Grace v. Virginia Trust Co.

142 S.E. 378, 150 Va. 56, 1928 Va. LEXIS 294
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 22, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 142 S.E. 378 (Grace v. Virginia Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grace v. Virginia Trust Co., 142 S.E. 378, 150 Va. 56, 1928 Va. LEXIS 294 (Va. 1928).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought by the appellant, Mazie V. Grace, against the administrators of Robert J. Bond, to-[60]*60set up a parol gift inter vivos from Bond to her of certain ehoses in action.

Bond was a widower about sixty-three years old, his wife having died in 1894, and Mrs. Grace, who had been divorced from her husband and had two children, was about twenty-five years old at the time of the alleged gift. When Mrs. Bond died she left surviving a son about two weeks old. The father provided for the rearing and support of his son and .there seemed to exist normal relations of affection between father and the son as the latter grew to manhood. About five years after the death of his wife, Bond quit farming and obtained employment with a railroad construction company. Prom time to time as he accumulated any money he deposited it with a merchant friend in Weldon N. C., where he resided. These deposits continued from time to time until they amounted to from $1,000 to $1,500. He took no receipt or other evidence of debt for any of these deposits. Sometimes Bond would be gone a year or more at a time without making enquiry about his money. The money thus deposited, however, was properly accounted for, and is not in controversy in any way in this litigation.

After working for some years in North Carolina he went with the construction company to Flint, Michigan, where he spent a year or more. From there he went to Buffalo, New York, and from there to Richmond, Virginia, in the fall of 1920. He was killed suddenly in an accident February 4, 1924. For the last eighteen months of his life he boarded with a Mrs. Dillon. He had confidence in her integrity, and while boarding with her asked her to take care of and preserve for him a bond, or bonds, amounting to upwards of $5,000.00. She said to him that she had no safe place to keep it, but he replied that it was all right, to lock it up in a [61]*61drawer or something of the kind, and he would call for it when he wanted it. He took no receipt for it. He did not call for it in his lifetime, and on the day of his death his son came to Richmond to see about his interment, and while there Mrs. Dillon surrendered this bond to him. This bond, however, is not in controversy in this suit.

At the time of his death Bond had an estate of upwards of $36,000.00, consisting of $14,200.00 of negotiable Liberty bonds, the bond which had been deposited with Mrs. Dillon of upwards of $5,000.00, and nearly $17,000.00 deposited in three different banks.

Bond had left with the Savings Bank of Richmond certain Liberty bonds, owned by him, for safekeeping, “but at the time he left them the bank did not have any safety boxes for customers, but kept securities of its customers in a private safety box along with its own valuables. In 1923, the bank built a new banking house in which it placed a number of safety boxes for the use of its customers. Bach customer who rented a box was provided with two keys and was advised to keep them in separate places so if one got lost the owner could still have another. These keys, however, would not unlock the box until the lock had been first turned by a master key, which the bank kept. Neither the bank alone nor the renter of the box could get into "the box without the use of the other’s key. On November 7, 1925, Bond rented one of these boxes.-and paid the rent for a year. The bank tendered him two keys but he refused to take but one of them, saying he wanted the bank to keep the other so it could get into the box and clip the coupons on the bonds and put them to his credit as they matured. He, therefore, left one of the keys with the bank. At some time, the •date is not satisfactorily fixed by the testimony, Bond [62]*62instructed the vice-president of the bank, in the event of his death, to notify his son, Ellis G. Bond, Weldon, North Carolina, and to deliver to him the contents of the box. The vice-president made a memorandum to this effect and when the box was rented put the memorandum in the box with the Liberty bonds above mentioned. On February 8, 1924, just four days after the death of R. H. Bond, the lock box was opened by one of the officers of the bank and the Liberty bonds were taken out and delivered to Ellis G. Bond. The receipt for these bonds, amongst other things, contains this language: “The above named Liberty bonds were left with this bank by R. J. Bond with the request that upon his death they be delivered to his son, Ellis G. Bond.”

Mrs. Grace claims that she first became acquainted with R. J. Bond in the spring of 1921; that shortly thereafter he began visiting her and these visits became more frequent as time went on, and that she became engaged to be married to him in May, 1923. She had obtained a divorce a mensa from her husband in 1919, and an absolute divorce in April, 1923. The evidence shows that R. J,. Bond had become madly infatuated with her by the summer of 1923. She testified on the subject of the gift as follows: “He told me during the summer of 1923 that he was going to give me some Liberty bonds, then later, about the last week in November I think it was on a Tuesday night, I am not sure, but it was the first part of the week — he was supposed to come on Tuesdays and Thursdays, he came nearly every Tuesday and Thursday, sometimes he would see me between them, but they were his regular nights — he said: ‘May, I have paid rent on the box at the bank in advance and here is the receipt,’ and he handed me the receipt across [63]*63the table; then he said: ‘May, the Liberty bonds in the box are yours, here is the key.’ I was so overjoyed, I thanked him and kissed him on the side of his face. I took the key and looked at it and I told him that I did not understand much about boxes, vaults, keys and things and that I would just let the contents remain in the box as I had no use for them at that time and in case I wanted to use them I would ask his advice concerning them.’ ”

“27Q. When he said the Liberty bonds were yours, state whether or not he made any remarks about your right to go and get them if you wanted them?

“A. Yes, sir; he told me: ‘Well, May, you know you can go down there right tonight if you wanted them for the contents of that box are yours.’ ”

Just one week after the death of R. J. Bond she went with her attorney to the bank and by the use of the key which Bond had given her, they opened the box and found that it was empty. The officers of the bank told her, that the bonds had been delivered to Ellis G. Bond according to the directions of his father herein-before referred to. She demanded that the bonds should be returned to the bank and the bank should deliver them to her. The bonds were thereafter returned to the bank by Ellis G. Bond but they were never given to Mrs. Grace, and that led to the present litigation. She first brought an action of detinue to recover the bonds and. other choses in action contained in»the box. This action was dismissed and she then brought the present suit. In her bill she claims that the box- contained not only the Liberty bonds aforesaid, but other evidences of debt, and that they all belonged to her, and she asked to have a disclosure of what other choses in action were in the box, and that it should be turned over to her. She sought to [64]*64prove by other witnesses that there were other choses in^action in the box but failed to do so.

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.E. 378, 150 Va. 56, 1928 Va. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grace-v-virginia-trust-co-va-1928.