Hyman v. Tarplee

149 P.2d 453, 64 Cal. App. 2d 805, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1129
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 10, 1944
DocketCiv. 12633
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 149 P.2d 453 (Hyman v. Tarplee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hyman v. Tarplee, 149 P.2d 453, 64 Cal. App. 2d 805, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1129 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*808 PETERS, P. J.

Joseph G. DeForest, as executor of the will of George H. Woodward, brought this action against Elizabeth K. Tarplee and her daughter, Irene Woodward Troy, to recover $4,071.26 deposited in a bank account in the name of Elizabeth K. Tarplee as trustee for George H. Woodward, on the theory that the deposit belonged to the estate of decedent. DeForest has since died and Joseph Leo Hyman substituted as plaintiff. Mary G. Woodward, as guardian of the persons and estates of her two minor daughters, was permitted to intervene. Her legal position is identical with that of the plaintiff. On the theory that Woodward, prior to his death, made a completed gift to- Mrs. Tarplee of the money in question, which was accepted by her, the trial court determined that Mrs. Tarplee owned the deposit. The plaintiff and intervener appeal. Their main contention is that there is no evidence to show a completed gift.

The evidence most favorable to respondents is as follows : The decedent, George H. Woodward, was married three times. Mrs. Tarplee was his first wife, and defendant, Mrs. Troy, is their daughter. Woodward and Mrs. Tarplee were married in 1899 and divorced in 1907. There is some evidence that during their marriage Mrs. Tarplee loaned her husband $1,000 of her own money to finance a bicycle shop, which sum was never repaid. There was no property settlement at the time of the divorce, nor any provision for alimony. After the divorce the parties remained on friendly terms, and Woodward paid his former wife for the support and education of their daughter. In 1920 the daughter left college and married. Woodward strongly disapproved of the marriage, and, as a result, became estranged from his daughter. Thereafter, for many years, he did not see her. He did remain on friendly terms with Mrs. Tarplee, and, for a period of about five years, ending about 1923, he had his mother board with her.

Woodward married a second time. This marriage lasted but a few years, terminating in a divorce. In that proceeding he paid his second wife $30,000 in cash, and gave her a life estate in some valuable property in San Francisco. In 1923 he married a third time, this time to the intervener Mary G. Woodward. Two children were born of this marriage.

After his divorce from respondent, Woodward’s new busi *809 ness, a machine shop, prospered. He purchased a home in Hillsborough in which he and his third wife and their two children lived. He deeded this house to his third wife, together with an adjoining piece of vacant land. By his will he left his business, appraised at $40,000, to his two children by his third wife, and also left them some insurance. During the period 1920-1937 Woodward remained estranged from his daughter by his first wife, and, from 1923 to 1937 he saw Mrs. Tarplee on but one or two occasions.

By 1937 Woodward’s third marriage was on the verge of collapse. At that time he was suffering from a heart ailment, and was highly nervous and excitable. He left his Hillsborough home and took a room in San Francisco. Shortly thereafter he called upon Mrs. Tarplee and became reconciled with his daughter, the respondent Irene, and her daughter, his grandchild. Irene, who had divorced her husband, was living with her mother, and was working. As time went on Woodward became very friendly with this family. He called every morning and gave his daughter a ride to work, and called for her nearly every night and rode her home. Nearly every day he returned to the Tarplee house after taking his daughter to work and had breakfast with Mrs. Tarplee, and would then rest. Mrs. Tarplee would put up his lunch and he would then go to his shop. He was too nervous to remain there any length of time, and many times he returned to the Tarplee home in the afternoon for a rest, or he would take Mrs. Tarplee for a ride. Nearly every evening he had dinner at the Tarplee hoúse. Both he and his daughter enjoyed fighting and wrestling matches, and several nights a week he escorted her to such exhibitions. On Sunday he frequently took his granddaughter to the ball game.

During this period he stated, on many occasions, that he wanted to do something for his. first wife, their daughter and granddaughter. He told them that he had a single premium five-year endowment policy for $5,000 which he had purchased with funds that were not community property of himself and his third wife, and that he wanted Mrs. Tarplee and his daughter to have this money. He was very appreciative of the care and consideration given to him by Mrs. Tarplee and their daughter, and also wanted to repay Mrs. Tarplee for the original $1,000 she had loaned him. He expressed *810 the thought that if he left the $5,000 to them by will, that there would be considerable trouble. He expressed these feelings many times before the date of the questioned gift. In June of 1938, before the due date of the policy, he went to the insurance company, and had the policy reduced to $2,500, and cashed in the other $2,500. For this he received a check from the insurance company for $2,066.68. He brought this check to the Tarplee home, there endorsed it, and handed it to Mrs. Tarplee stating, according to her testimony: “I want you to have it, if I would leave it, there would be too much trouble. . . . Well, I have got this money and I want you to have it, that is all I can do for you,” and he says, “you know,” he says, “I owe you a thousand dollars, and,” he says “I am going to give you a power of attorney on a thousand dollars that I have in the bank, and,” he says, “if I need anything you take it out of that.” After endorsing the check, he handed it to her and stated: “Here, this is yours.” Mrs. Tarplee further testified that when he handed the check to her she stated: “George, you really hadn’t ought to give me this, suppose you might need this yourself. ’ ’ He replied: “I won’t need it, it is for you; that is all I can do for you and I want you to have it . . . you know, I owe you that thousand and I will try to make up for what I didn’t give you and Irene.” Mrs. Tarplee testified that she then suggested that the money be deposited in the bank in her name with Woodward as beneficiary; that she had such an account with her daughter and understood that if anything happened to her, the daughter would get that account; that if anything happened to her and her daughter she thought Woodward should get the money here involved.

On cross-examination she testified that she took the first check “with the understanding that it was for me . . .”; that when he handed her the check he stated: ‘1 That is for you. That is yours and I don’t want any part of it. I will be taken care of, I have the shop. . . . This check is yours. Here, take it.”

The respondent Mrs. Troy, corroborated the story told by her mother in all important particulars.

After the check had thus been handed to Mrs. Tarplee she put it in her purse and kept it for several days until she had an opportunity to go to the bank with Woodward. The check was deposited in a new account in the name of. “Elizabeth *811 K. Tarplee, trustee for George H. Woodward.” Mrs. Tarplee kept possession of the bank book.

A few days after the account was opened, Woodward cashed in the balance of the insurance policy and received a cheek for $2,004.58. Either he or Mrs. Tarplee deposited this cheek in the account. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
149 P.2d 453, 64 Cal. App. 2d 805, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 1129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyman-v-tarplee-calctapp-1944.