Frazier v. Hudson

130 S.W.2d 809, 279 Ky. 334, 123 A.L.R. 1331, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 23, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 809 (Frazier v. Hudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazier v. Hudson, 130 S.W.2d 809, 279 Ky. 334, 123 A.L.R. 1331, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 289 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

At the time of the transaction here in contest the appellee, A. M. Hudson, defendant below, resided in Henry County, Kentucky, and was then about 78 years of age. He had succeeded in accumulating considerable property, composed of both real estate and personalty. His wife had died, and he had executed deeds dividing his extensive farm among his children — who were. married, and, as we gather, were living on the portions allotted to them, except his daughter, the appellant and plaintiff below, Mary Lee Frazier, nee Hudson, who was an in *335 fant 19 years of age and living with her father. In making the division of his land plaintiff was deeded 62 acres, but which did not embrace tne residence, and defendant reserved a life interest in that tract for himself, plus a similar reservation in 34 acres of an adjoining allotment to another child, and upon which 34 acres was located the Hudson residence.

_ Some four years or more before the filing of this action, plaintiff married one Frazier, and she and her husband desired a separate residence. To accommodate them defendant purchased another 62 acres and deeded it outright to his daughter, but did not alter in any manner the disposition of his home place that he had reserved for himself during his life. So that, the total amount of land given to plaintiff by defendant was and is 62 acres unencumbered by any prior estate, and 62 acres encumbered by defendant’s life estate — the land being worth, according to the undisputed testimony, at least $150 per acre — it being, in the language of defendant, “as good land as a crow ever flew over.”

Among the personal property owned by defendant was a number of U. S. Liberty Bonds of $1000 each, and on March 13, 1926, he went to the bank in which the bonds were deposited in a safety box and after procuring them he, by writing on the back thereof, assigned one of them to each of his children. The assignment of the one here in contest says: “For value received I assign to Mary Lee Hudson the within registered bond of the United States and hereby authorize the transfer thereof on the books of the United States Treasury Department.” Defendant then signed it, as he did other bonds to his other children, and acknowledged it before the assistant cashier of the bank. He then put the bonds back in his box and never informed any one of what he had done, except the assistant cashier. The bonds were redeemable by the government after 1933, but were not due until 1938. A year or more following 1933 defendant received notice that the government desired to redeem his bonds and he, for the first time, notified his children of the endorsements that he had made thereon and requested a re-transfer of them to him so that they might be redeemed, and with the intention as he testified without objection, to re-invest the proceeds in similar bonds.

All of the children except plaintiff readily consented *336 thereto, none of them, except her, asserting any interest in the particular bond that had been so transferred^ to them. She, however, declined, and later filéd this action against her father in the Henry circuit court, seeking to-recover possession of the bond that had been so transferred to her, with damages from the date of its transfer, which she fixed at the rate of 4% per centum annually, which was the rate of interest that the bond drew, and which he collected after the endorsement. She did not ask for or obtain a writ of claim and delivery at the beginning of the action. In her petition she claimed the property as a gift inter vivos, but she appears to have later abandoned that and to base her claim, of title under the doctrine of an express declaratory trust, emanating from the written declaration of her father as contained in the writing on the back of the bond. Evidencing such abandonment we insert some excerpts from brief of plaintiff’s counsel, made by them in disposing.of the argument of defendant’s counsel that the transaction in controversy did not constitute an inter vivos gift. They say: “The obvious reasoning upon which those cases are to be distinguished from the case at bar is that in those cases there was no thought of anything other than an inter vivos gift. The supposed donors had obviously intended to make an inter vivos gift, and nothing more. Since the elements required to sustain a gift were lacking, the ‘gifts’ failed. In the instant case, however, there was no contention that the transaction involved an inter vivos gift, but on the contrary, that it does not.”

.Later in their brief they say this: “In the instant case, the evidence certainly does not tend to establish an inter vivos gift. There was no delivery; no passing of the dividends; no surrender of present custody. Yet, there was a formal written declaration, made by the appellee before an official, setting out that appellee transferred the bond to his then infant daughter.”

Then follows an argument that, though the transaction was ineffective as an inter vivos gift, yet it was sufficient to create an enforcible declaration of trust, which, if true, has the same effect as if the original contention of an inter vivos gift had prevailed.

Defendant’s answer to the petition denied all material averments contained therein, except the assignment, and he denied all intention of making thereby any sort *337 of present transfer of title to the bond from himself to his daughter. On the contrary, he asserted that his only intention was to fix it so that his daughter and other children would receive the respective bonds so transferred at the time of his death if he still owned them at that time, and had not consumed them in his necessary living expenses, or otherwise. No objection was made to that testimony as given by him, and it corresponds with his conduct thereafter in retaining possession of the bonds and collecting the interest thereon for his own use, and in not informing the children of what he had done. However, it should be said that plaintiff testified that her father did inform her at or following the transfer made by him, but her testimony on that point is more or less unconvincing, and it was necessarily discarded by the court, who believed the testimony of the father rather than that of the daughter. On final submission after evidence taken the court dismissed plaintiff’s petition, to reverse which she prosecutes this appeal. In view of the express admissions of counsel supra, we will dismiss without comment the original claim of plaintiff that she obtained title to the bond in question through an inter vivos gift from her father, and will treat the case from now on as one based upon the claim of a valid and enforcible declaration of trust.

One of the chief elements essential to the creation of such a trust is the manifestation of an intent on the part of the alleged donor or trustee to create it in favor of the alleged beneficiary in and to the particular property involved. In the Restatement of the Law of Trusts, .Volume 1, page 73, Section 23, it is said: “In order to create a trust the settlor must properly manifest an intention to create such a relationship as constitutes a trust as defined in Section (2). * * * On the other hand, no trust is created unless the settlor manifests an intention to impose enforceable duties (see Section 25).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 S.W.2d 809, 279 Ky. 334, 123 A.L.R. 1331, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-hudson-kyctapphigh-1939.