Fischer v. Gorman

274 N.W. 866, 65 S.D. 453, 1937 S.D. LEXIS 71
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1937
DocketFile No. 8060.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 274 N.W. 866 (Fischer v. Gorman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fischer v. Gorman, 274 N.W. 866, 65 S.D. 453, 1937 S.D. LEXIS 71 (S.D. 1937).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

This action was brought by the executor of the last will and' testament of Esther C. Housman, deceased, and ‘by the devisees and legatees thereunder, to test the validity of certain deeds and assignments of real and personal property located in Sioux Falls, S. D. The instruments of conveyance and assignment were executed by the deceased during her lifetime, and came into the possession of the respective appealing defendants. The central controversy between the parties deals with the delivery of these instruments. Findings, conclusions of law, and decree were entered in favor of plaintiffs. Under the assignments of error we are required to review the sufficiency of the evidence and the adequacy of the findings. A preliminary epitome of the events shown by the evidence will contribute to an understanding of that which follows.

During the life of deceased she was the owner of certain real and personal property. The appealing defendants were her intimate friends and neighbors, but were.in no' manner related to> her and were not named as devisees or legatees in her last will and testament. Some months prior to her death deceased had1 executed and acknowledged the conveyances in question and1 had placed the same in respective packets with her savings bank book and other papers, with the name of defendant John Gorman on one packet, and tire name of Clarence E. Brace on the other. A further description of the instruments and of the property involved will serve no useful purpose. These packets were placed in a black handbag of a- style formerly used by women. Some months prior to her death, deceased called her maid servant, pointed out the bag where it was hanging in a closet in the house, and directed her to deliver the papers therein contained when she was advised that deceased could not recover. On September 20, 193.5, at about 10:30 o’clock in the evening, deceased suffered a paralytic stroke *456 and passed away at about 12:3o p. m. on September 21st. Witnesses for appellants testify that some time during the morning of the 21st, the maid called Mr. and Mrs. Gorman and Mr. B'ruce into the bedroom where the black bag was hanging and' handed the packets to Mr. Gorman and Mr. Bruce, respectively, according to her previous instructions.

With reference to the delivery, appellants stoutly assert that the evidence conclusively establishes a present delivery of the instruments in question to a third person for the benefit of the grantees, or, second, a delivery of the instruments to the grantees by an agent of the grantor. It is further asserted by appellants that the court failed to- make an effective finding of fact on the issue of delivery.

The first contention made by appellants was predicated upon the transaction between the grantor and the maid at the time the black bag and -its contents were pointed out to the maid. The circumstances are described by the maid in the following words, on direct examination: “The first time I saw those papers or knew anything about them was along in the middle of June when Mrs. Housman told me that she had some papers and told me where she 'had them and she showed me the -bag at the time, where they were in the closet, and she said to- me, 'When you know that I -can’t live, or that the nurse says that I am — I can’t recover, you deliver -these papers that are in the bag’; but I didn’t see the papers myself. Mrs. Housman gave me those instructions at that time and showed me this bag which was a bag su-oh as women used to use as a pocket book, and was in the closet in the spare bedroom, which would be on the north wall of that bedroom. 1 didn’t look inside the bag at that time and didn’t have the bag in my possession at all. She had the bag herself and just put her hand in on the papers and said she had some papers there in the bag, and she told me- that when I knew that she could not recover, or I was so advised by the nurse, to deliver those papers to- the persons to- whom they were addressed. I did not know at that time to- whom they were addressed.”

Appellants purport to find authority for their position in Trumbauer et al. v. Rust, 36 S. D. 301, 154 N. W. 801, 4 A. L. R. 10; O'Connor et al. v. McCabe, 46 S. D. 269, 192 N. W. 370; *457 Stalting et al. v. Stalting et al., 52 S. D. 309, 217 N. W. 386, 389 ; Wolf v. Wolf et al., 59 S. D. 418, 240 N. W. 349; Merkamp et al. v. Niles et al., 62 S. D. 241, 252 N. W. 636; and in similar holdings from other jurisdictions. We have no difficulty, however, in discerning that these cases are clearly distinguishable from the situation at bar. In each of the cases cited, the third person was placed in control of the instruments of conveyance. The controlling principle was well stated by this court in the case of Stalting v. Stalting, supra, as follows: “We believe the sound rule, and that sustained by the weight of authority, is that, .if the grantor unconditionally hands over the deed to the depositary, placing it beyond the control and dominion of the grantor, with instructions to transmit to the grantee at grantor’s death, there is then a valid, effective, and irrevocable delivery of the instrument as a deed, and a present interest in the realty passes at that time to- the grantee, although the enjoyment thereof is deferred until the death of the grantor. If, however, when the instrument is handed over to' the depositary, the grantor retains control and dominion over it, and the instruction is to deliver the deed to the grantee at grantor’s death, unless otherwise directed in the meantime, there is no 'delivery of a deed, but merely an effort to make a will in a manner not recognized by the law; the depositary remains the agent of the grantor only, and his authority to deliver is terminated by the death of the grantor, and the instrument can have no effect, unless it was executed with the formalities required for the execution of a will.”

In the instant case, the instruments were never handed to the third person, nor were they placed in the control of the third person. Undeniably, full control of the instruments remained in the grantor. Further, it is clear that there was no intention on the part of the grantor to' make any present grant. She was looking to the future, and to the execution of a plan she had in mind to deliver these instrumnts when and if it was certain that she was to die. It is evident that she sensed the necessity of delivery during 'her lifetime rather than after death as an essential of this plan. In the meantime, it is clear that she intended not only to retain the enjoyment but also the title to the property. The circumstances disclose instructions to an agent of the grantor, and wholly fail to show symbolic, constructive, or actual delivery of the instru *458 merits to a third person'for the grantees. The essential element, namely, control by a third person, from which the courts have inferred an intention to convey a'present interest, is entirely lacking in' this record.

The determined status of the maid servant as the agent of the grantor leads us to the consideration of the circumstances under which the instruments of conveyance came into the possession of the appealing-grantees, "and requires an answer to one specific inquiry, namely: Was the •’authority of the agent revoked by the death or incapacity of the' principal prior to» the purported deliveries?

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Bluebook (online)
274 N.W. 866, 65 S.D. 453, 1937 S.D. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fischer-v-gorman-sd-1937.