Lady v. Barrett

111 P.2d 702, 43 Cal. App. 2d 685, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 720
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 26, 1941
DocketCiv. 12685
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 111 P.2d 702 (Lady v. Barrett) 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
Lady v. Barrett, 111 P.2d 702, 43 Cal. App. 2d 685, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 720 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is an appeal from a judgment, based upon a verdict which the court directed the jury to enter in favor of the plaintiff. Hs, as special administrator of the estate of Mary Barrett, Sr., had brought the action for *686 possession of certain personal property held by appellant, Mary B. Barrett, executrix of the estate of Patrick C. Barrett. Joined as defendants were Mary B. Barrett and Alice G. Barrett, individually, and they also appear herein as appellants. However, as a matter of convenience we shall discuss this appeal as though presented solely by a single appellant, the executrix.

The property in question consists of four $5,000 bonds of the United States, which were payable August 1, 1918, and twenty-one checks in the amount of $150 each, representing interest falling due upon the bonds, at quarterly periods, beginning November 1, 1912, and ending August 1, 1918, excepting two checks which normally would have been issued on February 1, 1916, and May 1, 1916. The total value of these securities is $23,150.

All the bonds and checks were found by Mary B. Barrett and her sister Alice among the effects of their father, Patrick C. Barrett, within thirty days after his death at Claremont, California, on November 10, 1938. Each bond is registered and recites that “The United States of America are indebted to Mrs. Mary Barrett, or assigns, in the sum of Five Thousand Dollars.” On the reverse side appears a form providing for an assignment. A notation specifies that the execution and acknowledgment of an assignment when not made at the Treasury Department, must be before a United States judge or other named official of the government. Bach check recites that at the date thereof the payee named in the body of the check is the registered owner of bonds of the “3% Loan of 1908-1918”, amounting to $20,000, and is payable “to the order of Mrs. Mary Barrett”, referred to during the hearing of this case as Mary Barrett, Sr.

Mrs. Barrett died December 12, 1912, and the issue in this trial, held twenty-eight years later, was the ownership of these uncashed securities. Do they belong to the estate of Mary Barrett, Sr., or do they belong to the estate of Patrick Barrett, who was in possession of them at the time he passed away 1 It will be observed that the cheeks are negotiable; the bonds, assignable. Because the bonds, were never assigned in writing the court apparently concluded that they have always remained the property of the estate of Mary Barrett, Sr. This, in fact, is the argument advanced by respondent in support of the judgment and of the withdrawal of the case from the jury’s consideration. That the *687 respondent, however, had little confidence that this action directing a verdict was warranted on the evidence then before the court, appears from the fact that he has felt called upon to state in his brief, as proven facts, circumstances of which the court below was not advised, according to the record, and incidents which were not brought out in evidence. This, of course, is reprehensible practice on the part of counsel, and in our consideration of the appeal we have disregarded these statements, covering six or seven pages of respondent’s brief. Appellant contends that the bonds and the interest checks belonged to Patrick under the presumption that what he possessed at the time of death he owned (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1963, subd. 11), and declares that any other theory ignores the presumption “That a person is innocent of crime or wrong” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1963, subd. 1). The theory of appellant is that the bonds were given to Patrick by his mother, and she contends that a gift or assignment by parol may be made of a registered bond, citing In re Stockham’s Estate (193 Iowa 823 [186 N. W. 650, 22 A. L. R. 765]); in which the court recognized as valid the transfer of United States registered bonds made in writing before an official other than one of those mentioned on the bond, and stated “Many obligations and choses in action, such as notes, bonds, bank certificates, insurance policies and certificates of stock have been held to be the proper subject of a gift without the formality of a written assignment”. (See, also, Herbert, Exr., etc., v. Simson, 202 Mass. 480 [108 N. E. 65, L. R. A. 1915D, 733, note] ; Talbot v. Talbot, 32 R. I. 72 [78 Atl. 535, Ann. Cas. 1912C, 1221, 1235, note] ; Re Estate of Connell, 282 Pa. 555 [128 Atl. 503, 38 A. L. R. 1362, note].) A contrary view as to presumption of ownership where no written assignment has been made is expressed in Atchley v. Rimmer, 148 Tenn. 303 [255 S. W. 366, 30 A. L. R. 1481], and Gano v. McCarthy, 79 Ky. 409, strongly relied upon by respondent in his brief.

When Mrs. Barrett died she was residing at Green River, Wyoming, which had been her home for almost fifty years. She was a widow, and her heirs at law were her daughter Mary, known as Mayme, and her three sons, James, Patrick and Joseph Edward, known as Ed. James is the sole survivor of these four children. He was born in Green River in the year 1870, and has always resided in Wyoming. He *688 was appointed administrator of his mother’s estate in Wyoming May 19, 1938, and approximately a year later respondent, upon James’ nomination, qualified as Special Administrator for the estate in California. Mary had died in 1930. Ed died in 1934, and Patrick passed away, as we have stated, on November 10, 1938, six months after James’ appointment. At the time of his death Patrick was staying with his two daughters, Mary E. and Alice G. Barrett, at Claremont, having arrived there from Wyoming a fortnight previously.

It appeared at the trial that Mary (or Mayme) had been appointed administratrix of her mother’s estate by the superior court in Wyoming in 1913, a position from which she was removed, through proceedings instituted by James a year or so later, on the ground that she had not been duly and regularly appointed. At that time Tom Whitmore, not one of the family, was appointed to succeed her, and at a later date, in 1923, Mayme was reappointed administratrix of the estate of Mary Barrett, and continued as such until her death in 1930. At no time did she or Mr. Whitmore, as representative of the estate, list the bonds or checks as assets thereof, nor did either of them, so far as the record shows, bring an action to secure possession of these securities, or cash any of the checks which were issued after Mrs. Barrett’s death. The two missing quarterly checks for 1916 have not been accounted for in any way, and it does not appear that Mayme Barrett ever attempted to exercise any ownership over the checks or bonds, either as a part owner or as representative of her mother’s estate.

Owing to the fact that, with the exception of James, all the members of the family who were living at the time of Mrs. Barrett’s death have died, and because of the restrictions imposed by the rules of evidence upon the admission of statements of deceased persons, the appellant’s claim of ownership is based largely upon presumptions and inferences which, under section 1957 of the Code of Civil Procedure, are declared to be evidence. Section 1959, Code of Civil Procedure, defines a presumption as “a deduction which the law expressly directs to be made from particular facts ’ ’.

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Bluebook (online)
111 P.2d 702, 43 Cal. App. 2d 685, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lady-v-barrett-calctapp-1941.