Johnson v. Grice

106 So. 271, 140 Miss. 562, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 290
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1925
DocketNo. 25264.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 106 So. 271 (Johnson v. Grice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Grice, 106 So. 271, 140 Miss. 562, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 290 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

*566 McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petition filed in the chancery court of Lincoln county by Barney Grice, administrator of the estate of N. C. Collins, deceased, showed that the decedent at the time of his death was the owner of two promissory notes executed by Jim Gray in favor of the decedent for one hundred twelve dollars and fifty cents, one of which became due and payable March 1, 1925, and the other March 1, 1926. The petition further showed that said notes were executed as a balance of the purchase money of certain lands sold to the said Gray by the said decedent. The petition further showed that claims had been probated and filed against the estate, and at the time of filing the petition it did not appear whether the estate would be solvent or not. The petition further set up that the defendant, Willie Johnson, claimed said notes by virtue of some assignment or other transfer, the nature of which was unknown. The petition further showed that the note due March 1, 1925, had been paid to the administrator, and that he was entitled to the possession of the note due on March 1, 1926.

The answer set up briefly that immediately upon the execution and delivery of said notes by Gray to Collins the decedent, Collins, got Gray’s wife to write defendant a letter and inclose said notes so that she (Willie Johnson) would be the sole owner thereof. She further averred that the notes were not delivered to her solely as a gift, but that she had been reared by the said Collins and lived with him and by her labor enabled him to acquire the lands which had been sold to Gray. She claimed the notes as her individual and exclusive property and asked that the administrator be directed to pay the proceeds of the note collected to her. On the back of these notes was the following indorsement:

*567 “Wesson, Miss., March 1, 1924. In case of my death before this note matures, I hereby transfer and assign payment of same to Willie Johnson. [Signed] Nelson his
X Collins. Witness: [Signed] G. L. Hays.”
mark

The letter in which the notes were inclosed to Willie Johnson reads as follows:

“Wesson, Miss., March 9, 1924.
“Dear Willie: To-night I will rite you a few lines to let you hear from me. This leaves my family fairly well and hope this will find you and Lennette injoying the Blessings from God. I received your letter some days ago, also the deeds. Whi I hadent written you no sooner Mr. Collins had to get his deeds straighen up. They were so dem I think he had to have them prented over, so I were waiting untell he got every thing straight. Now we are buying the largest piece of land. We mad a one hundred dollar payment, and has 2 more notes to pay. Now I am sending you these 2 notes. You can see when they are due. When they are due you can send them back, one by,one. Mrs. Collins told me to send them to you so if anything should happen you will he the successor. Mr. Collins is not so well. He went down to his brothers yesterday. He told me to give you his Love and say write to him,. Pie will he at Sontag all this week. He say he think he will he at your house by Easter Sunday. If I were you I would try to keep him a while. Well I am so sleepy I must close. Tell Jennette to go and learn fast some day she will he a woman.
“Yours as ever, “Elsie Gray.”

The record shows that N. C. Collins died some time in January, 1925; that at the time the letter was written, March 1, 1924, the negro was old and feeble; that Collins sent for Jim Gray, the maker of the notes, told him ho did not expect to get well, and Gray remarked: “ ‘I am owing you, what must I do about the payments?’ and he said, ‘I want you to pay it to Willie,’ ” meaning Willie Johnson, the defendant herein.

*568 Willie Johnson was his stepgrandchild, and at the time the letter was written it is shown he was in feeble health, old and infirm, and evidently did not expect to live long.

The chancellor found that this was a conditional gift and entered a decree awarding the proceeds of the note which had been paid and the possession of the note not yet due to the administrator in this case.

We think it is clear from this record that this was a gift causa mortis, because made by the old negro to his stepgrandchild in view of his death, and that in the event of his death before the notes matured he intended for Willie Johnson, his stepgrandchild, to have the proceeds of said notes. There was a completed delivery of the notes by the decedent to Willie Johnson. But on this record it makes no difference whether there was a gift inter vivos or causa mortis, as the result is the same. Pace v. Pace, 107 Miss. 292, 65 So. 273.

“Gifts causa mortis” are thus defined by 28 Corpus Juris, section 92, pp. 684, 685:
“A donatio causa mortis, liberally translated, means a gift in prospect of death. It is a gift of personal property made by a party in the expectation of death, then imminent, and upon the essential condition that the property shall belong fully to the donee in case the donor dies as anticipated leaving the donee surviving him, and the gift is not in the meantime revoked, but not otherwise. Such a gift Judge Story describes as amphibious, that is between a gift inter vivos, and a legacy. A gift causa- mortis has some properties in common with gifts inter vivos, and some in common with legacies ;-but in its essential properties it is testamentary.”

Such gifts are distinguished from testamentary disposition, in that they are always conditional upon death, but possession of the property bestowed must be delivered to the donee and retained by him during his lifetime.

*569 28 Corpus Juris, pp. 685, 686, section 94, reads as follows: “While gifts causa mortis are in the nature of testamentary dispositions and have several characteristics in common with legacies, they differ from the latter in many important respects. A gift causa mortis resembles a legacy in that it is made in contemplation of death, is ambulatory, incomplete, and revocable at the option of the donor at any time during his life. On the other hand it differs from a legacy in several important particulars. Possession must be delivered to the donee and retained by him during the life of the donor, whereas in case of a legacy the possession remains with the testator until his decease; the claim need not be proved in a court of probate; the title of the donee becomes by relation complete and absolute from the time of delivery; no consent or other act on the part of the personal representative is necessary to perfect the title of the donee. It is a claim against the personal representative ; a legacy is a claim from and through him. Although the donor has made a will disposing of all his personal property, a donation of this sort is good.”

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 271, 140 Miss. 562, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-grice-miss-1925.