Deakins v. Webb No. 1

84 S.W.2d 367, 19 Tenn. App. 182, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 30
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 3, 1935
Docket1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 S.W.2d 367 (Deakins v. Webb No. 1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deakins v. Webb No. 1, 84 S.W.2d 367, 19 Tenn. App. 182, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 30 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

POET BUM, J.

On April 5, 1931, Henry D. DeVault died intestate in Sullivan county, Tenn., leaving about $16,000 in securities, represented by certificates of deposit and other negotiable instruments; he left no descendants, so his next of kin and distributees are his collateral kin. His wife, Mary I. DeVault, predeceased him, having died March 15, 1928. They were married in 1880, more than fifty years ago. At the date of the marriage Mrs. DeVault had some stock and personal property and she received $600 for the sale of land inherited by her from her father’s’estate. After her death, her husband discovered hidden money, consisting of gold and currency in amount of $1,444.83; he did not know that she possessed this money, and he carried it to a bank and deposited it by taking a certificate of deposit in his name, at the same time he had other money of his there on deposit and he did not consolidate these deposits in one certificate of deposit, but kept a separate certificate of deposit for the money which his wife had hidden before her death. Mr. DeVault had a nephew, H. Clinton Webb, who afterwards qualified as his administrator, in whom he had confidence, and Mr. DeVault, because of his age, finding his business matters troublesome, intrusted this nephew with the management of his affairs. He gave him the following written authority:

“This is to certify that I have on this date given privilege and authority to H. C. Webb to be free to act as my agent in all my personal *184 business matters, such as writing cheeks on any banks I have accounts with, and as to any other matters that may arise. This April 25, 1930. (Signed) II. D. DeVault.”

Mr. DeVault had his money deposited in three different banks at different localities, and the first thing that his nephew and agent, Mr. Webb, did was to consolidate these deposits by cashing all of the certificates of deposit, including the one which represented the money found after the death of the wife, and redepositing the entire sum in a certificate of deposit, taken in the name of Mr. DeVault in a bank at Bluff City, his home town. Mr. Webb acted for his uncle upon this authority until the day of the linde’s death in April, 1931, and perhaps attempted to carry out his uncle’s directions after his death in the settlement of his estate, but a few months later he regularly qualified as the administrator of the estate.

A few days more than three years after the death of Mr. DeVault, the complainants, who are the heirs at law and distributees, of Mrs. Mary DeVault, filed this bill for the purpose of recovering a part of Mr. DeVault’s estate upon one or more of the following theories alleged in the bill:

(a) That since Mrs. DeVault died intestate, and her husband had recognized her ownership of her funds which he had not intentionally reduced to his possession, then u.nder the law her estate passed to her next of kin and distributees, and they are entitled to recover them from the administrator.

(b) That Mr. DeVault did not die intestate, but in fact, had executed a will giving to Mrs. DeVault’s kin one-half interest in his estate, and this will was mislaid, destroyed, or lost, and the complainants are entitled to set it up and have it probated.

(c) That Mr. DeVault in his lifetime established a voluntary trust in favor of his wife’s kin in one-half of his estate, and that the complainants are entitled to have the.trust declared and enforced.

(d) That Mr. DeVault declared a voluntary trust of the funds belonging to his wife and directed his agent, Mr. Webb, to pay the funds over to the beneficiaries, and the complainants are entitled to have this trust agreement set up and enforced.

(e) And “said funds and property belonging to the said Mary I. DeVault were held and treated by the said Henry D. DeVault during the life, of the said wife as her separate property and estate, and that after her death it was held and treated by the said deceased as a trust fund in his hands for the use and benefit of the heirs at law ■of the said Mary I. DeVault.”

After the hearing, the Chancellor dismissed the bill.

(a) It seems to be the theory of the appellant that since the husband recognized the ownership of his wife in the personal property described, and did not reduce it to his possession prior to the act emancipating women, enacted in 1913, then the personal *185 property belonging to the wife at the time of her death passed under the law to her next of kin and distributees to the exclusion of her husband. At common law, it was necessary for the husband to reduce to his possession his wife’s personal property during her lifetime to perfect his title to it, but upon her death intestate he inherited her personal property, and, of course, this right of inheritance had no reference to her personal property which he had already acquired title to by reduction to possession. He inherited the property which he had failed to reduce to-his possession, and this to the exclusion of her next of kin, by reason of his marital relationship. Baker v. Dew, 133 Tenn., 126, 179 S. W., 645; American Surety Company v. Grace, 151 Tenn., 575, 577, 271 S. W., 739; Eblen v. Jordan, 161 Tenn., 509, 33 S. W. (2d), 65. (Since the passage of the act of 1929, carried into the Code 1932, section 8389, the husband takes under the statute of distribution to the exclusion of the wife’s collateral kin.)

(b) The evidence does not clearly establish the existence of a formally executed written will; the testimony shows that Mr. DeVault stated that he at one time made a will in favor of hM wife, but since her death it was necessary that he make another disposition of his estate.' And there is some testimony indicating or stating that he said that he had made another disposition of his estate. But there is testimony that Mr. DeVault said upon his deathbed that he had not executed a will. The appellants’ testimony taken alone is insufficient to establish a lost will. Even had they proved a formal execution of the will, and since it was not found among his papers at his death, then the presumption of law is that he revoked it. The burden was upon the appellant to show that it had not been revoked, and there is no evidence overturning this presumption. Wolfe v. Williams, 1 Tenn. App., 441. There is no convincing evidence that Mr. DeVault ever executed a formal will.

(e) There is not sufficient evidence showing that he ever anticipated or intended to give his wife’s people one-half of his estate; and there is no proof shoAving that he eA^er directed his agent, Mr. Webb, to pay over one-half of his estate to his wife’s relatives. There is nothing indicating the establishing of a voluntary trust to one-half of his property. His purpose to make a different dis- - position of his property negatives this idea.

(d) -and (e) Mr. D'eVault did express an intention to give to his Avife’s people the money aaTlícIi he had recognized as her money, especially the $600 which was derived from the sale of her father’s land, which she received. But aaA think this is an expression of a future intention, and he did not constitute himself a trustee to hold the funds for the benefit of liis Avife’s kin. If there were any recognition of a trust by Mr. DeVault, it was after *186

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Related

Pearson v. McCallum
173 S.W.2d 150 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.W.2d 367, 19 Tenn. App. 182, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deakins-v-webb-no-1-tennctapp-1935.