In Re Estate of Copeland

58 N.E.2d 64, 74 Ohio App. 164, 29 Ohio Op. 312, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 594
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 28, 1943
Docket471
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 58 N.E.2d 64 (In Re Estate of Copeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Copeland, 58 N.E.2d 64, 74 Ohio App. 164, 29 Ohio Op. 312, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 594 (Ohio Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Metcalf, J.

Thomas E. Copeland, a resident of Athens county, Ohio, died intestate on June 21, 1942, leaving $5,650 in currency in his safe-deposit box in the *165 First National Bank of Amesville, Athens county, which was included in the inventory and appraisement of his estate. To that item Gusta Norris, his niece, filed exceptions in the Probate Court, claiming this currency by virtue of a contract with Copeland whereby Copeland, in consideration of services performed and to be performed, agreed she should have, own and use this money. The administrator denied that any contract existed between Copeland and exceptor.

The Probate Court found that a tenancy in common existed and divided the currency equally between the administrator and' exceptor. From this finding and judgment each party appealed to this court, both appeals now standing on questions of law.

Motions for a new trial were filed by both parties on January. 13, 1943, within three days from the delivery of the written opinion by the trial court to counsel’s respective' offices although the opinion was never filed in the trial court, was not journalized and does not appear in the record or among the papers.

On February 19, 1943, the trial court journalized its finding in the same entry with the judgment, and on this date the .respective parties refiled their motions for a new trial. All of the motions were overruled on this date. Between the delivery of the written memoranda of the court’s decision and the journalizing of the finding, the court, upon the request of counsel for exceptor, signed a separate finding of fact and law under date of February 10,1943. No reference is made to this separate finding, either on the docket or in the journal, other than on that date there appears in the transcript of docket entries, the notation, “statement of facts of exceptor filed.” Counsel for exceptor maintain that inasmuch as no motion for a new trial was filed by the administrator within the prescribed time from the signing of the separate finding of law and fact by the trial court, this court is precluded from *166 considering this case on the weight of the evidence. It is clear that counsel for both parties were, out of abundant precaution, doing everything possible to protect their respective rights in the refiling of the motions for a new trial. They were trying to conform to the pronouncement in the case of In re Estate of Lowry, 140 Ohio St., 223, 42 N. E. (2d), 987, and apparently were of the belief, by reason of the established principle that the court speaks only through its journal, that in order to preserve their rights the motions should be refiled upon the journalization of the finding and decision of the trial court.

Appreciating the confusion that exists in Ohio surrounding the due filing of a motion for a new trial, especially in view of the Lowry case, supra, this court is not going to add further to the uncertainty by holding that a third motion for a new trial should have been filed upon the signing of the separate finding of fact and law which was not journalized. It is our considered opinion that in order for the finding of the court in an action at law without the intervention of a jury, to be equivalent of a verdict of a jury, it must meet the requirement of Section 11420-17, General Code, which among other things provides that the verdict and finding of a jury must be entered in the journal and filed with the clerk. The administrator having filed a motion for a new trial within the prescribed time of the entry journalizing the finding of the court, the same was duly filed.

The record discloses that Thomas E. Copeland had been an elderly bachelor living in the home of an acquaintance of the same status; and that as his health began to fail, exceptor who lived in the adjoining county visited him from one to three times a week over a period of several months and performed services such as looking after Copeland’s laundry, preparing food and keeping his bed and body clean. The evi *167 dence also shows that others of his next of kin visited Copeland and helped him to the extent the distance between their homes would permit. There was a friendly relationship existing between Copeland and all of them.

Decedent had no bank account. He kept his money in currency, in a safe-deposit box, paying rental therefor, but at all times concerned here left the key with the bank. On April 2, 1942, he requested the cashier of the bank to bring him the contents of his box which consisted of the currency in question. After some conversation he instructed the cashier to take the currency back to the box, the cashier giving the following receipt which was found among Copeland’s effects after his decease:

“April 2 - 1942.

“Received of Thomas Copeland five thousand six hundred fifty dollars for placing in safe deposit box No. 67 in First National Bank Amesville to be subject to withdrawal by Gusta Norris.

“F. L. Thomas cashier.”

The cashier added to the typewritten name of

“Thomas Copeland” on the loose-leaf record kept by the bank of its boxholders, by writing in ink the following notation, “or Gusta Norris or the survivor.” No withdrawal was made by either Copeland or exceptor and exceptor never visited the bank until a few hours before the funeral of Copeland when she came to inquire how the money was placed.

Mr. Thomas, the cashier, was called as a witness by exceptor and testified to the circumstances surround'ing his visit to Copeland with the currency and the return thereof to the safe-deposit box, the execution of the receipt and the notation on the record. His testimony was, in effect, that he inquired of Copeland what he intended to do with this currency; that he pointed out to Copeland the danger by way of fire or other *168 wise of having this much currency about him; that he might live a long time and need some of this money; and that Copeland stated that he was going to keep this currency on his person because he wanted no lawyers or court to get any of his money, that he was making out a list of how his money should go, that Gusta Norris, the exceptor here, was to divide it for him, and that if anything happened to the money it would happen to him because it would be right in his clothes.

As a result of their conversation Copeland decided to let Thomas take the currency back, with the statement, “if anything happened to him it was to be paid over to Gusta Norris.” Thomas further testified that Copeland did not instruct him to place the ink notation on the record referred to above, but that he did so because he “thought it would cover the case.”

Another witness testified that Copeland subsequently stated “he had sent the money back and he had fixed the money for Gusta Norris to draw.” Exceptor’s husband testified that Copeland said “he was going to fix this money and either give it to her (exceptor) or fix it so she could get it for the services done; what she was doing for him and what he expected her to do until his death”; and that at another time Copeland handed the receipt to her and said “I have fixed this paper which gives you the money * * * it is yours, sister, it gives it to you.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 N.E.2d 64, 74 Ohio App. 164, 29 Ohio Op. 312, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-copeland-ohioctapp-1943.