Hamilton v. Hall's Estate

69 N.W. 484, 111 Mich. 291, 1896 Mich. LEXIS 606
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 24, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 69 N.W. 484 (Hamilton v. Hall's Estate) 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
Hamilton v. Hall's Estate, 69 N.W. 484, 111 Mich. 291, 1896 Mich. LEXIS 606 (Mich. 1896).

Opinion

Long, O. J.

The claimant presented to the commissioners on claims in the Wayne probate court a claim against the estate of the deceased for the sum of $1,000, and interest thereon at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum from May 13, 1890, less certain credits. This claim was disallowed by the commissioners, and an appeal was taken to the circuit court for Wayne county, where the court directed verdict in favor of the estate.

It appears that Reuben H. Hall died testate in the city of Detroit, May 13, 1890, leaving all his property to his wife, Selina J. Hall, against whose estate the claim in [292]*292controversy is presented. He had no children. Before his death he told his wife to give to his sister, the claimant here, the sum of $1,000. It is contended by the claimant that, after the death of Reuben H. Hall, his widow said she would follow her husband’s wishes, and give the claimant $1,000 out of the estate; that thereafter Selina J. Hall treated the $1,000 as belonging to the claimant; and that thereby a trust was created in favor of claimant, which can now be enforced against said estate. In order to determine that question, it is necessary that some of the testimony given upon the trial be set forth. Mr. Houston testified that Selina J. Hall, in her lifetime, said to him that her husband told her, before his death, to give his sister, Mrs. Hamilton, $1,000 out of his estate. Witness stated that he had loaned money for Mrs. Hall, and collected interest on it when due; that deceased had considerable property, acquiring the greater portion of it from her husband; that at certain times she told him to pay claimant money as interest on $1,000; that she said she would pay interest on the money while she kept it, and that, at different times, she directed him to pay claimant money for her; that in August, 1890, he paid claimant, for deceased, $50; in February, 1891, $25; September, 1891, $50; June, 1892, $25; August, 1892, $20; May, 1893, $50; July 21, 1893, $25; July, 1894, $10; July, 1894, $40; and December, 1894, $25; that he made these payments out of interest moneys that he had collected upon loans made for the deceased, and that the payments were made with the knowledge of the deceased and by her instructions. The witness was asked to state whether Mrs. Hall ever said anything in regard to why she did not give the whole $1,000 to claimant immediately, and stated:

“She said she wanted Mrs. Hamilton to have this money for her own benefit. She thought her husband owed on his farm, and, if she gave her the $1,000, he would turn the money in in payment of his farm.”

Counsel then put in evidence a letter addressed to Mrs. [293]*293Hamilton from Mrs. Hall, under date of December 16, 1894, as follows:

“Dear Sister: Please explain so I can send my dues 1st January, whatever they are. I send you check for $25, and I hope it will reach you in good season and all right. Would have sent it before, but was so busy for several days before auntie went away I didn’t do anything only what I had to. Wish you would send me a statement of what you have had, so I can see if it tallies with mine.”

Mary Brining was called as a witness, and stated that deceased told her she was to pay Mrs. Hamilton $1,000; that she didn’t have the money then, but would pay her just as soon as she could make arrangements and get it. Witness said:

“ I think she was paying interest, and that she said she would pay her that money just as soon as she could get around to it.”

Mabel Loomis also testified as follows:

“She said Mr. Hall told her to give Mrs. Hamilton $1,000, and that she would give it to her as soon as she could, and would give her the interest on it until she did give it to her. She said that was Mr. Hall’s wish.”

John W. O’Keefe testified:

“Well, she said there was no particular time that she was obliged to give it to her, only she was going to give it to her just as she saw fit,—saw that she could; that Mrs. Hamilton wanted her to give it to her all at once, but she would not do that, but she wanted to give it to her in small payments along, so that Mrs. Hamilton would use it for her own personal use. * * * She said she was going to pay her interest on it.”

Mary R. West testified about a talk she had with Mrs. Hall, in which she stated:

“ He wanted her to give Mrs. Hamilton a certain sum of.money. She did not say to me how much. She says: ‘I am going,to give Sade $1,000, but I am not going to give it to her right away, because Mr., Hall didn’t want [294]*294me to cramp myself; but I shall pay her interest until I get around to pay it to her.’ ”

The witness further testified to certain goods that were bought by Mrs. Hall and sent to Mrs. Hamilton, and said that Mrs. Hall said to her;

“This is to be applied on interest.”

The witness, speaking of another occasion when1 she had a conversation with the deceased, said that Mrs. Hall told her that she had $1,000 coming to her, and she believed, when she got it, she would give Sade $500 of it for her next birthday. The witness, continuing, says:

“And she says: ‘What do you think about it?’ I says: ‘Well, if you have got it to pay, I would get it off my hands, and be done with it. You are paying the interest on it how. Why not have it through with?’ She says: ‘I believe I will, and, when he pays me the 1st of May, I will give her $500' of it.’ But she died before then. That was in January before she died.”

This is substantially all of the testimony relating to the subject of the fund.

The only question relating to this branch of the case is whether the claim can be sustained as a declaration of trust. It is claimed by defendant that there was no consideration for the alleged declaration of trust; that, if made, it was purely voluntary; and that, under the facts shown, if a trust exists, it is merely executory. It is contended upon the part of the claimant that the evidence in the case is clear and explicit that Selina J. Hall, in her lifetime, declared herself voluntarily, by parol, to be trustee for the sum of $1,000 received by her from her husband for the use and benefit of claimant, and that she treated this sum as belonging to the claimant, and paid interest upon it as claimairt’s money, and that by so doing she passed the title to it to claimant, retaining in herself only the legal title and the right to control the fund as trustee during her lifetime for the use and benefit of claimant; that is, that [295]*295the trust was an executed one, and is not purely executory.

The distinction between executed and executory trusts is clearly pointed out in Gaylord v. City of Lafayette, 115 Ind. 423, 429, where it is said:

“A trust may be said to be executed when it has been perfectly and explicitly declared in a writing, duly signed, in which the terms and conditions upon which the legal title to the trust estate has been conveyed or is held, and the final intention of the creator of the trust in respect thereto, appear with such certainty that nothing remains to be done except that the trustee, without any further act or appointment from the settlor, carry into effect the intention of the donor as declared. In such a case, even though there was no valuable consideration upon which the trust was originally declared, a court of chancery will enforce it in favor of one whose relation to- the donor was such as to show a good or meritorious consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 N.W. 484, 111 Mich. 291, 1896 Mich. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-halls-estate-mich-1896.