Gibson v. Hearn

113 So. 766, 164 La. 65, 1927 La. LEXIS 1938
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 23, 1927
DocketNo. 28020.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 113 So. 766 (Gibson v. Hearn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibson v. Hearn, 113 So. 766, 164 La. 65, 1927 La. LEXIS 1938 (La. 1927).

Opinion

*67 ROGERS, J.

In the month of September,. 1920, plaintiff married Arnold Carl Hearn. At the time of the marriage, Hearn was insured for $1,000, with double indemnity for accidental death, in the Indiana Life Insurance Company. The beneficiary designated in the policy was the insured’s mother, Mrs. Susan J. Hearn. Arnold Carl Hearn was accidently killed in the month of July, 1921, and three weeks after his death plaintiff gave birth to a female child, Mary Arnold Hearn. A check for $2,000, the proceeds of the policy, was issued by the insurance company to the order of Mrs. Susan J. Hearn, the beneficiary who delivered it to her son, O. Joseph Hearn, to be deposited in bank. The deposit was made in the Planters’ Bank of Haynesville. Subsequently it was withdrawn from that bank and redeposited in the First National Bank of Minden to the credit of “O. Joseph Hearn, Agent for Mary Arnold Hearn,” in the form of a time deposit for twelve months, drawing 4% per cent, interest annually. The money remained on deposit in this manner for two years, until December 2, 1923, wh.en it was withdrawn by O. J. Hearn and redeposited to the credit of “O. J. Hearn, Agent.” On December 2, 1924, the fund was again withdrawn and placed to the credit of O. J. Hearn personally.

On July 22, 1922, plaintiff qualified as the natural, tutrix of her minor daughter, Mary Arnold Hearn, and the said O. J. Hearn was appointed and qualified as undertutor to said minor.

On' September 19, 1923, plaintiff married Y. P. Gibson, and on February 1, 1926, she and her said husband as tutrix and cotutor, respectively, of the minor instituted this suit against O. Joseph Hearn to recover $2,184.05 as the property of the minor held by him and for $500 as attorney’s fees. During the trial of the case, plaintiff also filed a plea of estoppel, which was overruled.

The judgment of the court below decreed the fund in question to belong to the minor, Mary Arnold Hearn, ordered defendant to redeposit it in the First National Bank of Minden, at interest, and not to be withdrawn until the minor shall reach 18 years of age, then to be used for her higher education, the withdrawals to be under the court’s direction. The demand for attorney’s fees was rejected. Defendant appealed, and plaintiffs have answered the appeal, asking that the judgment be amended so as to order in lieu of the redeposit of the fund that it be placed in the custody and under the' control of the tutrix of the minor, and that, should defendant fail to redeposit the fund as ordered or to pay it over to the tutrix, plaintiffs have a personal judgment against the defendant for the full amount thereof, with interest.

Plaintiffs’ action is grounded upon an alleged donation by manual gift by Mrs. Susan J. Hearn, the beneficiary, of the avails of the policy to the minor Mary Arnold Hearn. Their contention, which we think is established by the evidence, is that, shortly after the marriage of Mary Stell and Arnold Garl Hearn, she and her husband and his mother, the beneficiary, held a number of conferences with regard to the disposition of the proceeds of the policy, and it was decided that it was unnecessary to change the beneficiary, but, in case of the death of the insured, these proceeds would be turned over to his wife, if there were no children, and, if there .were any children, the proceeds would be given to them; that, after the birth of her child, it was agreed by the mother and the widow of the insured and by his brother, defendant herein, that the avails of the policy were to be given to the child of the deceased by placing the fund to her credit in bank with in-' terest until she was 18 years of age, when it was to be used for her higher education; that it was in furtherance of this agreement that the fund was withdrawn from the Haynesville Bank, where it had been placed by defendant who was handling the busi *69 ness and affairs of his mother, and deposited in the First National Bank of Minden to the credit of “O. Joseph Hearn, Agent for Mary Arnold Hearn,” in the form of a time deposit for twelve months, bearing 4% per cent, interest annually; that this method of handling the fund was adopted upon the advice of the cashier of the bank, the institution not being equipped with a trust department, with the intention of renewing the deposit every twelve months until the donee shall become 18 years of age, when it shall be withdrawn and used for the purpose stated.

It is further contended by plaintiffs that the certificate evidencing the first deposit was delivered by defendant to the mother of the minor, who, for safe-keeping, placed it in a trunk belonging to her mother-in-law. This is denied by defendant and his mother, who testified that the certificate was delivered to the latter. Whether defendant delivered the certificate to his sister-in-law or to his mother, it is certain they were fully aware of the method adopted in handling the transaction, and that neither of them objected thereto.

After her marriage to Arnold Carl Hearn, plaintiff, now Mrs. Gibson, and her husband resided with his mother and his brother, the defendant, on a farm lying north of the city of Minden. She continued to Uve with her husband’s family after his death and until her marriage to Gibson. Her theory is, apparently, that, because they are displeased with her marriage, defendant and his mother have changed their benevolent intentions towards her daughter, and are now seeking to avoid the effect of the donation previously made to her.

There is no question here of the capacity of the donor to make, nor of the donee to receive, the donation.

The manual gift of corporeal moveable effects, accompanied .by real delivery, is not subject to any formality. Civ. Code, art. 1539; Succession of Zacharie, 119 La. 150. 43 So. 988.

In the case of a minor, not emancipated, the donation must be accepted by his tutor; nevertheless the parents of the minor, whether he be emancipated or not, and his other legitimate ancestors, even in the lifetime of the parents, and although they be not tutors to the donee, may accept for him. Civ. Code, art. 1546.

And if the donation has been executed by delivery, it has fuU effect, though not accepted in express terms. Civ. Code, art. 1541; Succession of Zacharie, supra.

Money may be donated by manual gift. Succession of Hale, 26 La. Ann. 195. And in the Succession of Zacharie, supra, it was held to be an unconditional donation of money, where the decedent, a bachelor of means, caused a certain sum of money to be deposited in a savings bank to- the credit of his two dependent sisters .living with him, the delivery to the bank being a delivery to the donees, the donation becoming effective eo instante.

All the facts of the case at bar bring it within the rule prescribed by the codal articles referred to and announced in the authorities cited. They clearly show an intention to give, consummated by a real delivery. The title of the money in the Haynes-ville Bank was undoubtedly in Mrs. Susan J. Hearn. When, however, in order to effectuate the donation to her granddaughter, she directed that it be withdrawn, and, with the consent of the donee’s mother, deposited- in the Minden bank in the name of the defendant as the “Agent for Mary Arnold Hearn,” the title to the fund became vested in the donee. As in the Zacharie Case, the thing donated was money. The parties adopted the most expedient way of making the donation.

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Bluebook (online)
113 So. 766, 164 La. 65, 1927 La. LEXIS 1938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-hearn-la-1927.