Monroe v. Monroe

63 P.2d 456, 63 P.2d 459, 99 Colo. 401, 1936 Colo. LEXIS 238
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 7, 1936
DocketNo. 13,794.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 63 P.2d 456 (Monroe v. Monroe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monroe v. Monroe, 63 P.2d 456, 63 P.2d 459, 99 Colo. 401, 1936 Colo. LEXIS 238 (Colo. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Young

delivered the opinion of the court.

Charles Archer Monroe, plaintiff in the district court, had a judgment canceling a deed from his father, James *402 Monroe, since deceased, to Duncan D. Monroe, Nettie M. Hains, J. Harry Monroe, Nellie V. Shannon and Frank Monroe, defendants, who were children of said deceased and brothers and sisters of plaintiff. The deed was canceled on the ground that there had been no delivery by James Monroe prior to his death. Reference will be made to the parties as plaintiff and defendants as they appeared in the district court, or by name.

James Monroe died intestate and the plaintiff and defendants were all of his heirs at law. The assignments of error concededly raise but one question, namely, whether there is evidence to support the court’s finding that the deed was not delivered. If there is evidence to support such finding the judgment must stand; if not, it must be reversed.

The trial judge saw the witnesses and heard their testimony and under our rule, too well established to require, citation of authorities, we must construe the evidence, if it reasonably may be so construed, to support the court’s finding and judgment.

The presented evidence was substantially as follows : James Monroe was a farmer, operating in Logan county, who had accumulated property of an inventoried value of approximately $80,000. He had given to his children, other than Harry and Duncan, a quarter section of dry land each, except the plaintiff Charles Archer, to whom he had given 360 acres of land. All of the children except Harry were indebted to him in varying sums, Duncan to the amount of $6,000 and Nellie Y. Shannon in an amount sufficient to consume her entire interest in his estate. The plaintiff’s indebtedness to him appears to have been but $1,000. All of the children except Harry were married. Harry had remained at home and, beginning with 1912, had rented from his father the 176 acres conveyed by the questioned deed, and known as the Home Place, continuously to the time of his father’s death, November 3, 1933. It appears from the evidence that prior to the father’s death, Harry had arranged with him to *403 rent the place for the year 1934, which arrangement was continued with the administrator of his father’s estate, and carried on to completion.

July 10, 1933, James Monroe, the father, was stricken with paralysis and confined to a hospital for a month, at the expiration of which time, having partially recovered, he went to the. rooming house of a Mrs. Westlake in Sterling where he resided until his death, November 3, 1933. For ten years preceding his death he had rented in his name, a large safety deposit box at the Security State Bank in Sterling. Harry Monroe had a key and the box was used jointly with his father during all that time. At the suggestion of Mrs. Archer Monroe, and on the day that James Monroe was stricken with paralysis, Harry took his personal effects, including his key to the deposit box which he retained until his father’s death, with the exception of one occasion either September 29th or October 20th — there being a conflict in the testimony as to the date — but at any rate at a time when Mrs. Archer Monroe drove her father-in-law out to Harry’s place to get the key to examine his box, because it had been suggested to him by someone that Harry was stealing his money out of it. It was on the occasion of this examination that it is contended delivery of the. deed in question was made. When James Monroe went to his safety deposit box he procured a large envelope,- took it to his room at Mrs. Westlake’s and examined its contents. The record justifies the conclusion that the envelope contained $2,020 in money, a $500 liberty bond, two certificates of deposit aggregating $4,000, an abstract of title, some water stock, a quitclaim deed to the home place, which appears as an exhibit in the case and purports to have been executed on January 22, 1931. When James Monroe completed his examination of these papers it was after banking hours. He had Mrs. Westlake call Harry to his room and reliance is placed on what there took place as accomplishing a delivery of the deed. The record contains the account of this transaction as given by *404 Harry Monroe, Mrs. Westlake and by E. L. Santer, tbe attorney for the administrator, who related bis conversation with Harry Monroe. Tbe account of tbe transaction given by Harry is as follows: “Q. Now, Mr. Monroe, you state in your answer that on September 29, 1933, your father delivered you tbis quitclaim deed to tbe property in question. Please state where and under what circumstances be gave you tbis deed. A. He gave me tbis deed along with some other papers down at Mrs. West-lake’s. He bad gotten tbis package, out of tbe bank box and bad looked it over, and called me in and be says, ‘Harry, everything is all right, my money is all there,’ and be says, ‘ There’s some papers inside for you. Take them home and take care of them. ’ ’ ’

Again be repeats it as follows: “A. He says, ‘Harry,’ be says, ‘I have found everything all right, and there’s some papers inside for you. Take these and take it home and take care of it,’ and just as we were coming out of tbe door of tbe bedroom be says, ‘Hold on, I forgot, here’s my bank box key. Take it along with you too,’ and be banded me tbe key to tbe bank box. That was September 29,1933.”

Tbe testimony of Mrs. Westlake as to what took place is as follows: “Well, be and Harry bad some conversation in tbe room there and when be came out of bis bedroom into tbe dining room, be said ‘Everything is all right, take these papers home and take care of them. Everything is all right.’ Then be said, ‘Hold on,’ and be put bis band in bis vest pocket and be took out tbe key .and be says, ‘Here’s my key. Take that home and take care of it.’ ”

Tbe testimony of another witness concerning tbe conversation with Harry as set out in tbe abstract of record is as follows: ‘ ‘ That after bis father bad examined tbe contents of tbe box or envelope ‘bis father told him something to tbe effect, I have found everything all right’ and delivered back either tbe package or tbe box, and said something to him, substantially what Harry Monroe, has *405 testified to here, with, this exception that, as I recall it, he did not tell him to take this home, he told him to take it back, and he explained to us he took it home because it was late in the afternoon, and the bank had closed. He stated to us his father told him to take it, and then he said everything was all right, to ‘take it back,’ and there was an additional statement that I am not exactly sure of the conversation that led up to it. It seemed to me, as I recall it, it was prefaced by some remark such as, ‘If anything happens,’ or ‘at the proper time,’ but I would not say for sure that that was said, but anyhow he said, ‘There is something in there for you,’ * * * I do not recall the exact language. He stated that Harry said he did not know at the time this package was delivered to him what the papers were his father referred to.”

Harry Monroe testified that he did not know what was in the envelope when his father gave it to him until he reached home and examined it with his sister, Nettie M. Hains. That he then took the deed and consulted Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
63 P.2d 456, 63 P.2d 459, 99 Colo. 401, 1936 Colo. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monroe-v-monroe-colo-1936.