Chandler v. Roddy

43 S.W.2d 397, 163 Tenn. 338, 10 Smith & H. 338, 1931 Tenn. LEXIS 122
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 43 S.W.2d 397 (Chandler v. Roddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandler v. Roddy, 43 S.W.2d 397, 163 Tenn. 338, 10 Smith & H. 338, 1931 Tenn. LEXIS 122 (Tenn. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the' Court.

This is a suit by Eugenia Williams Chandler, daughter of the late D. H. Williams, to establish her right and title to certain personal property acquired by her father *341 during his lifetime. She claims that, prior to. his death, he gave said property to her. D. H. Williams left a will, under which his daughter was to act in a trust capacity hereinafter appearing. She files the bill, therefore, in an individual capacity to set up her own rights and likewise as a trustee for a declaration as to the rights of all parties involved. The executor of the will and certain contingent remaindermen were made parties defendant and they answered denying that there had been any completed gift of the property involved to Mrs. Chandler and insist that said property passed under the will. There was a mass of proof taken and the chancellor found that there had been no gift to the daughter, except as to some $68,000 of bonds and her claim to these bonds is no longer in dispute. The State of Tennessee filed an intervening petition in the cause seeking to collect a further inheritance tax and the relief prayed in this petition was in the main granted by the chancellor.

Mrs. Chandler appealed from so much of the chancellor’s decree as was adverse to her in the main case, and- all parties were dissatisfied with the chancellor’s ruling upon the State’s intervention and seek a review of the decree below in that aspect.

In 1920 D. H. Williams made a will by which, after certain particular provisions, generally speaking, he left his estate to a trustee, the income to be paid to his daughter until she was thirty years of age. Upon reaching that age, the property was to be turned over to her for life with remainder to her issue. If she died without issue, one-half was to go to the National G-eographic Society and one-half to James P. Roddy and Roddy’s family. Roddy was an intimate friend and business associate of the testator and was named as executor under *342 the will and designated as trustee until the daughter reached the age of - thirty years.

Mrs. Chandler became thirty years of age shortly after her father’s death. Roddy meanwhile had qualified as executor, paid off the legacies provided in the will, paid the debts and thereupon turned the entire estate over to Mrs. Chandler, with the exception of some $25,000, which it was agreed he was to hold to cover any further liability that might be adjudged against him as executor for inheritance taxes, etc. The daughter therefore has all the property in litigation in her possession and the question is whether she holds it in her own right as a gift from her father, or as life -tenant and trustee under her father’s will.

That part of the Williams estate which the daughter claims as a gift consists of certificates of deposit, stocks and bank deposits valued at more than $600',000.

There has been a great deal of discussion in the briefs and at the bar as to the admissibility of testimony of Mrs. Chandler in which she undertook to detail transactions and repeat conversations had with her father whereby it is contended he gave to her the money and securities in dispute. All this evidence was excepted to by the defendants and the chancellor sustained these exceptions. His Honor was of opinion that section 5598, Thompson’s-Shannon’s Code, providing that in actions by or against executors, etc., neither .party should be allowed to testify against the other as to any transaction with or statement by the testator, etc., applied. It is insisted for the cornnlainant that the executor is merely a nominal party to this srdt; that he had turned the property over to Mrs. Chandler as trustee, and had no further interest therein; and that the statute was not applicable,

*343 We do not find it necessary to pass on this controversy. All the material features of the excluded evidence of Mrs. Chandler are covered by the testimony of other witnesses without interest in the subject of litigation. Mrs. Chandler merely goes into somewhat greater detail than the other witnesses. If her excluded testimony be considered, therefore, it adds nothing to her case. If it be rejected, her case is not thereby weakened. Her account of her father’s dealings with her and his declarations to her is confirmed by the proof of her husband, Mrs. Cornick, Bacon, Briscoe, Jenkins, Weems, Roddy himself, and perhaps other witnesses.

Mrs. Chandler’s story is that in 1920, prior to her marriage, her father- called her into his office where there was a small iron safe belonging to him. He taught her the combination of the safe. He showed her the contents of the safe, including various certificates of deposit, shares of stock, and the like! These securities were contained in envelopes and testator had endorsed these envelopes as containing the property or personal property of Eugenia Williams. She said that he told her that he had given her all these securities; that they were all hers.

Sometime later Mrs. Chandler testifies that she was in her father’s office and he asked her if she remembered the combination of the safe. She had forgotten it and he taught it to her again and again made these declara-. tions as to his having given her the contents of that safe.

Later in the year 1920 the daughter married. It seems that her father objected to her marriage and there was somewhat of an estrangement between father and daughter for a time. 'Within two years, however, the afféctionate relations between them were restored and *344 Mrs. Chandler and her husband went to her father’s house to live with him. He was a widower with only this one child, having lost his wife and other children some years before. Likewise the relations between the father and the son-in-law seem to have become quite cordial and to have remained so until the father’s death.

About the year 1926, the testator, assisted by his son-in-law, Chandler, removed the securities mentioned from the iron safe in testator’s office to a safety deposit bos in the City National Bank. Chandler testifies with respect to the details of this move and to statements by testator at the time that he had given all this property to his daughter — that it was her’s. Chandler likewise testifies as to the securities being enclosed in envelopes which testator had endorsed as containing the property of Eugenia Williams Chandler, the name Chandler appearing to have been added in most cases to the original endorsements.

At this point we should note a contention made for complainant that there was a manual delivery of the securities here by her father to her husband as her agent. We think, however, that there was no intention by the testator to change title by any delivery made on this occasion. The stocks, etc., handed to Chandler at this time were handed to him for the purpose of having him assist in the transportation of this property to the City National Bank.

The box at the City National Bank was rented by D. H. Williams. A key or perhaps two keys were given by the bank to Williams. The contents of the iron safe were placed in the box. Williams alone had access to the box. So matters stood for perhaps two years.'

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.W.2d 397, 163 Tenn. 338, 10 Smith & H. 338, 1931 Tenn. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-roddy-tenn-1931.