Reel v. Hansboro State Bank

201 N.W. 861, 52 N.D. 182, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 112
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 201 N.W. 861 (Reel v. Hansboro State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reel v. Hansboro State Bank, 201 N.W. 861, 52 N.D. 182, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 112 (N.D. 1924).

Opinion

*185 JOHNSON, J.

Plaintiff bases her cause of action upon the following facts:

The plaintiff’s sister, Mrs. M. E. Ward, lived in Elsberry, Missouri, up to the time of her death, on April 11, 1923. She had, for some time, maintained a time deposit in the sum of $3305.00 in the defend *186 ant bank. On February 15, 1923, tlie certificate of deposit matured. After the 1st of January, 1923, and for some months prior thereto, Mrs. Ward’s health had been failing. She was 81 years of age. In February, 1923, in a conversation with one Blackorby, Mrs. Ward stated that “she wanted to give the property she had up here (N. D.) to her sister at Devils Lake, Mrs. Beel (plaintiff) and what she had down in Missouri to her sisters there.” She also told Blackorby that she had money in a bank in North Dakota; that she had heart trouble, and was not expected to live. She stated to this witness that “she had ordered a certificate of deposit made to her sister, Mrs. Beel.” A will was made by Mrs. Ward after this conversation and subsequent to the instructions relating to the certificate of deposit. The old certificate was sent to the defendant bank for renewal, but owing to illness in the family of Blackorby, the managing officer of the defendant bank, the certificate was not immediately renewed. It lay in a drawer in the bank many days without attention. Thereafter Mrs. Ward wrote the following letter in longhand:

“I sent you the certificate of deposit the 21st (meaning the 12th of Feb.) 1923 and have not heard from it. Getting uneasy about.it, although I know the trains have not been regular since the blizzard. If you have overlooked it, you be sure to send the interest to Elsberry, Mo., but you make the certificate to Mrs. A. L. Recl, Devils Lake, North Dakota, so if anything happens to me she can draw it. I have been quite sick, a little better now. You had to give up your mother. You have my sympathy. I know what that is. I hope your father is improving. Your friend, M. E. Ward.”

Inadvertently, the instructions of Mrs. Ward in this regard wore not complied with and a new certificate was prepared by a clerk in the bank, to Mrs. Ward as payee. This certificate was not delivered to Mrs. Beel, but was mailed to Mrs. Ward. It was issued on February 24, 1923, but dated back to February 15, the maturity date of the old certificate. Mrs. Ward received the certificate some time before her death, placed it in her safety deposit box and delivered the box to one Dr. Keeling, her attending physician, to be put in a bank at Els-berry for safe keeping. Keeling is the executor of the will.

The will is dated February 13, 1923, and in it the testatrix devises all her real property in Missouri to the defendant Beulah Estes, a *187 niece; and all the remainder of lier estate, real and personal, to her throe sisters, by name, including plaintiff, for their natural lives, the same to revert to Beulah Estes at the time of their death. Beulah Estes waited on Mrs. "Ward in her last illness.

The plaintiff contends that she is the absolute owner of the fund in the Hansboro State Bank; that the letter, quoted supra, constitutes an absolute assignment or gift to her of that fund; that the transaction was a gift inter vivos; that it was the intention of the decedent, as expressed in this letter and in conversations, to make plaintiff the present owner of the deposit; and that Mrs. Ward retained no right in, or control over, the principal,-reserving only the right to the interest; and that a trust was created. The defendants, other than the bank — the bank has not appealed — maintain that a gift of the deposit to the plaintiff was never consummated for want of delivery; that the bank, or its managing officer Blackorby, did not become a trustee of the fund for the benefit of the plaintiff; and that there was no acceptance of the gift by the plaintiff before Mrs. Ward changed her mind and revoked the same. The defendants, in effect, contend that the transaction constitutes at most a gift causa mortis; and that it was revoked before death.

The distinction between a gift inter vivos and a gift causa mortis is that the latter does not pass an irrevocable title until the death of the donor; § 5543, Comp. Laws 1913; a gift Inter vivos vests an irrevocable title on delivery; §§ 5539, 5540, Comp. Laws 1913.

The test to be applied in determining whether a gift is one inter vivos is whether it was made with the intent that it take effect immediately and irrevocably. If a gift inter vivos, it must have been fully oxeeuted by an unconditional delivery, actual or symbolical, having regard to the nature of the property and the circumstances. The fact that the donor is in extremis at the time the gift is made, does not, it has been held, necessarily determine its character as a gift causa mortis. If, as we have said, it was made with the intention that it should be immediately and irrevocably effective, with an intention to part both with possession and dominion, and was accompanied by a complete and unconditional delivery, it may, notwithstanding, the donor is in extremis, be a gift inter vivos. Gilligan v. Lord, 51 Conn. 562; Coffey v. Coffey, 179 Ill. 283, 53 N. E. 590. By statute in this state, *188 a gift made during tbe last illness of tbc donor, or under circumstances which would naturally impress him with an expectation of speedy death, is presumed to be a gift causa mortis. Comp. Laws 1913, § 5542.

There is a difference clearly recognized in the decisions between a gift inter vivos and a declaration of trust. Baker v. Baker, 123 Md. 32, 90 Atl. 776. In the case of a declaration of trust the legal title may be retained by the donor or transferred to a third person with the equitable title vesting in the cestui que trust. An intention to make a gift in praesenti ordinarily excludes the idea of a declaration of trust. Ashman’s Estate, 223 Pa. 543, 72 Atl. 899; 28 C. J. 624.

We are of the opinion that the record presents neither a case of a gift inter vivos nor one of causa mortis. There was not such delivery of the evidence of the debt — the certificate of deposit — as will satisfy the rule as stated above and laid down in Ramsdell v. Warner, 48 N. D. 96, 183 N. W. 281. The evidence is wholly insufficient to support the conclusion that Mrs. Ward was in immediate fear or contemplation of death, at the time she wrote Exhibit 2, or even when she talked with the witness Blackorby. She thought the .end might not be far away, but it does not appear that she thought it was imminent. Though ill, she was not confined to her bed when the will was made.

It is contended that a voluntary, irrevocable trust was created. Section 6277, Comp. Laws 1913, is as follows:

“Subject to the provisions of § 5364 a voluntary trust is created as to the trustor and beneficiary by any words or acts of the trustor, indicating with reasonable certainty:
“1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 N.W. 861, 52 N.D. 182, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reel-v-hansboro-state-bank-nd-1924.