Pennell v. Ennis

103 S.W. 147, 126 Mo. App. 355, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 411
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 103 S.W. 147 (Pennell v. Ennis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennell v. Ennis, 103 S.W. 147, 126 Mo. App. 355, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 411 (Mo. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Plaintiff is the daughter of Mrs. Lucinda W. Morse, deceased, and defendant the administrator of the estate of said deceased. This proceeding [357]*357commenced in the prohate court on a demand presented against the estate and based on the following bank checks:

“Edina, Mo., Oct. 21, 1905.
THE BANK OF EDINA,
Pay to Mattie F. Pennell ......$250.00
Two Hundred and Fifty........Dollars
In Current Funds.
L. W. Morse/'’
“Novelty, Mo., Oct. 21, 1905.
The Lyoan Bank oe Edina.
Pay to Mattie F. Pennell, or____$250.00
Two and Fifty................Dollars.
L. W. Morse/-’

Judgment was given in favor of plaintiff in the probate court, but on a trial anew in the circuit court, to which the case was appealed, the jury returned a verdict for defendant pursuant to a peremptory instruction given at the conclusion of the evidence for plaintiff. The checks which are the foundation of the demand, were signed a few hours before the death of Mrs. Morse and when she -was very low with illness. She had been in poor health for some time before, having suffered a stroke of paralysis which rendered one side of her body helpless. The date of the checks is October 21, 1905, but this date was inserted by mistake, as the checks were drawn two days later, on the twenty-third. Whether Mrs. Morse then realized how neár her end was, is uncertain on the proof. About three o’clock in the after: noon she asked plaintiff to get her check book and when it was put in her hands, wrote the two checks in question, handed them to her granddaughter, Daisy Pennell, the daughter of plaintiff, telling her to give them to plaintiff for the latter to use for any purpose she wished. This- incident occurred before the physician who had been attending the deceased, was sent for; but it must [358]*358have been but a few minutes before; for he arrived at the house about four o’clock in the afternoon, and it was necessary for the messenger to go to the town of Novelty, some three miles away, and.summon him, and for the physician to come from said town. When he arrived he saw Mrs. Morse could not live long and, as stated, she died the same day. At the date the checks were signed, the deceased had on deposit in the Lycan Bank the sum of ninety dollars, which was subject to check and $336.-58 not subject to check, but covered by a time certificate to fall due either six or twelve months after its date. She had a deposit in the Bank of Edina, on which the other check was drawn, of $69.64, which was subject to check. The figures in the check on the Lycan Bank called for $250 to be paid to plaintiff; whereas the writing was for “Two and 50 ... . Dollars.” At the time Mrs. Morse signed the checks she said they amounted to $500, showing that her intention was to make each check for $250. The drift of the cross-examination indicates that if the defendant had been called on to put in evidence, he would have defended on the ground that the deceased was incompetent to transact business when the checks were given. But as the court directed a verdict on the evidence for defendant, no such question is before us. There is evidence tending to prove Mrs. Morse knew what she was doing and that her purpose was to give her daughter $500. Plaintiff’s counsel has treated the transaction as constituting a gift inter vivos and not causa mortis. We have no doubt its real character was that of a gift causa mortis; but this point is immaterial. The essential question is whether or not the delivery of the checks was a valid gift, they not having been accepted or paid prior to the death of the drawer, and the rule of law controlling the decision is the same whether the transaction is regarded as inter vivos or causa mortis. The current of authority seems to be unbroken in favor of the proposition that a check drawn on the draw[359]*359er’s general account in a bank, will not constitute a gift to tbe payee of tbe amount of tbe check if it is neither accepted nor paid prior to the death of the drawer. This is because a complete delivery is essential to a valid gift, and the check of the donor is looked on as no more than his promise to give the amount written. [1 Story, Eq. Jur. (13 Ed.), sec. 607a, note 6, 610; Harris v. Clark, 3 N. Y. 93; McKenzie v. Downing, 25 Ga. 669; Thresher, Admr., v. Dyer, Excr., 69 Conn. 404; Simmons v. Cincinnati, etc., Co., 31 Ohio St. 457, 27 Am. Rep. 521; Cloyes v. Oloyes, 36 Hun (N. Y.) 145; Rolls v. Pearce, L. R. 5 Ch. Div. 730; In re Mead, L. R. 15 Ch. Div. 651; In re Beak’s Estate, L. R. 13 Eq. 489; Bromloy v. Brunton, L. R. 6 Eq. 257.] Some of those cases consider the effect of the delivery of a donor’s check when the gift is inter vivos and others when it is causa mortis. The same rule is applied to attempted gifts by the delivery of the donor’s own promissory note, [School Dist. v. Sheidley, 138 Mo. 672, 40 S. W. 656; West v. Cavins, 74 Ind. 265; Flint v. Patee, 33 N. H. 520; 66 Am. Dec. 742; Holley v. Adams, 16 Vt. 206, 42 Am. Dec. 508; Grymes v. Hone, 49 N. Y. 17, 10 Am. Rep. 717.] Cases are reported in which the gift was held valid'on exceptional facts; as where the check was certified or paid prior to the death of the donor. Any step which changes the transaction from a mere executory and voluntary promise by the donor into an executed transaction, will validate it. Obligations or checks drawn by third parties in favor of the donor, are regarded as the latter’s property and which he may give away. The rule is thus stated in a standard treatise:

“Whatever doubt may have once been entertained, the rule is now well established that all things in action which -consist of the promises or undertakings of third persons, not the donor himself, of which the legal or equitable title can pass by delivery, may be the subjects of a valid gift, including promissory notes, bills of [360]*360exchange, checks, bonds, mortgages, savings-bank pass books, certificates of deposits, policies of insurance, and ■the like; and it is settled by the recent cases that a valid donation of negotiable instruments may thus be made without indorsement. Debts due from the donee himself may be donated, either by giving back to him the written evidence of debt, or by canceling or destroying same, or by delivering the receipt. Things in action, on the other hand, in which the donor himself is the debtor party, cannot be the subject-matter of a valid gift. The reason is that, whatever be their form, these gifts would amount to nothing more than the donor’s own naked executory promise to pay at some further day, without any consideration to support it; and such a voluntary promise cannot be enforced against the donor nor against his executors or administrators. [3 Pomeroy, Eq. Jur. (3 Ed.), sec. 1148.]

Equity does not lend assistance to voluntary dispositions of property while they are yet executory. If such dispositions are attempted in a mode-which fails for want of compliance with some indispensable rule of law, they will not be carried into effect in another mode to which the rule may not be essential.

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.W. 147, 126 Mo. App. 355, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennell-v-ennis-moctapp-1907.