Hale v. Hale

231 S.W.2d 2, 313 Ky. 344, 1950 Ky. LEXIS 861
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 20, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 231 S.W.2d 2 (Hale v. Hale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. Hale, 231 S.W.2d 2, 313 Ky. 344, 1950 Ky. LEXIS 861 (Ky. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

Judge Knight

Reversing.

This litigation involves the ownership of, and title to, the sum of $3,548.71, which includes accumulated interest, now on deposit in the Bank Josephine of Prestonsburg, Ky. The facts are these: On December 16, [346]*3461946, R. B. Hale deposited to his own credit in a savings account of the bank the sum of $3,500. At the time of the deposit, an employee of the bank, at Hale’s direction, made on the ledger sheet where the account was posted this endorsement: “If anything should happen to Mr. Hale, this money is to be divided equally to his children, Jesse James Hale, Opal Hale and Charity Hale.” This typewritten endorsement was signed by Mr. Hale, but was not witnessed. R. B. Hale died on December 9, 1947. On the day before his death, on December 8, 1947, he issued to his daughter, Minnie Turner, appellee herein, a check for $1,000 against this deposit in the bank. This was for the purpose of paying his funeral expenses, hospital and doctors’ bills and, according to the testimony of Minnie Turner, if there was anything left over after paying these expenses, she was to keep it. She deposited this check to her credit after the death of her father and when the bank ascertained that Mr. Hale had died before the check was presented for payment, it charged the $1,000 back to the account of Minnie Turner and again credited it to the R. B. Hale account, thus restoring the deposit to the original sum of $3,500. The Bank Josephine, uncertain as to the ownership of the deposit after the death of R. B. Hale, filed this suit to determine its ownership, making parties defendant to that suit the, administratrix of R. B. Hale, his daughter Minnie Turner who claimed some interest in it by reason of the check heretofore referred to, Jesse James Hale, Charity Hale, and Opal Hale, who claimed ownership under the terms of the memorandum under which it was deposited. By proper pleadings these claimants set up their respective claims to the fund represented by the deposit and, after submission of the case on the evidence, the Chancellor entered a judgment directing that out of the deposit the bank pay to Minnie Turner the sum of $726 which her evidence showed she had paid out for funeral, medical, and hospital expenses of deceased in reliance on the check he had given her for that purpose before his death. It further adjudged that Margaret Hale, administratrix of the estate of R. B. Hale, was entitled to the remainder of the deposit and directed the bank to turn the balance of $2,822.71 over to her as administratrix. Jesse James Hale, Charity Hale, and Opal Hale prosecute this appeal from that judgment which denied them ownership of the entire deposit,- and Minnie Turner cross-appeals from so much [347]*347of the judgment as denied her the balance of the $1,000 over and above the $726 allowed her in the judgment.

What Proof Shows.

It is established by the evidence that E. B. Hale was thrice married. By his first wife he had one child, Minnie Turner, appellee herein. By his second wife, from whom he had been divorced, he had two children, Wayne Hale and Edna Hale, not here involved. By his third wife, Margaret, he had no children. She survived him and is now administratrix of his estate and appellee herein. Not satisfied with these three matrimonial ventures, he “took up” with still another woman, Virgie Castle, and by her he had six children, all, of course, illegitimate. Included among these are appellants Jesse James Hale, age ten, Charity Hale, age six, and Opal Hale, age four, for whom their mother is the duly qualified guardian. Hale bought a small farm about three miles from his home and turned it over to Virgie Castle as her home and she and her children lived there. Hale spent about half of his time at that home and at all times recognized her illegitmate children, including appellants, as his children and supported them and their mother until his death. ’ During his lifetime, he made deeds to tracts of real estate to these children, all in consideration of love and affection, and made money advancements to his legitimate children by his other wives. In December 1946, he sold a tract of land in Floyd County for $3,500 and it was with the proceeds of this sale that he made the deposit here involved. According to the testimony of Virgie Castle, mother of appellants, Bonnie Mae Hale, older., sister of appellants, and Eoy Hicks, son of Virgie Castle by another man, E. B. Hale told them that he had deposited the $3,500 in the bank for the benefit of the three young children, Jesse, Charity, and Opal, and that he had said, “if anything happens to me I want this money to raise these children on.” It is also stipulated that, prior to his death, E. B. Hale deposited a savings account in the Salyersville National Bank in the amount of $2,000 in the names of Opal Hale, Charity Hale, two of appellants herein, and Eeuben Hale, age 8, another illegitimate child of E. B. Hale, but not involved in the present litigation.

The Question Involved.

Appellants concede that the typewritten memoran[348]*348dum. on the ledger sheet, heretofore quoted, signed by R. B. Hale but not witnessed by any one, does not meet the formalities required in making a will and they do not claim under it as a will. They also concede that the deposit does not meet the requirements of a gift inter vivos and they do not claim title to the deposit as a gift. The contention of appellants is that the fund involved is a parol trust created in favor of appellants in which R. B. Hale made himself trustee; that it was an irrevocable trust, and that R. B. Hale had no right to draw a check on the fund in favor of Minnie Turner so as to give her title to any part of the fund. Appellees contend that no trust was created in favor of appellants by the deposits and that R. B. Hale retained the right to withdraw any part of the fund as he desired, free of any right of appellants.

The Law of the Case.

The Kentucky case most similar to the case at bar, and principally relied on by appellees, is that of Turpin’s Adm’r v. Stringer, 228 Ky. 32, 34, 14 S. W. 2d 189, 191. In that case Sol Turpin made a deposit in his bank in his own name, as did deceased in the instant case, and at his written direction there was entered on the deposit records of the bank that “if anything should happen to him, or he should die, that said sum was to be paid to [Andy Stringer].” The deposit remained in the bank under these instructions until the death of Sol Turpin, and the administrator of his estate brought suit against Andy Stringer to have it determined that the deposit in question belonged to the estate of decedent and not to Andy. The lower court peremptorily instructed the jury: “You will find for the defendant, Andy Stringer, $2293.75, the amount of the bank account directed to be paid to said Stringer in the event of Sol Turpin’s death.” On appeal the case was reversed, this Court holding that the instruction of the lower court was erroneous since the alleged instructions given to the bank by deceased operated neither as a valid inter vivos gift of the deposit to the defendant nor was it a testamentary devise, and that the deposit belonged to the estate of deceased and not to defendant. No contention was made there such as is made here, that the fund was deposited by decedent as a voluntary trust for the benefit of those named in the memorandum on the deposit slip. Therefore that [349]

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W.2d 2, 313 Ky. 344, 1950 Ky. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-hale-kyctapp-1950.