Philpot v. Temple Banking Co.

60 S.E. 480, 3 Ga. App. 742, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 420
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 24, 1908
Docket741
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 60 S.E. 480 (Philpot v. Temple Banking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philpot v. Temple Banking Co., 60 S.E. 480, 3 Ga. App. 742, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 420 (Ga. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Hill, C. J.

John McCullongb, after living in Texas for some years, unexpectedly came to the home of bis brother Enoch McCullough in Polk county, Georgia, on the 26th of June, 1904. He was in bad health and was suffering from an incurable disease. At the dinner table, bis. brother and his brother’s wife and son being present, on the day of his arrival, be stated to bis brother and family that he had come back from Texas to his brother’s home, where be wanted to remain until be died; that he was in bad health and did not expect to recover, and that be wanted his-brother and family to take care of him and nurse him as long [743]*743as lie lived; that he had, besides a small amount of cash, a certificate of deposit issued to him by the First National Bank of Terrell, Texas; that he wanted his brother to take the certificate of deposit, pay the expenses of his sickness and burial in the event of his death, which he expected to occur as a result of his physical condition in a short time, and that the balance of the money, represented by the certificate, he wanted him to have. Several days after this first conversation, he again told his brother about the certificate of deposit, and delivered it into the possession of his brother, telling him that after paying the expenses of Ms sickness and funeral, he was to keep the balance of* the proceeds of the certificate as his own. He did not, however, indorse the certificate, but delivered it, unindorsed, to his brother. His brother called in his wife, gave her the certificate, and told her to put it in her trunk and keep it. John McCullough appeared to be in bad health, and was despondent and hopeless of his ultimate recovery,, but Ms mental condition was entirely normal. He continued to grow worse, and, about a week after his arrival, called in the family physician, Dr. W. F. Goldin, who treated him from then, until he died on the 21st of July, 1904. This physician testified as to his physical condition, and stated, that his mental condition rvas unaffected by his disease, that he talked as intelligently as any man he had ever talked to, and that there "was no indication of mental weakness until just a few days before his death. One day, while the doctor was present, the deceased told him about the certificate of deposit on the Texas bank, and that he had intended to make a deposit of the certificate in one of the banks of Atlanta, but that he had neglected to do so, and said: “I understand you are interested in a bank, and I want you to take it down there and deposit it for me. I gave it to Enoch, the proceeds of it, and I Avant you to have your pay. I want you to take it down there’ and have it collected for him.” The doctor suggested to him to have it deposited in the bank at Temple in his own name; that he would then have the bank at Temple to send him a check for the amount of the certificate, and make it payable to his brother Enoch, and he could give this check to his brother. Mrs. McCullough, Avife of Enoch, at the request of her husband, got the certificate and delivered it to the doctor. He saw that the certificate of deposit was made payable to John McCullough and was not indorsed [744]*744by him, and he called attention to this fact. John McCullough was in bed and was nervous, and he asked the physician to write his name for him on the back of the certificate, which the physician did in his presence and in the presence of his brother and his wife. The physician took the certificate, enclosed it in a letter, and sent it to the bank at Temple, and personally directed the cashier of the .bank to deposit the certificate in the name of John McCullough and to send it on to Texas for collection, and to prepare a check payable to the order of E. E. McCullough covering the amount of the certificate. This was done by the cashier. The cheek was” taken to John McCullough by the pl^sieian and delivered to him, and he asked the physician to sign his name to the check, which the physician did, in his presence,, and John McCullough then delivered the cheek into the possession of his brother Enoch. The certificate of deposit issued by the Texas bank was deposited at the Temple bank on the 12th of July, 1904. The cheek drawn by John McCullough on the Temple bank was dated July 13, 1904, and on that day was delivered by John to his brother Enoch. John McCullough died on the 21st of July thereafter, and Enoch McCullough presented the check to the bank on August 15, was then paid by the bank a small amount in cash, and deposited the balance of the check, amounting to $1,050, to his own credit in the bank. The certificate of deposit issued by the bank in Texas is as follows: “No. 9461. The First National Bank of Terrell, Texas. June 21st, 1904. John McCullough has deposited in this bank $1,092.21/100, payable to the order of himself on the return of this certificate properly indorsed. E. S. Morrow, Assistant Cashier. Negotiable at any bank. Certificate of deposit.” Indorsed: “John McCullough, W. F. Goldin.” The check drawn by John McCullough on the bank at Temple is as follows: “Temple, Ga. July 13th, 1904. The Temple Banking Company. Pay to the order of E. E. McCullough $1,092.21-100, one thousand and ninety-two dollars and twenty-one cents. John McCullough.” Indorsed: “E. E. McCullough, W. F. Goldin.”

Some time after the occurrences above narrated, J. H. Philpot, as administrator of John McCullough, brought suit in the city court of Polk county against E. E. McCullough, W. F. Goldin, and the Temple Banking Company, the purpose of the suit being to [745]*745recover the sum of $1,092.21 collected by the bank as the proceeds of the certificate of deposit from the Texas bank, which sum, on the day of John McCullough’s death, was on deposit with the Temple Banking Company to the credit of the deceased. In the suit by the administrator it was alleged, that the title to this money was in the estate of John McCullough, that the heirs at law of John McCullough were his brother Enoch McCullough and Florence Doster, a minor child, who is the granddaughter of the sister of John McCullough. The petition charged, that Enoch McCullough unlawfully secured said $1,092.21 from the Temple Banking Company after the death of his brother; that the Temple Banking Company, having actual notice of John McCullough’s death, and of the fact that no administrator had been appointed on his estate, unlawfully turned over said money to Enoch McCullough, and that the said money was secured by Enoch McCullough and Dr. W. F. Goldin from the bank with the understanding that Goldin, who was the president of the bank, could use a large part of the fund. On the trial of the case the gift by John McCullough to his brother Enoch was attacked on the ground that the gift was incomplete and not consummated prior to the death of John McCullough; that the check on the Temple Banking Company which John McCullough had made and delivered to his brother not having been presented for payment prior to the death of John McCullough, the gift was, by operation of law, revoked by his death; also that the gift by John McCullough to his brother Enoch was made when John had not sufficient mental capacity to make a gift; and further, that said gift was obtained by the undue influence of Enoch, his family, and Dr. Goldin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.E. 480, 3 Ga. App. 742, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philpot-v-temple-banking-co-gactapp-1908.