Epps v. Wood

257 S.E.2d 259, 243 Ga. 835, 1979 Ga. LEXIS 1110
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 20, 1979
Docket34799, 34800
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 257 S.E.2d 259 (Epps v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Epps v. Wood, 257 S.E.2d 259, 243 Ga. 835, 1979 Ga. LEXIS 1110 (Ga. 1979).

Opinions

Nichols, Chief Justice.

This is a resulting trust case. The widower (in Case No. 34799) and the administrator of the deceased wife’s estate (in Case No. 34800) appeal from an order granting summary judgment for the deceased wife’s sister.

Depositions and affidavits introduced in support of and in opposition to the motion for summary judgment establish the following: Clifford and Frances Epps were husband and wife. Both were gainfully employed during a portion of their marriage. Since 1971, Clifford has been receiving Veteran’s Administration and Social Security benefits in excess of $1,000 each month. Frances retired from her employment in 1971 and received a small monthly income thereafter. Before Clifford was injured during the early 1960’s, he had maintained bank accounts in his own name. After the funds in those accounts were exhausted during the periods of his hospitalization and recovery, these accounts were closed out, and thereafter his income was deposited by Frances into a checking account maintained in the names of Frances and her sister, Mrs. Vivian Wood, until withdrawn by Frances [836]*836either to pay Clifford’s and Frances’ living expenses, or to make periodic deposits into certain savings accounts that also were maintained in the names of Frances and Vivian. Periodically, Frances took funds from the savings accounts and purchased bank certificates in her and Vivian’s names. All of these accounts and certificates were with right of survivorship, and Clifford’s name did not appear on any of them.

Clifford was aware of these transactions. After he was injured during the early 1960’s, he executed and filed of record, and thereafter never canceled, a general power of attorney in favor of Frances. Everyone, including Clifford, agrees that Clifford is not a good businessman; in fact, that he could be a spendthrift, whereas Frances was a skilled and successful manager of financial matters. She placed approximately $500 per month from Clifford’s benefit checks into the savings accounts and certificates. Clifford simply gave Frances his paychecks and his benefit checks and left financial matters entirely up to her. He did not question her actions or her decisions.

Clifford and Frances had several houses in Macon, Georgia that were titled either in Clifford’s or in Frances’ name during their marriage. Their first residence, purchased in 1951, was at 2784 Alta Vista Avenue. It was titled in Clifford’s name. A second house was purchased in 1956 at 336 Clinton Street to serve as a place of residence for Frances’ aged parents and her mentally retarded brother. All or a large part of Frances’ income then was being spent to support her parents and brother. Clifford made the down payment on the Clinton Street property by drawing out his retirement benefits from the company where he then was employed. The Clinton Street property was titled in Frances’ name because Clifford regarded it as being a gift to her. In 1962 the proceeds from the sale óf the Alta Vista property were used to purchase a residence at 547 Woolfolk Street. The Woolfolk Street property was titled in Frances’ name because, in the words of Clifford, "I gave her power of attorney when I had to go to the hospital so long and she was a good business woman and I saw no reason to change it.” He also testified about the Woolfolk Street property that there was no agreement for her to hold the title in trust for him; rather, "I bought it as ours.” [837]*837A few years later, in 1966, they sold the Clinton Street and Woolfolk Street properties, and the proceeds were used to purchase in Frances’ name a vacant lot upon which they constructed a home at 598 Robert Henry Street, where they lived until Frances’ death. When questioned as to why the Robert Henry Street property was put in Frances’ name, Clifford testified that Frances "was still guardian or still power of attorney and I saw no reason to change it.” He swore that there was no agreement between him and Frances about what she was to do with the Robert Henry Street property, which he regarded as being theirs.

Clifford has been under periodic psychiatric care for many years, both as an in-patient at Veteran’s Administration Hospitals and as an out-patient. He always has turned himself in when he felt need for care and never has been involuntarily committed. He also has received medical treatment and undergone hospitalization for alcohol abuse and for alcohol and drug abuse.

In 1972, Frances recorded an instrument in the form of a deed, executed in consideration of love and affection, pursuant to which she purported to convey to herself and her sister Vivian the home in which she and Clifford then were living on Robert Henry Street. The instrument recites: "It is the intention of this instrument to convey unto the grantees herein a present fee simple title to said property as tenants in common and upon the death of either of said grantees herein the interest in said property shall immediately vest in the survivor.” Clifford knew this deed existed, although it is not altogether clear exactly when or how he found out about it. Frances gave Clifford no reason for the deed and Clifford did not ask her about her reasons for it. He merely supposed that "the fact that I stayed in the hospital so much that she left it to where I would have a home and that her sister would be a trustee more or less to see that it didn’t deteriorate and be done away with.”

Upon the death of Frances, Vivian laid claim to all of the money and the house on Robert Henry Street to the total exclusion of Clifford. She did so, according to her evidence, in accordance with the survivorship deed and with Frances’ expression of intent as set forth in a [838]*838purported will drawn in Frances’ own handwriting but unwitnessed. This writing states that the house and all the money was to be the property of Vivian to be used by her to support their mentally retarded brother or for whatever other purpose Vivian might see fit. This writing further recites that Clifford had money from other sources "that will be enough for him to put into the Hell Hole’s [sic] of this World.”

Vivian testified that although there was an agreement between her and Frances for Frances to leave to her all of Clifford’s assets, there was no agreement for her to take care of Clifford or to expend any money for his benefit. She later testified that the money and property being left to her was not Clifford’s; rather, that it all belonged to Frances. She also swore that Frances, as well as Clifford, put money into the various bank accounts, certificates, and homes, some money of which came from Frances’ earnings and some of which came from their mother’s estate; that the various family members always had helped each other out financially, including her paying for Frances’ funeral arrangements, and that she and her husband had helped keep Frances and Clifford from losing the Robert Henry Street property when Clifford had been in the hospital. Vivian claimed all of the money and the house as hers alone. She disavowed any obligation to provide anything for Clifford.

Clifford testified positively that he never intended to make a gift of the money or of the Robert Henry Street property to Frances; that all of it was theirs and not hers; that if he ever had known that she was claiming it as hers alone to his complete exclusion, he would have asserted his rights sooner. He thought she was acting for him or for them, not for herself alone.

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Epps v. Wood
257 S.E.2d 259 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 S.E.2d 259, 243 Ga. 835, 1979 Ga. LEXIS 1110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epps-v-wood-ga-1979.