In Re Steele's Estate

52 P.2d 207, 152 Or. 49, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 54
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 52 P.2d 207 (In Re Steele's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Steele's Estate, 52 P.2d 207, 152 Or. 49, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 54 (Or. 1935).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

Mardith Eoberts, administratrix of the estate of David E. Steele, deceased, appeals from a judgment against her and in favor of Belle Gardner, formerly Belle Burnette, in the sum of $1,070.97. The claim as filed against the estate by Belle Gardner was for the sum of $2,620.03, consisting of items for services performed, money advanced to and on behalf of David E. Steele, and for his board. Upon rejection thereof by the administratrix a trial was had before the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict on which the above judgment was rendered.

Special interrogatories were submitted to the jury. Those on which the general verdict and judgment were based were answered as follows:

“3. Did the claimant, Belle Gardner, pay to Dr. E. M. Anderson, on or about the 28th day of May, 1932, at the request of the decedent David E. Steele the sum of $50 for services rendered decedent' David E. Steele by the said Dr. E. M. Anderson? A. Yes.
“4. Has any of the same been repaid to her. A. No.
*52 “5. Did the claimant, Belle Gardner, loan to the said David E. Steele on or about May 23, 1932, the sum of $1,000? A. Yes.
“6. Has any portion of the said sum been repaid to claimant? A. Ño.
# * * * *
“18. What amount of interest, at the rate of six per cent per annum, had accrued upon any of the foregoing items of claimant’s demand up to the 22d day of September, 1932, when decedent David E. Steele died? A. $20.97.”

The jury found against the claimant as to the other items in her demand upon the administratrix.

It is the contention of the claimant that on or about May 23,1932, she loaned to David E. Steele the sum of $1,000, in order to enable him to have in the bank a sufficient sum to cover a check for $1,427.04 which he had sent to the sheriff of Multnomah county in payment of taxes for the year 1931. In order to prove that this money had been loaned to Mr. Steele there was evidence introduced other than that of the claimant herself, showing that, on May 5, 1932, Mr. Steele gave to the tax collector of Multnomah county a check bearing that date, for the sum of $1,427.04. The record of the sheriff’s office shows that on May 25, 1932, a check for identically the same amount, together with other checks and cash on hand amounting in all to $79,396.98, was by the sheriff deposited in the Canadian Bank of Commerce in Portland; that the checks and cash included in the slip for that deposit were received by the sheriff on or before May 5 and were not deposited earlier due to rush of business in his office; that the receipts for those taxes show that they had been paid as of May 5; and that his tax statement was returned to Mr. Steele by letter postmarked at Portland on May 26 of that year.

*53 Mrs. Gardner had at this time, and for many years prior thereto had maintained, a box at the Commerce Safe Deposit Vanlts in the Chamber of Commerce bnilding, to which Mr. Steele had joint access. According to the records, he visited this vault in the afternoon of May 23, and on the same day he deposited to his account in the First National Bank of Portland the sum of $1,000. This is evidenced not only by his deposit book but also a deposit slip. In the deposit book after the entry of this sum there is written, by the hand of decedent, according to some of the witnesses, “loan to make tax ck O. K.”. The check for $1,427.04 given to the sheriff was cashed by the First National Bank on May 27 of that year.

The record discloses that decedent’s father, a man 86 years old at the time of the trial, testified that his son, a month or six weeks prior to his death, had told him that he had borrowed from Mrs. Gardner the sum of $1,000 to assist in paying his taxes. Fred C. Levy, who had been soliciting the decedent for insurance, testified that Mr. Steele stated, in the spring of 1932, that he was financially embarrassed and could not pay for the insurance and that he had been obliged to borrow $1,000 from Mrs. Gardner to pay his taxes. Mrs. Helen Heivele and Mrs. Mildred Leonhardt also testified that Mr. Steele had told them that he had borrowed $1,000 from Mrs. Gardner to pay his taxes. This statement to them, they testified, was made in the latter part of May or early in June, 1932.

It appears that Mr. Lamont was a special deputy in charge of tax collections in the sheriff’s office and that he died about June 1,1932. The occasion of Mr. Steele’s making the remark to Mrs. Heivele and Mrs. Leonhardt was that he had just learned of Mr. Lamont’s death. As Mrs. Heivele said: “Mr. Steele came in and said, *54 ‘Of all times Mr. Lamont had to die; wasn’t it lucky I got that money from Belle to pay that check in the bank!’ ” Mrs. Leonhardt explained the occasion of Mr. Steele’s remark to her as follows: “Well, it was when a friend of Mr. Steele’s in the tax department died; he came np in the kitchen one day and told me he read in the paper where his friend in the tax department had died, and he felt easy that he had his money in the bank for the taxes, and the check was being held until such a time as the money was there to pay the check, and he had borrowed the money from Mrs. Burnette [Mrs. Gardner], to cover the check, and was all right now; the man had died and he was glad it was covered.”

There were numerous witnesses who testified that Mr. Steele found it very difficult to meet the various claims against him and that he was delinquent most of the time in rent for the hotel which he operated, and in other obligations. His bank statement showed that he did not, from May 5 until the deposit of $1,000, have enough money in his bank account to pay the check for taxes.

Mrs. Gardner testified that she had in her safety deposit box on May 23, 1932, the date on which she claims she made the $1,000 loan to Mr. Steele, money in excess of that amount; that Mr. Steele had advised her that he had given his check for over $1,400 to the sheriff in payment of taxes and that it was necessary to get money somewhere to make the check good; that he wanted to borrow some money from her and she had authorized him to take from the deposit box $1,000; that a day or two later she counted the cash in the box and found that $1,000 had been taken; and that nobody except Mr. Steele and herself had access to the contents of the deposit box. She further testified that Mr. Steele *55 had many times promised to repay the money, with interest, but had refused to give her a note for the money he borrowed and had never given her any written evidence of the debt and had never admitted to her in the presence of any third party that he was indebted to her and would repay the money borrowed from her.

The only other claim allowed by the verdict in addition to principal and interest on this loan was the item of $50 paid by the claimant to Dr. E. M. Anderson. In support of this part of the demand Dr. Anderson testified that Mr. Steele had told him he would get Mrs. Gardner to give him a check for the amount of his fee for services, and that she had paid him by check the sum of $50. The check was introduced in evidence, dated May 28, 1932, payable to Dr. E. M. Anderson in the sum of $50, signed by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
52 P.2d 207, 152 Or. 49, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-steeles-estate-or-1935.