Parret v. Craig

38 A. 305, 56 N.J. Eq. 280, 11 Dickinson 280, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 9
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 20, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 38 A. 305 (Parret v. Craig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parret v. Craig, 38 A. 305, 56 N.J. Eq. 280, 11 Dickinson 280, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 9 (N.J. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Stevens, V. C.

This suit is brought by the administrator of Catherine Craig against the executor of John Young, under the following circumstances : Catherine Craig died in 1893, at the age of eighty-[281]*281one. She had been a widow for about twelve years before her death, and had no children of her own. John Young, her nephew, died in the year 1895. He is shown by the evidence to have been her confidential adviser for nine or ten years prior to her decease, and to have had to a considerable extent the management of her business affairs. On December 15th, 1883, he opened an account in the Provident Institution for Savings, of Jersey City, entitled “Provident Institution for Savings in account with John A. Young, trustee for Catherine Craig.” Between this day and April 29th, 1892, he made twenty-nine deposits, aggregating, without interest, $3,222.76. During this same period he drew out on various occasions nearly all the money thus deposited, with the interest.

The bill charges a misappropriation of these moneys by Young to his own use, and- prays an account and a decree for payment. It is admitted that with the exception of two items, one of $76.73 to take up a protested check, and one of $100 given to Morgan Turton, the moneys were used by Young for his own purposes. The defendant’s insistment is that Young had a right to use them because they were given to him by Mrs. Craig. The proof of the alleged gift rests on Young’s declarations alone. Mrs. Craig had made two wills, one in 1885 and the other in 1890. The first of these wills gave her entire estate, and the second her entire estate except her wardrobe, to Young. Three, or four days before her death she made a third will in favor of another nephew, Morgan Turton, and his wife, with whom she was then living. The validity of the third will was contested by Young in the orphans court of Union county. He was called as a witness and cross-examined in reference to the account in the savings bank. He explicitly admitted that he had, with the exceptions I have mentioned, appropriated the money to his own use; he justified the appropriation by declaring that the money had been given to him. The contention of defendant’s counsel was that as complainant relied upon Young’s evidence for proof of misappropriation, he was bound to accept all of it as true and that on the whole evidence it appeared that Young had taken [282]*282the money only because it was given to him. While I think that the defendant was entitled to have the whole of Young’s evidence read, I do not think that the court is bound to give equal credit to every part of it. There cannot be the slightest doubt that Young used the money for his own purposes. He tells us how he used it. But there is on Young’s own statement, and on the undisputed and undoubted facts, a very serious question as to whether Mrs. Craig made him a gift of it. It will be borne in mind that the bank account stood in the name of Young as trustee for Catherine Craig. Now, Young’s statement was, not that Mrs. Craig had authorized him after he had deposited the money to draw it and spend it upon himself or upon his property, but that she had given it to him before he deposited it. He testified as follows:

“Q. Although you entered your account in that hank in her name, you still say that the money was given to you out and out and that you did not hold it as trustee, do you ?
“A. Yes, I considered that money was a gift to me.
“Q. Did you deposit anything in this account except the presents of money from Mrs. Craig ?
“A. Money and checks, that is all.
“Q. Well, they were all presents from her ?
“A. Yes, sir.”

It is certainly strange that if Young regarded this money as his own, he should have opened the account as a trustee account and continued it so for nine years. It is strange, too, that he should have opened it in this way, when he had in the same bank, as he admits, another account of his own. It is still stranger that he should, as he says he did, have opened it in this form after consultation with counsel. The fourth entry in the bank passbook is an item of $200, under date of April 8th, 1884. On April 6th, 1884, there appears in a little diary belonging to Mrs. Craig the following receipt, which Young admits he gave her: “Apr. 6, 1884. Rec’d of Mrs. Adam Craig, to deposit in savings bank, $200. John A. Young.” The $200 credited in the pass-book, Young admits to be the same as that which he receipted for. The language of this receipt is not the language [283]*283of gift. Again, when first examined about the form of the account, Young explained it by saying that he was Mrs. Craig’s banker. On re-examination on a subsequent day, he was asked,

“Q. Wliat did you mean when you said you were her banker?
“A. Well, I meant that she gave me money and I had a separate account . of it in the bank, knowing how much she wanted to give me.
* * x * -x- -x- * x x -x-
“Q. Why did you want to know how much she gave you ?
‘A. Merely as a record, that is all.
“Q. What did you want of a record ?
‘A. Well, I can’t tell exactly why I wanted a record — curiosity.”

There is another still more significant fact. On April 9th, 1887, he drew out of this account $1,000. On the same day he executed to his aunt a mortgage for that amount. The mortgage was recorded, and subsequently, on a certificate of his aunt authorizing its cancellation, canceled. This action on his part seems to me to be utterly irreconcilable with Young’s statement that the money in the bank was his own, or that he then so regarded it. I have no doubt, on the whole evidence, that the account itself correctly states- his position. As to this fund, he was trustee for Catherine Craig, and not absolute owner. In foro oonsdentice, he no doubt sought to justify his conduct in taking it on the ground that his aunt’s income was ample for her support, and that he was her sole legatee.

On the part of the defendant,'Maggie Cheever was called as a witness to prove the gift. But her testimony, taken altogether, strongly indicates that Mrs. Craig’s intention was not to make a gift of this money inter vivos, but to give it to Young by her will. According to this witness, Mrs. Craig, within a year before she died, appears to have thought that the money (except that which had been secured by mortgage) was in the bank. Yearly all of it had, in fact, been drawn out.

The remaining question relates to the $1,000 secured by mortgage. This money, as I have said, was drawn out on April 9th, 1887. The mortgage given to secure it was dated on that day, and was acknowledged on the 14th and recorded on the 15th of the same month. On it is endorsed the following: “ Dunellen, [284]*284Sept. 29, 1888. Received of John A. Young principal and interest to date. Catherine Craig. Register will please cancel this of record Catherine Craig.” It is not denied that the signatures to this receipt and request are Mrs. Craig’s. Prima facie, they indicate payment of the amount secured.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 A. 305, 56 N.J. Eq. 280, 11 Dickinson 280, 1897 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parret-v-craig-njch-1897.