Grand Rapids Trust Co. v. Bellows

195 N.W. 66, 224 Mich. 504, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 958
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1923
DocketDocket No. 86
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 195 N.W. 66 (Grand Rapids Trust Co. v. Bellows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Rapids Trust Co. v. Bellows, 195 N.W. 66, 224 Mich. 504, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 958 (Mich. 1923).

Opinion

Sharpe, J.

Dennis Bellows, long a resident of Rockford, in Kent county, died in the hospital at Ann Arbor on May 17, 1922. On the 15th, he indorsed certain certificates of deposit, totaling $4,000, to his son, the defendant Rolland Bellows. The plaintiff, as administrator of his estate, filed the bill of complaint herein, alleging that the transfer of the certificates had been procured while deceased was mentally incompetent and by undue influence, and praying that it be set aside and said certificates, or the proceeds thereof, be decreed to be the property of the estate. From a decree granting such relief, the defendants Rolland Bellows and Winifred Bellows, his wife, appeal.

The trial court filed an opinion in which he quotes from and comments upon the evidence at length. He reached the conclusion that the indorsements of the certificates by the deceased were procured as charged in the bill, that no title passed to Rolland thereby, and that the proceeds thereof were the property of the estate.

The deceased for some time prior to his death had been suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis and tuberculosis of the kidneys. In April, 1922, he went to Ann Arbor and entered the University hospital for [506]*506treatment. At first he roomed outside the hospital, but about May 1st he was confined therein. On the 10th he was put on the list of patients “dangerously ill” and his relatives notified that he was “liable to die.” On the 13th he was transferred from the surgical to the medical ward. The doctor in charge of that ward testified—

“he was so weak I think I might say that he could not sit up in bed to allow a physical examination of his chest.”

He also testified that—

“during the 15th and 16th he showed periods when it would be quite difficult to arouse him and on numerous occasions he became somewhat hallucinated.”

He expressed the opinion, based on his observations and the condition as revealed by the hospital records, that deceased “was in no condition to transact business of any importance” on the morning when the certificates were signed. Mrs. Good, a nurse in attendance, testified:

“He seemed stuporous when he first came in the ward, but it grew worse as he was there longer; *, * he had hallucinations and deranged conditions of mind when he was there in the ward.”

She further testified:

“Q. In your attendance upon him, did you have to talk to him?
“A. He had to be aroused and argued with.
“Q. Could you make him understand what you were telling him ?
“A. Sometimes he seemed to understand but you were never certain. Sometimes he would not even take his medicine that was given to him.
“Q. You were never certain, you say, that he understood what you said?
“A. No,, sir.
“Q. And you say that he had to be aroused to give him his medicine?
[507]*507“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. When did that condition commence?
“A. Well, the afternoon of the 13th.
“Q. And did that continue continuously throughout the time he was there in the ward?
“A. He grew worse.
“Q. And it grew worse continuously and that condition of affairs was sustained on the morning of the 15th of May, was it?
“A. I don’t remember, but I know that he had to be aroused to have his temperature taken at 8 o’clock.
“Q. The ihoming of the 15th, and you say the condition grew constantly worse from the time he came until the time he died?
“A. Yes, sir.”

On the 15th his condition was such that food was administered to him through the rectum by what is known as a “Murphy drip.” During the twelve hours before the indorsements were made, hi's temperature had steadily declined and his pulse and respiration had taken a marked drop. On the 11th, his wife, his son Rolland and his daughter Nathalie, having been apprised of his condition, came from their homes at Rockford to the hospital to see him. His daughter Arline, who was in school at Kalamazoo, arrived before them. The deceased refused to see his wife, but the others saw him and remained until the following day, when they all returned to their homes The record does not disclose any private interview between Rolland and his father at that time. Rolland returned on the 14th late at night and saw his father but a moment. He returned to the hospital the next morning about 8 o’clock. A screen was placed around the bed in which the father lay. Arline, who had returned from Kalamazoo, came in at this time and asked what they were doing. Rolland testified that he stepped outside and— [508]*508and he suggested that she had better go upstairs to the waiting room and she did so. Arline testified that Rolland told her their father was going to make a will and that soon after, when she inquired if he had done so, Rolland said—

[507]*507“told her father had some business he wanted to attend to,”—
[508]*508“the nurse said that dad was unable to make a will at that time.”

The only person present besides Rolland at the time the indorsements were made was a nurse named Armstrong. Her testimony was taken by deposition. In substance she said that when she and Rolland went to his bedside deceased seemed very weak and had to be aroused out of a stupor; that they took the top off the stand and placed it on the bed; that Rolland took the papers out of his pocket and either he or she held them while they were being signed; that her attention was challenged by the persistence of Rolland to get the papers signed; that deceased seemed rational and she thought he knew he was signing his name. Her testimony is somewhat weakened by the fact that some time previous she had made an affidavit in which she said that—

“deceased was so weak at the time said papers were signed that he had practically no will of his own; that said Rolland Bellows was persistent in procuring deceased’s signature to all of said papers and that deponent believed when the papers were signed that the transaction would be questioned and that the signing was void and of no force and effect.”

It does not appear that she overheard any conversation between Rolland and his father, except the request of the former that the latter should sign the papers.

There is no claim that any consideration passed to the deceased. Rolland’s title, therefore, rests on the proof that by indorsement and delivery the certificates were given to him by his father. While his counsel suggest that the transaction “has many, if not all, of [509]*509the essential elements of a gift causa mortis,” it is clearly apparent that the gift, if made, was unconditional, intended to become effective at once, and not liable to revocation by the donor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 N.W. 66, 224 Mich. 504, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-rapids-trust-co-v-bellows-mich-1923.