In re Final Account of Swade

65 A.D. 592
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 65 A.D. 592 (In re Final Account of Swade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Final Account of Swade, 65 A.D. 592 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Jenks, J.:

Sarah M. Swade, the alleged donor, was a spinster between sixty and seventy years of age. For twenty-five years she and her unmarried sister Catharine, the alleged donee, had lived alone on a farm owned in common by them and their sole surviving sister, who was married. Sarah Swade died intestate, leaving surviving her the said two sistei's, nephews and several nieces, one of whom alone attacks the alleged gift. It does not appear that she left any creditors. I state these circumstances as they may be considered in determining “ the intent to give and the fact as to delivery.” (Cooper v. Burr, 45 Barb. 9 ; Porter v. Gardner, 60 Hun, 571.) In Fowler v. Lockwood (3 Redf. 465) it was said that when the rights of creditors are not involved the testimony to establish the gift need not be as strong. Sarah Swade fell ill on October 3,1897. On the eighth day of that month, in the presence of the niece, a nephew and a grandnephew, she asked her sister Catharine to fetch a package of papers from a desk near her bed in their common bedroom. Catharine thereupon brought a packet wrapped in slate-colored muslin, which contained papers and envelopes, to Sarah. Sarah said : “ These are all my valuable papers, bonds, mortgages, notes and bank book, and I give them to you to do with as you see fit, both real and personal, indoors and out.” Sarah then gave the packet back to Catharine, [594]*594who took it, put it in the desk, locked the -desk and- kept its key. Sarah died October 11, 1897. The presumption is that if there was any gift it was one causa mortis. The rule in Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (§ 1146), “If a gift is actually made by the donor during his last sickness, or under any other circumstances which would naturally impress, him with an expectation of speedy death, it will be presumed to be a donation causa mortis, although the donor does not, in express terms, declare it to be such,” is approved by. Follett, J., in Bliss v. Fosdick (86 Hun, 162, 173), which case was affirmed on the opinion below in 151 Hew York, 625. This presumption is fortified by the testimony of John Delamater, a nephew, that bn October 3, 1897, Sarah told him that she did not feel well, and that she did not think she would live a great while, and that she wanted Aunt Catharine to have everything outdoors and in the house. A gift, however, is not presumed. (Matter of Bolin, 136 N. Y. 177, 180 ; Devlin v. Greenwich Savings Bank, 125 id. 756.) The question first presented is whether the donee has established the gift by evidence “clear and convincing, strong, and satisfactory ” — by evidence which is “ very plain and satisfactory.” (Devlin v. Greenwich Savings Bank, supra ; Ridden v. Thrall, 125 N. Y. 572, 576 ; Scoville v. Post, 3 Edw. Ch. 204; Grymes v. Hone, 49 N. Y. 17.) In addition to the facts of the transaction itself, there is the evidence of Mrs. Montfort, the intestate’s niece, who had lived with the sisters for ten years, that she had heard Sarah declare that she wanted Catharine to have everything, and that she intended to give Catharine everything if Catharine survived her, and the testimony of the nephew, Mr. Delamater, that on October 3, 1897, Sarah said that she did not expect to live long, and that she wanted Catharine to have everything out of doors and in the house. This evidence was competent. (Hackney v. Vrooman, 62 Barb. 650, 666, and authorities cited; Thorn. Gifts, § 222.) But it is contended that there was no sufficient delivery in law. The testimony is that Sarah took the packet, handed it to her sister with a declaration of the contents, saying, “ I give them to yon to do with as you see fit, both real and personal, indoors and out,” without any further direction at all. Thereupon Catharine put the packet back in the desk, locked it and retained its key. (See Cooper v. Burr, supra ; Allerton v. Lang, [595]*59510 Bosw. 362; Westerlo v. De Witt, 36 N. Y. 340.) There is nothing which prevents the conclusion that Catharine disposed of the packet exactly as she would have done with her own choses in action. The transaction took place in their common house. The desk had been in their common bedroom for years, and had been used by both sisters for their valuable papers. Sarah thus parted with the control of the package and of its contents, and the subsequent disposition made of the papers by Catharine was her own voluntary act; she returned them to the common repository of her. sister and herself, and retained the key thereof. In Beaver v. Beaver (117 N. Y. 421, 428) the court say : “ The delivery may be symbolical or actual, that is, by actually transferring the manual custody of the chattel to the donee, or giving to him the symbol which represents possession. In case of bonds, notes or choses in action, the delivery of the instrument which represents the debt is a gift of the debt, if that is the intention; and so, also, where the debt is that of the donee it may be given, as has been held, by the delivery of a receipt acknowledging payment. (Westerlo v. De Witt, 36 N. Y. 340; Gray v. Barton, 55 id. 72; 2 Schouler on Pens. Prop. § 66 et seq.) ” And there may be implication of an acceptance when the gift is beneficial to the donee. (Id.; Porter v. Gardner, supra.)

So far as the subjects of the gifts are concerned, it has been held that a gift of a promissory note of a third person may be made donatio causa mortis (Coutant v. Schuyler, 1 Paige, 316 ; Harris v. Clark, 2 Barb. 94; affd., 3 N. Y. 93; Champney v. Blanchard, 39 id. 111), and the same is true as to non-negotiable choses in action (Cornell v. Cornell, 12 Hun, 312, and authorities cited; Bedell v. Carll, 33 N. Y. 581), and as to savings bank books. (Podmore v. South Brooklyn Savings Inst., 48 App, Div. 218; Ridden v. Thrall, supra.)

It is further contended that delivery of the particular securities was not proven. This contention' is based entirely upon the fact that Sarah did not exhibit the contents of the package. The witness Mrs. Montfort says that the packet was in slate-colored muslin, and that the wrapping covered the entire package, except that each end showed; that she could not see what papers were in the package, but as near as she could see they were valuable papers. In [596]*596this she was corroborated by the other witnesses, one of whom says that he saw what appeared from its color to be a bank book, and another says that it appeared to contain papers and envelopes. These witnesses all testified to the resemblance to the packet produced at the trial, with that which passed from the hands of Sarah into the hands of Catharine. If the witnesses had testified that the donor scheduled the various choses in action or exhibited them at the time, then the appellant’s case would have depended entirely upon breaking down the testimony of these witnesses. I think that their testimony is all the more creditable in that they did not attempt to manufacture testimony so as to shut oft even this criticism. For it is not inherently improbable that a donor would have done exactly what the witnesses have said she did not' do.

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Bluebook (online)
65 A.D. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-final-account-of-swade-nyappdiv-1901.