Gernert v. Liberty Nat. Bank & Trust Co. of Louisville

145 S.W.2d 522, 284 Ky. 575, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 544
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 29, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 145 S.W.2d 522 (Gernert v. Liberty Nat. Bank & Trust Co. of Louisville) 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
Gernert v. Liberty Nat. Bank & Trust Co. of Louisville, 145 S.W.2d 522, 284 Ky. 575, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 544 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

On June 26, 1938, Louise Gernert, a maiden lady advanced in years, died intestate, a resident of the city of Louisville, Kentucky. Following her death appellee, and a defendant below, Liberty National Bank and Trust Company of Louisville, was appointed administrator of her estate, which position it accepted, and after qualification took charge of her personal property which the law vested in it as- such representative for the pur *577 pose of distribution as the law directs. The intestate' owned a considerable amount of both real estate and personal property, the latter amounting to between fourteen and fifteen thousand dollars, the inventory of the appraisers showing the amount and items thereof. There were no debts owed by the intestate except, perhaps, a remnant' of physicians ’ bills and her funeral expenses. The personal property consisted of cash on deposit in bank, bank stock, bonds and other securities about which no question existed as to solvency. The-nearest relatives and heirs of the intestate who survived her were and are Minnie Krankel, and Amelia Rehkopf,. two married sisters, and eleven nephews and nieces,, children of deceased brothers and sisters.

On March 21, 1939, two of the nephews and one niece jointly filed this equity action in the Jefferson circuit court against the administrator—and all of the other heirs of the intestate—and in their petition they averred that the inventory made of the personal assets of the estate was incorrect in that it did not include certain pieces of jewelry belonging to the estate, nor did it include some notes which plaintiffs averred were executed by some of the heirs (who were named) to the intestate, and which had not been paid, the aggregate amount of which (as averred) was $2,500, but the exact, amount of which was unknown to plaintiffs. However, they alleged that by reason thereof there was due to be paid the estate from the sister, Amelia Rehkopf, $1,500; by Phil Rehkopf, her son, $1,000, and by Phil Gernert, another nephew, the sum of $48. There was no value put upon the jewelry by plaintiffs in their petition, but they prayed that the claimed omitted property be recovered as a part of the assets of the estate and for its. settlement after such augmentation.

Defensive pleadings were filed putting in issue the-material averments of the petition and affirmatively alleging that the notes mentioned in the petition had been, reduced by payments made thereon to nominal amounts,, and that the intestate before her death released and relinquished to the payers of the notes all balances due-thereon and delivered the notes to the parties who executed them, as gifts. It was furthermore affirmatively-alleged in the defensive pleading that the limited amount of jewelry was distributed by decedent before her death as gifts to some of her preferred heirs, including her *578 two sisters, and that all of such property was then and there delivered to the donees, except two of the gifts were made to a couple of nieces who were absent at the time, but their donations were delivered to another heir in trust for them, with instructions from the deceased that the articles be delivered to the respective donees by the trustee, which was later done, but, perhaps, in some instances after intestate’s death.

A reply controverted the affirmative averments and the cause was referred to the court’s commissioner to take proof and report upon the issues of fact thus made. That task was valiantly and ably performed by the commissioner who, after taking the proof offered by either side, determined and held that the aggregate value of nil the property sought to be recovered for the benefit of the estate, by plaintiffs in their petition was only about $700, and that it had been disposed of :by inter vivos gifts, as averred in the affirmative paragraph of defendants’ answers. Accompanying that report was the testimony taken, heard and considered by the commissioner, who in his report also overruled and dismissed a motion for the allowance of an attorneys’ fee to plaintiffs’ counsel in prosecuting the action, amounting (as they claimed was reasonable) to the sum of $1,250. Plaintiffs filed exceptions to that report, in which they raised the issues as to the validity of the gifts which the commissioner had upheld, and the exceptions also disputed the correctness of the commissioner’s ruling in disallowing an attorneys’ fee to be taxed as costs and to be paid out of the estate. The court overruled all plaintiffs’ exceptions to the report and confirmed it. Prom that judgment plaintiffs and their attorneys, (Huggins and Hogan) prosecute this appeal.

In attacking the validity of the gifts, upheld and sustained by the commissioner, and by the court in its judgment, counsel for appellants make two arguments — (1), that the testimony of the two surviving sisters of the decedent — whose testimony plaintiffs took as if on cross-examination, showed that the intestate was, as counsel argue, incompetent to make the gifts at the time they were alleged to have been made, and (2) that each of them in which the donated property was not personally delivered to the donee at the time was invalid, since, as insisted, it is necessary for the completion of a valid inter vivos gift that the property be delivered to the *579 donee in person and not to a trustee or agent for him. Attention will now be given to those two arguments.

1. Argument (1) is wholly unsupported by the. testimony, and in fact it is not seriously urged on this appeal. While the testimony established the fact that at: the time of the gifts the deceased donor was not in robust health, yet there is not the slightest intimation by anyone that she was mentally incompetent to comprehend her estate, the property which she was donating to her relatives, the purpose inducing her to take that action with reference to each of them, and to transact, any and all business matters relating to her property as she had always done. Impaired health alone is not enough to prove mental incompetency, unless the impairment is to such an extent as to dim, weaken or dissipate the mental faculties, and which the testimony shows was clearly untrue as to the donor in this case.. A conclusion to the contrary would have been most flagrantly against and unsupported by the evidence, and. for which reason no additional time nor space will be devoted to its discussion.

2. In support of argument (2) we are cited to the cases of Bell’s Ex’r v. Lawrence, 272 Ky. 439, 444, 114 S. W. (2d) 517; Combs v. Roark’s Adm’r, 221 Ky. 679, 299 S. W. 576; and Cochran’s Adm’x v. Cochran, 273 Ky. 1, 115 S. W. (2d) 376. In those cases—and numerous others cited in our opinions therein—we set forth the facts necessary to constitute an inter vivos gift, which are: (a) That there must be a competent donor; (b) an intention on his part to make the gift; (c) a, donee capable to take it; (d) the gift must be complete,, with nothing left undone; (e) the property must be delivered and go into effect at once, and (f) the gift must, be irrevocable. In the Bell case we disallowed the alleged gift because we gathered from the evidence, which the opinion set out, that element (b), supra, was absent, and for which reason the alleged gift could not be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W.2d 522, 284 Ky. 575, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gernert-v-liberty-nat-bank-trust-co-of-louisville-kyctapphigh-1940.