Reynolds v. Thompson

171 S.W. 379, 161 Ky. 772, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 132
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 18, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 379 (Reynolds v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Thompson, 171 S.W. 379, 161 Ky. 772, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 132 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Miller

— Reversing.

The pufpose of this appeal is to finally determine whether the appellee, James Thompson, is the owner of -a mortgage note executed by Dunn, for $500.00, which he claims as a gift from the appellant, Francis Reynolds.

The appellant, Francis Reynolds, is now more than 89 years of age. He had spent most of his life in Harrison county, Kentucky; but some time previous to October, 1907, he removed to Dayton, Ohio, where he became an inmate of the Soldiers’ Military Home.

R. E. • Smith, a successful merchant of Harrison county, Kentucky, was the friend and business adviser of Reynolds. In the fall of 1907, Smith undertook to place at interest, secured by a mortgage, $500.00 which Reynolds had saved. This was done by buying a real estate lien note which L. M. Dunn had executed to J. "W. Boyd on November 26, 1907, for $500.00, and secured by a lien upon Dunn’s land. It was endorsed in blank by Boyd and delivered to Smith, who kept it until his death in March, 1911.

On January 10, 1908, Boyd made the following transfer upon the deed book in which the Dunn mortgage was recorded in the Harrison County Court Clerk’s office, to-wit:

“For value received I hereby transfer this note to Francis Reynolds of Nat’l. Miltary Home of Ohio. This the 10th day of January, 1908.
‘ ‘ Attest: W. R. Curie, Clerk. J. W. Boyd. ’ ’

On December 3, 1912, Reynolds brought this action against Dunn, the mortgagor, and James Thompson and [774]*774Minnie Smith, the widow and executrix of R. E. Smith, seeking to recover a judgment for the $500.00, and to enforce the mortgage upon Dunn’s land to pay the note. Reynolds did not file the note with his petition, giving as his reason for not doing so, that he left it with R. E. Smith for safe keeping; that Smith was dead, and upon his death the note went into possession of his wife, Minnie Smith, who then had possession of same and refused to deliver it to Reynolds, claiming that the defendant, James Thompson, had some interest in the note. Thompson was called upon to assert any interest or ownership he claimed in the note.

He answered, alleging that at the time the Dunn note was bought with Reynolds’ money, in 1907, Smith was. Thompson’s statutory guardian; and that in January, 1908, Reynolds gave and delivered the note to Smith as the statutory guardian for Thompson, as an absolute gift; that Smith so received the note; and” that Smith and his wife had so held it ever since.

The issues having been thus made as to the gift of the note by Reynolds to Thompson in January, 1908, and tried upon that issue, the chancellor was of opinion that the evidence established a gift inter vivos; but, if he was mistaken in that conclusion, he was nevertheless of the opinion that the gift should be upheld as a parol, voluntary trust; and in either of said events it was irrevocable by Reynolds. The chancellor rested his decision upon the authority of Howard, Admr. v. Marshall, 156 Ky., 20, 51 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1208.

To reverse that judgment, Reynolds appeals.

Reynolds’ wife was the grandmother of the appellee James Thompson and his brother John Thompson. Their father had died when the boys were quite young, and Reynolds, their step-grandfather, had raised them from the time they were quite young, until they were perhaps 14 or 15 years old. Thompson afterwards took the name of Francis as his own middle name, and was thereafter generally known as his step-grandfather’s namesake. After Reynolds ’ wife died, he discontinued housekeeping and went to live at the Soldiers’ Home, at Dayton, Ohio.

The testimony of Reynolds bears the usual marks incident to great age, in. that his ideas are sometimes disconnected and poorly expressed. He says, among other things, that during the summer of 1908, some six or eight months after the investment was made, he went to the clerk’s office, in Harrison county, where the clerk [775]*775read to him the note which he had bought from Boyd, and that after reading it upon the margin of the deed book, he was satisfied of its validity and the regularity of his purchase.

'It will be remembered the assignment upon the deed book recited that it was a transfer of “the within note to Francis Reynolds.” Throughout the subsequent transactions relating to the note Reynolds always contended that it was in the clerk’s office, in Harrison county. He seemed to think the assignment was the note, and that the assignment was the only evidence of Dunn’s indebtedness to him.

When R. E. Smith died in March, 1911, his wife, the defendant Minnie Smith, qualified as his executrix and as guardian of the appellee, ' Thompson. She found among her husband’s papers a carefully kept account oi his trust as guardian of James Thompson, in which he had charged himself with $30.00 interest on the $500.00 in November, 1908, and again with the same amount in November, 1909, the account reciting in each instance that the $30.00 was “interest on mortgage note for year ending November 26, 1908,” and 1909, respectively.

Upon James Thompson reaching his majority, Minnie Smith made her settlement as his guardian in May, 1911, in which she adopted the account left by her husband; and although James Thompson had then reached his majority, Minnie Smith kept possession of the note, suggesting that Thompson ought not to have possession of so much money, or that it would be best for him to leave it in her possession.

Mrs. Cavanaugh, of Cincinnati,' Ohio, was the niece of Reynolds’ wife, and consequently the kinsman of Thompson.

In August, 1912, appellee James Thompson, who had theretofore and for several years, been living with Mrs. Cavanaugh, in Cincinnati, Ohio, joined the regular army and was thereafter stationed at Fort Des Moines, Iowa. In the following October the appellant, Francis Reynolds, left the Military Home, at Dayton, and went to live with Mrs. Cavanaugh, in Cincinnati, where he has since remained. By reason of this separation, the communications between Reynolds and Thompson have been principally, if not entirely, by letter.

As early as October 20, 1908, R. E. Smith wrote to Reynolds, at Dayton, a long letter which, among other things, contained this paragraph:

[776]*776“The interest on the Boyd note is dne soon. Should the party want to pay interest upon interest, for instance, $30.00 now due; should he keep and pay upon $530.00 for next year, or must he pay the $30.00 now?”

The record contains no answer to this letter, but it is claimed by Thompson that there must have been an answer in which Reynolds at least gave the interest to the boy, since Smith charged himself as guardian with the $30.00 interest which accrued in November, 1908, and with a like sum which accrued in November, 1909.

Subsequently, in a letter undated, but evidently written to Thompson before September 14, 1912, Reynolds used this language:

“I have no claim nor there is none against you getting your money any time from that man or any one else that owes you, or me, Francis Reynolds. If I was you I would make that man pay me or Mr. Billy Boyd, and you see Judge King and the clerk of the court and get them to get yonr mortgage to James Thompson right off; or Swinford, he is the mayor of the city. Now, you see Mr. Swinford and don’t let Billy Boyd fool you.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 379, 161 Ky. 772, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-thompson-kyctapp-1914.