Galbraith v. Galbraith

193 N.E. 707, 99 Ind. App. 563, 1935 Ind. App. LEXIS 99
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1935
DocketNo. 15,202.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 193 N.E. 707 (Galbraith v. Galbraith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galbraith v. Galbraith, 193 N.E. 707, 99 Ind. App. 563, 1935 Ind. App. LEXIS 99 (Ind. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Wood, J.

During his lifetime, Arthur D. Galbraith was the owner and payee of three certain promissory notes, to wit: one note dated May 13, 1913, due and payable two years after date; one note dated December 31, 1915, due and payable one year after date, and one note dated April 23, 1905, due and payable one day *564 after date. By his written indorsement on the back thereof in words and figures substantially as follows: "July 2, 1920, I assign the within note to A. H. Gal-, braith. A. D. Galbraith,” he assigned each of said notes to his son, the appellant herein. The makers of these respective notes failed to pay them. Arthur D. Galbraith died testate January 18, 1930. Appellees are the executors of his last will and testament.

The appellant filed two claims against the estate of appellees’ decedent, seeking to recover upon the written indorsement placed upon each of said notes by the decedent while in life. These claims were consolidated in the trial court, and they are so treated on this appeal. One of the claims contained one paragraph, founded upon the indorsement on the note dated May 13, 1913, while the other claim contained two paragraphs f ounded upon the indorsements on the notes dated December 31, 1915, and April 23,1905, respectively. To each paragraph of these respective claims, the appellees filed a separate second paragraph of answer admitting the assignment of the note, by written indorsement, as therein alleged, but avering that the assignment and indorsement were made without any consideration. Appellees also filed a separate amended third paragraph of answer to each paragraph of the claims, alleging in substance, that the appellant’s cause of action did not accrue within ten years prior to the death of Arthur D. Galbraith, and did not accrue within ten years prior to filing the claim; that the first note had been due since May 13, 1915; the second since December 31, 1916, and the third since April 24, 1905; that no payments or credits had been made upon any of them; that Arthur D. Galbraith was alleged to have assigned each of said notes to appellant by written indorsement; that Arthur D. Galbraith died January 18, 1930; that appellant’s claims were not filed within eighteen months after the *565 death of Arthur D. Galbraith, and were not filed until January 29, 1932.

To each separate second paragraph of appellees’ answer, the appellant filed a second separate paragraph of reply in which he alleged that the assignment of the note, therein referred to, with the written indorsement thereon, which formed the basis of the claim, was a gift from Arthur D. Galbraith to appellant.

Appellant also filed a third separate paragraph of reply to said second paragraph of answer in which he alleged that the assignment of the note therein referred to, together with the written indorsement thereon, which formed the basis of the claim, in each instance was made in consideration of love and affection which Arthur D. Galbraith had for appellant.

To each separate amended third paragraph of appellees’ answer, appellant filed a second separate paragraph of reply, in which he alleged in substance, that on July 25, 1928, and within ten years before the filing of appellant’s claim, Arthur D. Galbraith, in a written communication addressed to appellant, acknowledged his liability on the notes sued upon, and agreed and promised to pay the same in full. The written communication is copied into and made a part of the paragraph of reply and reads as follows:

“Burney, Indiana, July 25, 1928.
“Harold Galbraith those notes you have Carl Dorsey note dated May 13, 1913, principal sum of $2661 Al Swaim note dated Dec. 31, 1915 principal sum of $500 Joe Ramer note dated Apr. 23, 1905 principal sum of $235 that I gave you and charged them against you in my last will as advancements knowing that you have tried to collect them off of the principals of the notes and failed and as I am endorser on them to you that makes them a just debt from me to you which I now and hereby acknowledge. Therefore I hereby promise and agree to pay you said notes with interest in full. I saved Walters home and was turned out and you and *566 Neva have always welcomed me in your home I want you and Neva to let this farm go and I want you to have your old home place for a home pumphrey farm.
Your father,
A. D. Galbraith.”

To these several paragraphs of reply the appellee addressed a separate and several demurrer on the ground that the facts stated in each of said separate paragraphs of reply were not sufficient to avoid the paragraph of answer to which they were directed, filing memoranda in support thereof alleging: first, that the consideration sought to be shown was a good consideration as distinguished from a valuable consideration and was not sufficient to support an executory contract or promise; second, that the writing set out was an executory promise not shown to be founded on a consideration sufficient to bind the decedent’s estate; third, that the writing set out was not sufficient to constitute a new promise as against a claim barred by the statute of limitations; fourth, that the writing set out in said paragraph of reply pleaded as a waiver or new promise to avoid the statute of limitations, was only a waiver of an executory promise, contract, note and indorsement, when the original contract, note, and indorsement would not have been binding against said estate, if not barred by the statute of limitations; that said replies alleged an executory promise without valuable consideration to make good an executory promise, the indorsement, which was without valuable consideration; fifth, that if the writing set out in the replies was intended to be the basis of appellant’s claim in lieu of the note on which the claim was originally filed then it was a departure from the original cause of action; and sixth, that the writing set out in the paragraphs of reply was not sufficient to constitute a gift causa mortis or inter vivos, did not amount to a testamentary disposition, nor a change in the decedent’s will.

*567 The demurrer was sustained to the several paragraphs of reply. Appellant elected to stand upon the ruling on the demurrer, refused to plead further. Judgment was accordingly rendered against him upon the pleadings which we have heretofore summarized, that he take nothing by his action. He appeals to this court, assigning as error for reversal this ruling of the court on appellees’ demurrer.

The record, as it comes to us, presents two controlling questions.

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Related

Brown, Administrator v. Addington
52 N.E.2d 640 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 N.E. 707, 99 Ind. App. 563, 1935 Ind. App. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galbraith-v-galbraith-indctapp-1935.