De Mouy v. Jepson

51 So. 2d 506, 255 Ala. 337, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 319
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 22, 1951
Docket1 Div. 423
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 51 So. 2d 506 (De Mouy v. Jepson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Mouy v. Jepson, 51 So. 2d 506, 255 Ala. 337, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 319 (Ala. 1951).

Opinion

SIMPSON, Justice.

This suit was brought in the circuit court, in equity, on a bill by appellee, Emily Jepson, as legatee under the will of Mary E. Rupf, deceased, against Sophie G. De- *339 Mouy, individually, and as executrix under the will of said decedent. By agreement of the parties, there was consolidated with, said cause a case on appeal to the circuit' court in a detinue suit instituted in the justice of the peace court between the parties,involving certain personal property, to he, mentioned later, owned by decedent in her' lifetime.

This suit was instituted under the provisions of § 159, Title 7, Code 1940j and the general authority of equity, to have the court construe Paragraph A of the will and the first clause of the -codicil.

Paragraph A of the will reads: “I give, devise and bequeath to my beloved friend, Emily Jepson, wheresoever situated, now of 510 Wilmott Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn., my home wherever situated, now of 301 White Avenue, Fairhope, Alabama, including all furniture and equipment.”

The codicil reads: “First I wish my home that is left to Mrs. Emily Jepson of Bridge^ port, Connecticut, to have the lease, adjoining my home, on the W-est thirty-three feet to go to her with the home.”

There are two issues in dispute between the-parties, one involving personal property consisting of one dining room- set, one china -cabinet, one buffet, and one red carpet, which were situated in the property devised to Mrs. Jepson, which Mrs. DeMouy is claiming under a memorandum hereafter to be considered; and a strip of land approximately nine feet in width between the Jepson house (the “home” mentioned above) -and Mrs. DeMouy’s house on the east, which Mrs. DeMouy received, by. the terms of the will as residuary legatee. ' The personalty is the subject property of the detinue suit mentioned above.

The memorandum under which Mrs. Der Mouy claims the aforesaid articles of personal property, though they were, at .the time of testator’s death, in the “home” which Mrs. Rupf devised to Mrs. Jepson, was dated after the execution of the will and is as follows: (Sophie is Mrs., De-Mouy) “Chair' for Dr. Dahlgren. Antique desk for Marshall. Dining room set for Sophie. 4 dinner plates for Allison. Antique drop leaf tabteTor Sophie, -. ¥ase -for Mrs. Damrell. . Silver pitcher and dishes for Mrs. Ernest. Little house on 75 foot lot & furnishings for Sophie. Clothes basket for Sophie. Chair for Mrs. Moore, Book' case or mahogany victrola for Mrs," Cheeseman. Red carpets and pink drapes for Sophie. Large chest and pink camellia for Mary Rose. Double cot, mattress & covering for Sophie.” ■ ,

Appellant, Mrs. DeMouy, contends that-by this memorandum the articles of personal property mentioned were gifts inter vivos from Mrs. Rupf to her, in consequence- of which they were lifted from the terms of Paragraph A of the will above quoted, entitling her to receive them rather than Mrs. Jepson. Appellee, however, advances-the contrary -contention, which was sustained by the trial court, that if given any effect at all; the memorandum was testamentary in character, and not having been mentioned in -and' having no relation to the will, was void as not' having been executed in the form as required by law. . We are in á-ccord with that ruling. We think the evidence is too uncertain and unsatisfactory to’ show’-a completed gift to Mrs, DeMouy. ■

It is an essential prerequisite of' a. gift inter vivos that there must be a clear intention of the donor to make the gift with the donor’s relinquishment of all present and futhre dominion thereover and a delivery to and acceptance thereof by the donee, Collins v. Baxter, 231 Ala. 247, 164 So. 61.

The burden is on the donee, the appellant here, to establish the fact of gift by clear and -convincing proof and if the impartial mind is left in .-doubt or uncertainty-as to exactly what the status of the transaction was, the- donee has failed to discharge the burden imposed and the claim, of gift will fail. Collins v. Baxter, supra; Hudgens v. Tillman, 227 Ala. 672, 151 So. 863; Miller v. Tubb, 202 Ala. 631, 81 So. 573; Wheeler v. Glasgow, 97 Ala. 700, 11 So. 758; Thomas v. Tilley, 147 Ala. 189, 41 So. 854; Barnes v. Barnes, 174 Ala. 166, 56 So. 958.

We think the- evidence is entirely too uncertain as to just what result the-memoran.idtup did hatye upon the cigar .terms of .tji.e. *340 will and the contested articles of personal property described in Paragraph A of the will. All the evidence shows to sustain the gift inter vivos to Mrs. DeMouy is that Mrs. DeMouy was residing in the home of Mrs. Rupf and looking after her business for her when the memorandum was purportedly executed and when Mrs. Rupf died. The only proof as to the execution and delivery of the memorandum was that it bore Mrs. Rupf’s signature and that within two or three months of her death, according to the deposition of Morgan, a tenant of hers, she told Morgan that she had directed Mrs. Sophie G. DeMouy to make up a list of certain personal property which she desired to give (not had given) to various people, that Mrs. DeMouy did make up such list and that she, Mrs. Rupf, had signed it and had had it witnessed by Mrs. DeMouy and that she had delivered it to Mrs. DeMouy. It was in Mrs. De-Mouy’s possession when it was presented in court. The articles described in the memorandum “for” Mrs. DeMouy which are in litigation here remained in the home of Mrs. Rupf until after her death and thus, as we view it, there was never any completed delivery with relinquishment of control to make an executed gift.

It is to be conceded, as argued by able counsel for appellant, that where the personal property is not susceptible of manual delivery, symbolic or constructive delivery is sufficient to constitute an enforceable gift and under circumstances where a gift is evidenced by writing executed by the donor, the delivery of the writing is held to be sufficient delivery to support the gift. Collins v. Baxter, supra, and cases cited; First National Bank v. Hammel, 252 Ala. 624, 626, 42 So.2d 459; Goodson v. Liles, 209 Ala. 335, 338, 96 So. 262; 38 C.J.S., Gifts, § 22, pp. 801, 802.

But conceding the execution and delivery of the memorandum, whatever may have been its dubious import, the circumstances disclosed by the present record fail to satisfactorily convince the impartial mind of a completed gift inter vivos. True, the other items listed in the memorandum are not contested here as being completed gifts to the respective persons named therein, but these articles were delivered presumably before Mrs. Rupf’s death and we will assume with her authorization or approval. The circumstances with reference to them are not shown and the articles are not in contest. The situation is different as regards the articles claimed by Mrs. DeMouy. There is no evidence that Mrs. Rupf ever parted with the dominion and control over them or that they were ever delivered over to Mrs. DeMouy, and without a release of dominion and control over them and a delivery by the donor to the donee, regardless of the status of the other articles mentioned in the memorandum, the gift was not completed. Our view of the case is that the memorandum as regards the personal property in suit must be regarded as merely indicative of Mrs.

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51 So. 2d 506, 255 Ala. 337, 1951 Ala. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-mouy-v-jepson-ala-1951.