Castle v. Persons

117 F. 835, 54 C.C.A. 133, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4475
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 1902
DocketNo. 1,729
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 117 F. 835 (Castle v. Persons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Castle v. Persons, 117 F. 835, 54 C.C.A. 133, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4475 (8th Cir. 1902).

Opinions

CARLAND, District Judge.

This action was originally commenced in the district court of Washington county, Minn., and subsequently removed by the defendant in error to- the circuit court of the United States for the district of Minnesota, on the ground of diversity of citizenship. Maria Persons was the original plaintiff, but, she having died pendente lite, the action is now prosecuted by her executor. The object of the action was to recover from defendant in error the sum of $5,000 and interest. The complainant alleged for a cause of action that prior to the 23d day of January, 1897, the defendant in error became and was indebted to one Thomas Persons in the sum of $5,000; that on said date defendant in error admitted said indebtedness, and, at the request of said Thomas Persons, promised to pay the same to Maria Persons, with interest. The answer of defendant in error denies any indebtedness to Thomas Persons, or that said Thomas ever directed or requested him to pay said indebtedness, if any existed, to Maria Persons, or that defendant in error ever promised or agreed to pay said indebtedness to Maria Persons. At the close of the testimony for plaintiff in error, counsel for defendant in error made the following motion:

“I move to direct a verdict on the ground that there is not sufficient evidence to enable the jury to find the issue in favor of the plaintiff in this action, and particularly that there is not sufficient evidence to show an accounting by which any sum was agreed upon between the father and defendant, and no sufficient evidence to show that there was an assignment of that claim by the father to the mother, and it appears so far as any evidence appears, as a question of law, that if anything was due that money is still due to the estate of Thomas Persons, and not to the mother.”

The trial court granted the motion upon two grounds, and those grounds can hardly be said to have been embraced in the above motion. They were that the evidence showed that plaintiff in error’s title to the chose in action was derived through an attempted donatio causa mortis, which failed (1) because there was no delivery of the chose in action by Thomas Persons to Maria Persons; and (2) because there was a recovery of Thomas Persons from the sickness which caused him (Thomas Persons) to make the gift, which by operation of law revoked the same. The case was not tried on any such theory, and not till the court ruled had this theory been mentioned in the pleadings or by counsel. Counsel for plaintiff in error excepted to the ruling of the court, and such ruling is the only error assigned here. Conceding, for the purpose of this writ of error, that the theory bn which the trial court ruled was the correct one, let us examine plaintiff’s testimony, and ascertain if there were not issues that ought to have gone to the [837]*837jury. There was abundant testimony from which the jury might have found the following facts:

On January 23, 1897, at Alma, state of Washington, Thomas Persons, father of defendant in error, was a man 84 years of age. He was a very sick man. He expected to die; others expected him to die. He desired to dispose of his property in order to save administration. In contemplation of death he gave to defendant in error certain property in the state of Washington, and to another son certain property in the state of Minnesota. On this same date he was asked by defendant in error this same question: “What are you going to do with what money I owe you ?” Thomas Persons answered: “That is mother’s. I want mother to have that.” Defendant in error, turning to his mother, Maria Persons, who was present, said: “Mother, that is all right, but I have not got the money with me, but I will pay you when I get back.” That defendant in error repeatedly acknowledged to Maria Persons and others subsequent to this time and prior to the death of Thomas Persons that the amount owing by him to the latter was $5,000. That defendant in error subsequently, many times prior to the death of Thomas Persons, promised to pay this sum to Maria Persons, and did pay her $100 thereof. Thomas Persons died on December 27, 1897.

The following is all the testimony bearing upon the question of revocation of this' transaction by operation of law, resulting from the recovery of Thomas Persons from the illness from which he apprehended death, and under which apprehension he made, or attempted to make, this disposition of the chose in action to Maria Persons. He never did anything himself to revoke the gift.

Simon E. Persons, examined in chief by counsel for plaintiff in error:

“Q. Well, what eventually happened? Did he recover or recover temporarily? A. He did partly. He partially recovered, and we took him back to Minnesota.”

Cross-examination:

“Q. Tour father, up to the time he died, from the time he first came back from Alma, was in feeble health? A. He was quite feeble at first, but he got so he could walk half a mile and further,—sometimes three-quarters of a mile. Q. But during the last few weeks of his life he was very feeble, was he not? A. The last two months he was continually in bed, or six weeks. Q. Was your father able to transact business on his own ,account and keep his accounts and do his business for himself, or did somebody have to assist him? A. He was perfectly able to do it himself; at least, I thought so. He always did. Q. Did he do correspondence of his own? A. Mother, X think, did the writing for him. Q. Up to the time of his death? A. I think so.”

Maria Persons, examined in chief by counsel for plaintiff in error, testified as follows:

“Q. After that did your husband die or did he recover? A. He recovered partially. Q. Where did you go then? A. We came, or rather was brought back here, to Afton; neither one of us could walk.”

Out of 67 pages of printed testimony, the foregoing is all that counsel on either side put into the case upon a question which turned the plaintiff out of court. The court, at the close of the case, elicited the following testimony from the witness Marion E. Persons:

[838]*838“The Court: After your father made this disposition of his property dio he get well, so he was able to travel? A. Yes, sir. Do you mean at Alma or at any time? The Court: At any time. Ans. Yes, sir. Q. Where did he drive? A. He traveled around about the yard and up and down the roads at my place at Afton. The Court: How far was he able to go? A. Half a mile or a mile. He did walk that, and might have walked more. He was out and walked every morning before breakfast about half a mile. The Court: Was he as well as he had been for several years before this sickness in Washington that you spoke of, at the time that he disposed of this property? A. He was until the last two months. The Court: Have possession of his mind and faculties, so he could think as well about his affairs as he had been accustomed to before that sickness in Washington? A. Yes, sir.”

On the theory that the evidence showed a donatio causa mortis, these questions by the court were dangerous in the extreme to plaintiff in error’s case, and the most dangerous could not have been asked by counsel for defendant in error in the form in which they were put. The witness simply affirmed the testimony of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
117 F. 835, 54 C.C.A. 133, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castle-v-persons-ca8-1902.