Comstock's Appeal from Commissioners

10 A. 559, 55 Conn. 214, 1887 Conn. LEXIS 27
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 1, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 10 A. 559 (Comstock's Appeal from Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comstock's Appeal from Commissioners, 10 A. 559, 55 Conn. 214, 1887 Conn. LEXIS 27 (Colo. 1887).

Opinion

Loomis, J.

Between 1867 and 1879 Amelia F. Day, wife of and living with George W. Day, acquired about $2,000 by her personal services, under an agreement between herself, her husband, and her brother, by whom the money was [216]*216paid to her, that it should be of her sole and separate estate, which money she from time to time delivered to her husband. She died in 1879; he died in 1888. W. W. Comstock, the administrator upon her estate, whom we shall call the plaintiff, presented a claim for the repayment of this money to the commissioners appointed to receive, examine and decide upon the claims against his estate. They allowed $305.73 and disallowed the balance, $1,912, whereupon he appealed to the Superior Court, and there, by .verdict of a jury, recovered $2,000. S. P. Tuttle, the administrator upon his estate, whom we shall call the defendant, then appealed to this court. The plaintiff first presented his claim against the husband’s estate to the defendant in 1884 in the following form :—

“Estate of George W. Day, Dr. to William W. Com-stock, Administrator of the estate of Amelia F. Day, deceased.
“ To cash loaned by the said Amelia F. Day in her lifetime to the said George W. Day in his lifetime, out of her sole and separate estate, between January 1st, 1868, and January 1st, 1881, $2,135.00, the same being the amount of all the money received by the said Amelia F. Day from William W. Comstock for the care and board of Georgiana Comstock for the period embraced between said last mentioned dates. The said William W. Comstock, administrator, further claims the interest on said sums loaned, from the dates when the same were loaned to the date when interest is allowed on other claims against said George W. Day’s estate.”

In 1885, in the Superior Court,-upon the suggestion of that court that he should present his claim with more particularity, the plaintiff made this additional presentation:—

“ On or about the 18th day of April, 1879, there was found to be due from the said George W. Day, then in full life, to the estate of Amelia F. Day, deceased, the sum of ■$2,035, by the admissions of the said Day to the said W. W. Comstock, and on April 29th, 1880, the said Day received from the said W. W. Comstock, on the account [217]*217referred to in said claim, $50 more, amounting in all to the sum of $2,085; the same, except said $50, having been received by said George W. Day in his lifetime from the said Amelia F. Day in her lifetime, from and out of her sole and separate estate, and as trustee thereof, and under the express and acknowledged trust that he would keep the same invested for her in his business or elsewhere, and would account to her for the same with interest on demand. Said moneys were received by said George W. Day in payments of from twenty dollars to fifty dollars each, at intervals of about two months, beginning about April, 1869, and continuing to about October 1st, 1879.”

The defendant moved the court to strike out all except the last clause of this additional statement, because the other .portions of it change the ground of action from that embodied in the first presentation. The court denied the motion.

The parties were at issue to the court on the demurrer of the plaintiff to the fifth defense in the substituted answer of the defendant. The fifth defense was in these words:—

“ The said George W. Day and Amelia F. Day were husband and wife, and living together as such on the first day of January, 1868, and so continued until her death, which took place October 18, 1879.”

The plaintiff’s grounds of demurrer were stated in these words:—

1. Because the appellant’s claim is alleged to be upon an express and acknowledged trust.

2. The transactions upon which said claim is based are described as being between husband and wife, relative to her sole and separate estate which came into the husband’s hands for investment merely, and as trustee thereof for the benefit of the wife, and not upon any other agreement whatever.

8. Because if not in law the sole and separate estate of the wife, then it appears that the moneys which are the subject matter of this suit were the statutory estate of the wife, acquired since the 22d day of June, 1849, in the [218]*218hands of the husband as her statutory trustee, which estate in this ease, at the husband’s death, is to be transferred to the administrator of the deceased wife.

4. Because the facts therein stated would not in equity excuse the said George W. Day from accounting to the said Amelia F. Day for so much of her sole and separate estate, or for so much of her statutory estate, as should come into his hands in the manner stated in the reasons of appeal; and because the rights of the appellant and the obligations of the appellee are the same in this proceeding as those of the wife and husband respectively in a court of equity in their lifetime.

5. Because it-.does not appear that the written assent of the said Amelia F. Day was ever obtained by the said George W. Day to apply any part of the principal of the wife’s estate either for her support or otherwise.

The court held the fifth defense to be insufficient. The parties were then at issue to the jury; the plaintiff had a verdict; the defendant appeals.

The first five reasons aré based upon the reception by the court of the additional statement as to his claim by the plaintiff. The remaining reasons are as follows:—

6. That the court charged the jury that the property in question in this case came within the terms of and was controlled by section 8, page 186, of the Revised Statutes.

7. That the court charged the jury that the pleadings in the case did not fix the character of the property in question for the purposes of this case.

8. That the court charged the jury that if Mr. Day received the sole and separate estate of his wife on an agreement to return it to her, if he needed it in his business, and she let him have it from time to time as he requested, the statute of limitations would not apply.

9. That the court charged the jury that if Mrs. Day did not give the property in question to her husband, then he received it as trustee, so that the statute of limitations would not apply to the transaction.

10. That the court charged the jury, in substance and [219]*219effect, that the relation of debtor and creditor did not and could not have arisen between Mr. and Mrs. Day, and that he did not believe that any such relation existed between them, but that if the jury found some other agreement to have existed between them, contemplating a return of the money in question, their verdict should be for the appellant.

11. That the court did not charge the jury as requested by the appellee in his first request.

12. That the court did not charge the jury as requested by the appellee in his third request.

13. That the court did not charge the jury as requested by the appellee in his fifth request.

14. That the court sustained the demurrer to the fifth defense in the appellee’s answer.

15. That the court overruled the claims of the appellee relating to the reply to the third and fourth defenses of the answer.

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Bluebook (online)
10 A. 559, 55 Conn. 214, 1887 Conn. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comstocks-appeal-from-commissioners-conn-1887.