that Alton Brooks had on October 25th, 1930, mortis causa given the bank book and the fund which it represented to the complainant. The defendant answered, the case was heard upon bill, answer, and evidence, and on December 10th, 1931, the court decreed the deposit to be the property of Mrs. Mitchell and directed the administrator to pay it, together with accrued interest, to her. The appeal is from that decree.

The important issues of fact are: (1) Did Alton Brooks deliver to Mrs. Mitchell the savings bank deposit passbook for the purpose of making a gift to her of the fund which it represented? (2) Did she actually take possession of the book during his life? and (3) Did he at the time of such delivery believe that his death was imminent and inevitable ?

The direct evidence relating to the delivery of the bank book is not contradicted, but there was some conflict in the evidence as to certain corroborative circumstances attending the transaction.

Mrs. Mitchell'testified that, as soon as Alton Brooks died, she notified Junius, his brother, and that he shortly after that came to her house; that on that visit she opened the black suitcase which had belonged to Alton and which at the time was in her bedroom; that she unlocked it in his presence with a key in her possession, and found in it passbook Ho. 20110, issued by the Highlandtown Branch of the Baltimore Trust Company, evidencing a savings account in the name of Alton Brooks in the amount of $5,600 deposited on April 30th, 1930, which contained the following rules and by-laws:

“The Bank Book must be presented when money is deposited or withdrawn. The acceptance of the Bank Book shall constitute an acknowledgment on the part of the depositor of notice of these rules and regulations and his agreement to be bound thereby. When the first deposit is made, the depositor shall sign a signature card subscribing to the rules and regulations of the Savings Department of the Bank, and the depositor *6 and his legal representatives shall he bound by said rules and regulations and any amendments thereto.
Money on deposit may be withdrawn by the depositor, or his legal representative, on presentation of the Bank Book and a proper order. Ho withdrawals may be made by cheek. Ho assignment or transfer of this Bank Book or of the account represented thereby need be recognized by the Bank unless the consent of the Bank shall be first obtained, and a memorandum thereof entered therein.”

She further testified that after his brother’s funeral Junius returned to her home and asked for'Alton’s bank books and his watch. She told him she claimed the bank book of the Baltimore Trust Company deposit, but, when lie said that he could not administer the estate unless she delivered it to him, she let him have it, that Alton had another bank book which he kept in a square box which he took to the hospital with him, and that after his death she discovered that book and gave it to Junius also.

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Bluebook (online)
161 A. 261, 163 Md. 1, 84 A.L.R. 547, 1932 Md. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-mitchell-md-1932.