Campbell v. Campbell

22 S.E.2d 694, 125 W. Va. 15, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 3
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1942
Docket9379
StatusPublished

This text of 22 S.E.2d 694 (Campbell v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Campbell, 22 S.E.2d 694, 125 W. Va. 15, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 3 (W. Va. 1942).

Opinions

*16 Kenna, Judge:

In the Court of Common Pleas of Kanawha County, A. H. Campbell proceeded by way of notice of motion for judgment against L. E. Campbell, and from a verdict and judgment for fifteen thousand, three hundred dollars, L. E. Campbell prosecutes this writ of error, the Circuit Court having declined an application. There being no assignments of error that are not predicated either upon the insufficiency of the plaintiff’s proof or upon the giving or refusing of instructions, it is necessary to narrate the substance of the testimony.

A. H. Campbell, the plaintiff, is a man in his middle eighties and the father of L. E. Campbell, the defendant, who is sixty-one years of age. At the time of the occurrences that gave rise to this controversy in October, 1941, the plaintiff and his second wife were living on a side road not far from Sissonville, Kanawha County, near the residence of Adam Minter, whose wife is their daughter. They spent a great deal of their time at the Minter home. Due to producing oil or gas wells upon their property, the Campbells were comfortably well off.

The defendant, L. E. Campbell, lived with his wife on West Washington Street in the City of Charleston, and they were also comfortably well off.

In the afternoon of October the eighth, according to the testimony of the plaintiff, he and Mrs. Campbell decided to go to Charleston in search of a dwelling which they* could rent, and while there to visit the home of L. E. Campbell. Mr. Campbell kept in his home in a hiding place that this record does not disclose quite a quantity of money which he frequently counted, and this he decided to take with him, not informing Mrs. Campbell that he was doing so. On the way in, they stopped at Mrs. Minter’s home where Mr. Campbell had Mrs. Minter assist him in counting the one hundred, fifty, twenty and ten-dollar bills that he had in his trousers pocket. Mrs. Minter states that he had fifteen thousand, six hundred dollars.

Mr. and Mrs. Campbell spent the night at the home of L. E. Campbell, and the following morning, L. E. Camp *17 bell, at the plaintiff’s request, went with him to the office of a Charleston attorney where a will was drawn and executed' by A. H. Campbell, the provisions of which made L. E. Campbell his sole beneficiary. According to the plaintiff, after the business was done in the attorney’s office, he and L. E. Campbell sat on some empty boxes in a hallway where L. E. Campbell importuned the plaintiff to give him the sum of five thousand dollars, which the plaintiff refused, explaining that he wished to deposit at least that sum to the credit of his grandchildren, subject to withdrawal at his death. When they returned to the L. E. Campbell home, plaintiff states that L. E. Campbell informed him that he had a place in which plaintiff’s money could be safely kept, and that it was therefore unnecessary for the plaintiff to risk carrying it. Thereupon they went upstairs and plaintiff counted out fifteen thousand, three hundred dollars which he turned over to the defendant to keep, receiving his assurance that he could get the money at any time he wished it. Pies Campbell, a full brother of the defendant, questioned concerning what he knew of the defendant getting his father’s-money in October, 1941, stated rather indefinitely that Lewis had told him that the “old man” had that amount and would probably lose it, but he, Lewis, would take care of it.

The testimony of the defendant is that his father and step-mother came to his home to visit at the time they say they did, and that after spending the night there, the next morning, not after, but before, going to town, his father turned over to him as an outright gift the sum of five thousand dollars, having told him on the previous night that he intended to execute his will the following morning, making him the sole beneficiary. After that occurrence, they went to town where L. E. Campbell took his father to the office of an attorney for the purpose of having his will drafted and executed. This was done, and they returned to the house without any unusual occurrences. Shortly after they had gotten to the home, Mrs. Minter came in and asked her mother, Mrs. A. H. Campbell, to go to town with her. This Mrs. Campbell con *18 sented to do, but having left the house Mrs. Minter told her that she had been informed that A. H. Campbell had drafted and executed a will, by the terms of which L. E. Campbell received all of his property. Mrs. A. H. Campbell then promptly went back to the home in a “flare”, announcing that she was going to sue for a divorce and taking a threatening attitude in general. About ten days after the will was drafted and the exchange of money took place, A. H. Campbell came to Charleston to see L. E. Campbell and to explain to him the difficulty that he had encountered due to the fact that it had become known among the members of the family that he had executed a will with the provision as drawn, and that he wished that L. E. Campbell would return to him the five thousand dollars, possession of which he had given him as a gift the previous week. This L. E. Campbell refused to do, and his father left him demonstrating quite a bit of resentment.

There are six assignments of error briefed and submitted and we think that in proper sequence assignments two and five should be first disposed of.

Assignment two raises the question as to whether the plaintiff can recover where the record discloses that he had not paid the current year of taxes upon the indebtedness sought to be enforced. We think it unnecessary to discuss this question beyond saying that this Court considered it in the case of Newhart v. Pennybacker, 120 W. Va. 774, 200 S. E. 350, 754, there holding that it is not necessary as a condition precedent for the plaintiff to show that property taxes have been paid up to date upon the claim sought to be reduced to judgment. So that, even conceding that this claim, incurred in October and sued upon in December, falls within the provisions of the statute in question (Code, 56-4-71), we (Jo not think it constituted error in this connection to enter judgment thereon.

Assignment five is based upon the fact that the plaintiff’s wife, in testifying for the plaintiff, qualified her statement that the money brought by Campbell to Charleston was his, by saying that the royalty money *19 belonged to them both, and that consequently the claim sued on was not the sole property of the plaintiff. Mrs. A. H. Campbell, the witness, made no formal claim to any interest in what may be termed the cause of action, and in a number of places referred quite positively to the money delivered to L. E. Campbell as the property of A. H. Campbell. We do not think that the defendant can in any way be troubled in the future by this loose allusion made by the witness.

Assignments one, three and four all relate to the question of whether or not the evidence of the plaintiff is sufficient to sustain a verdict in his favor for the sum of fifteen thousand, three hundred dollars.

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Related

Harner v. Harner
177 S.E. 286 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1934)
Saunders v. McCown
198 S.E. 520 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1938)
Newhart v. Pennybacker
200 S.E. 350 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1938)
Burke v. Nutter
91 S.E. 812 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1917)
State v. Alie
96 S.E. 1011 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.E.2d 694, 125 W. Va. 15, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-campbell-wva-1942.