Lay v. Proctor

34 P.2d 331, 147 Or. 545
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 34 P.2d 331 (Lay v. Proctor) 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
Lay v. Proctor, 34 P.2d 331, 147 Or. 545 (Or. 1934).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

The record in this case discloses that A. B. Daniel, now over 90 years of age, was a former resident of the state of Illinois. He was married and the father of two children, daughters, by his first wife, who died many years ago. The record discloses nothing further of these two daughters. Sometime after her death, he married a widow, 13 years his junior, with one son, Boy Lay. The issue of the second marriage was four children, Bertha L. Proctor *547 and Ivy C. Feldman, daughters, and A1 Daniel and Reuben H. Daniel, sons. The record is silent as to what property A. B. Daniel or Jennie F. Daniel owned at the time of his second marriage. Since that time, it seems that he and his wife accumulated a considerable amount of property and money. As he grew older, his wife took a more active interest in the business affairs. The daughters of the present marriage seemed to have married early and to have established themselves in homes of their own. The record does not show at what time they left their parental home, but it was long enough ago so that they both have children who at the time of the trial herein had passed their age of majority.

About the year 1913, A. B. Daniel and his wife Jennie F. Daniel moved from Illinois and took up their home at Cove, Oregon. It appears that about that time or possibly earlier the son Reuben H. Daniel, who was then married, also moved to the same place. Roy Lay, the stepson of A. B. Daniel, also moved to the same place about the same time.

In the year 1929, and for many years prior thereto, Bertha L. Proctor was living in South Dakota. She was the mother of four children, two girls who had attained their majority and were supporting themselves. One, Audrey Proctor, as a school teacher, the other, Dorothy Proctor afterwards Dorothy Wittenmeyer, as a law clerk or stenographer in the law office of Senator Bennett at Mapleton, Iowa, where she had been so engaged for about ten years prior to her visit to Oregon. The two boys at that time were aged 10 and 15 years respectively. Sometime before that the husband of Bertha L. Proctor suffered a physical breakdown and moved to the state of Idaho for medical treatment, so that, during that year, she and her *548 husband were not living together. About September 16, 1929, either of her own volition or at the invitation of her mother, she left South Dakota with her two younger children and took up her home with her parents at Cove, Oregon. Along about September of 1930, Dorothy Proctor paid a visit to her mother and other relatives in Oregon, spending much of her time with her grandparents at Cove. Shortly after her arrival, she examined into the record and condition of her grandparents’ property which at that time consisted of real estate, notes and mortgages, and about $12,000 in savings accounts in the banks.

In October, 1930, she assisted her grandparents in making a testamentary disposition of their property. A. B. Daniel transferred all his property, whether owned by him individually or jointly with his wife, to one Lou Payne, who thereupon transferred it all to the wife, Jennie F. Daniel. At the same time, Jennie F. Daniel made a will bequeathing all the said property to A. B. Daniel, the husband, for life, and upon his death, after making the following provision for her son “ A1 Daniel, I give, devise and bequeath one dollar ($1.00), only, he having had advancements which would equal more than his proportionate share in the estate” and a couple of other minor bequests, she bequeathed all of her estate to her four children, Boy Lay, Bertha L. Proctor, Beuben H. Daniel and Ivy Feldman “share and share alike” and named B. A. Benham as executor.

In the winter and spring of 1931, Jennie F. Daniel became very ill and was taken to the Hot Lake Sanatorium for treatment. While there and on her sick bed on April 8, 1931, she made an order to the banks in La Grande, where the money on savings deposit was kept, to transfer said savings account to “a joint account payable to my daughters, Mrs. Ivy C. Feld *549 man and Mrs. Bertha L. Proctor”. These accounts were in the First National Bank of La Grande and the United States National Bank of La Grande. In June, 1931, these accounts were transferred by Ivy C. Feldman “for personal reasons” to Bertha L. Proctor. She regained her health to a considerable extent and returned to her home in Cove where she lived until the spring of 1932 when she had another sick spell and died April 19, 1932.

Thereafter in due course, the will was admitted to probate and B. A. Benham appointed executor. When the executor was about to have the inventory of the estate made, he inquired about the moneys in the banks. The daughters thereupon informed him that there was no money in either bank belonging to the estate; that their mother had made Ivy C. Feldman a gift of $3,000 and Bertha L. Proctor a gift of $5,000 and that some $2,300 had been turned over to Bertha L. Proctor in trust, to be used by her in the future care of her father, A. B. Daniel, and that the balance had been spent in the care and keeping of the old people up to that time.

Thereafter, B. A. Benham, as executor of the last will and testament of Jennie F. Daniel, brought the instant action to recover for the estate, from the defendants, the sum of $11,634.68, the amount alleged to have been in the banks at the time the order was made transferring it from the account of Jennie F. Daniel to her daughters.

Sometime thereafter, B. A. Benham resigned as such executor and Boy Lay was appointed administrator de bonis non and was substituted as plaintiff herein.

To the complaint defendants filed an answer, alleging in substance as follows: That Bertha L. Proctor *550 left her home in South Dakota and came to Cove, Oregon, at the earnest solicitation of Jennie F. Daniel and A. B. Daniel to care for them during their remaining years; that in the year 1931, Jennie F. Daniel was the owner of certain real property located at Cove, Oregon, and approximately $12,000 in cash in addition to other notes and mortgages; that in April, 1931, Jennie F. Daniel transferred to the defendants Bertha L. Proctor and Ivy C. Feldman, the sum of $5,470.24 of her funds in the United States National Bank and the sum of $7,308.89 of her funds in the La Grande National Bank (First National Bank) of La Grande, Oregon; that in June, 1931, all of said funds were transferred to Bertha L. Proctor to be held by her subject to the authority and further direction “of said Jennie F. Daniel”; that in September, 1931, the said Jennie F. Daniel directed the defendant, Bertha L. Proctor, to pay to, and for the benefit of, Ivy C. Feldman, the sum of $2,000 and she had given said money to Ivy C. Feldman with the understanding that she would pay to the grantor interest on that sum during the grantor’s life. This sum was to be secured by a mortgage on some Portland property to be taken in the name of Bertha L. Proctor as grantee who was to hold it as trustee. That it was further agreed that upon the death of Jennie F. Daniel said Bertha L. Proctor was to deliver to the said Ivy C. Feldman the said note and mortgage, the trustee holding the note and mortgage as trustee for Jennie F. Daniel as to the interest and as trustee for Ivy C. Feldman as to the principal. That Jennie F. Daniel at the same time directed Bertha L. Proctor to transfer to Ivy C.

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Bluebook (online)
34 P.2d 331, 147 Or. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lay-v-proctor-or-1934.