Rust v. Phillips

159 S.E.2d 628, 208 Va. 573, 1968 Va. LEXIS 150
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 4, 1968
DocketRecord 6539
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 159 S.E.2d 628 (Rust v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rust v. Phillips, 159 S.E.2d 628, 208 Va. 573, 1968 Va. LEXIS 150 (Va. 1968).

Opinion

Snead, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this appeal we are called upon to determine whether the evidence is sufficient to support a finding by the trial court that David N. Rust, Jr., deceased, made valid inter vivos gifts of certain negotiable instruments totaling $100,000 to his children.

On December 6, 1965, Elizabeth R. Phillips and Wilbur C. Hall, executors of decedent’s estate, filed a bill of complaint which alleged, among other things, that the gifts in question were valid, but that the validity of the gifts had been questioned by certain heirs because they claimed there “was no completed delivery” of the property. The executors prayed that the court determine whether decedent’s acts *574 were sufficient to constitute valid gifts. The following persons, with the amount of the gift purportedly made to each child shown in parenthesis, were named as defendants:

Mary Rust, Widow of David N. Rust, Jr.
Eleanor R. Bullock ($25,000)
Mary R. Clarke ($25,000)
Elizabeth R. Phillips, in her individual capacity ($25,000)
Caroline R. Williams ($7,500)
Elizabeth R. Phillips and Wilbur C. Hall, Trustees for W. S. Rust ($7,500)
David N. Rust, III ($10,000)

The answers of Mary Rust, David N. Rust, III, and Caroline R. Williams denied the validity of the gifts. However, the answers of Mary R. Clark, Eleanor R. Bullock, Elizabeth R. Phillips, and Elizabeth R. Phillips and Wilbur C. Hall, trustees for W. S. Rust, either alleged the validity of the gifts or sought the court’s interpretation and construction of the decedent’s acts in June 1963 when the gifts were alleged to have been made.

Evidence was taken ore tenus on March 9, 1966, and at the conclusion of the complainants’ evidence, counsel for defendants Caroline R. Williams, Mary Rust and David N. Rust, III moved to strike it out because there had been no evidence showing “relinquishment of dominion and control” of the property in question by the decedent. The motions were overruled and exceptions noted. At the close of all of the evidence, counsel for Mrs. Williams again renewed his motion to strike on the ground that “the executors have not even shown a prima facie case” of an executed gift. A ruling was deferred until May 18, at which time the motion was overruled.

By its decree of June 17, 1966, the court held that the decedent, David N. Rust, Jr., had made valid inter vivos gifts of all the property in question. The defendants Caroline R. Williams, David N. Rust, III and Mary Rust objected and excepted to the entry of the decree and have appealed.

David N. Rust, Jr. died on October 14, 1963, at the age of 82. At the time of his death he was mentally alert and in full possession of his faculties but suffered from emphysema. Until his death, decedent was engaged in the business of making and buying real estate loans.

For approximately twenty years, decedént employed his daughter, *575 Elizabeth R. Phillips, as a part-time secretary to assist him with his affairs. Mrs. Phillips was given a “power of attorney * * * so that * * * [she] could do certain things for him.” In addition, decedent appointed her a deputy to enter his safe deposit box at the Leesburg office of the Loudoun National Bank (now First and Merchants National Bank) where he kept his investments. Sometimes decedent would enter the box, and on occasions Mrs. Phillips would enter it “whenever he told me to.”

Mrs. Phillips testified that on June 14, 1963 * * my father asked me to get certain notes from his safe deposit box for him, which I did.” He then dictated letters to his six children. Each letter was dated June 14, 1963, and reads as follows:

“The enclosed notes of $- are a gift for Christmas. The interest is to start December 29, 1963.”

The decedent signed the letters typed by Mrs. Phillips, placed them in separate envelopes along with the real estate notes in the amounts heretofore stated, and sealed the envelopes (1) He then handed all the envelopes to Mrs. Phillips and, after being thanked by her for his gift, expressed hope that “the money would do some good.” Mrs. Phillip^ stated that at her father’s instruction she returned the six sealed envelopes on the same day to decedent’s safe deposit box. All of the notes involved were either payable to bearer or endorsed in blank. The envelopes remained in the safe deposit box, sealed, until decedent’s death on October 14, 1963.

Subsequent to decedent’s death, the executors of his estate opened the box for inventory purposes and the six sealed, unstamped envelopes were found among the contents of the box. The executors delivered the envelopes to the respective addressees, each of whom signed a receipt for the envelope and its contents.

Mrs. Phillips testified that she did not inform any of the children of the alleged gifts prior to her father’s death, and that if he had requested a return of the envelopes “I suppose an employee would do what the boss says.” At the conclusion of her testimony, the trial court requested the witness to state in detail what transpired on June 14, 1963, when the letters were written.

“THE COURT: Did he seal yours?

“THE WITNESS: Yes. He sealed them all and I thanked him for mine and I told him he was generous, etc. I thought he was. And he told me to put the letters in the safe deposit box and he would *576 mail them or we could mail, or I could mail them at a later time. And after that he did suggest, maybe once, that he was going to mail them, but he didn’t.

“THE COURT: Was any restrictions put on these, the delivery of these gifts other than what he stated in the letter?

“THE WITNESS: Not that I know of. Restrictions?

“THE COURT: When were you told to deliver them, or were you told?

“THE WITNESS: I wasn’t told to deliver them—because

“THE COURT: Because what?

“THE WITNESS: Because I assumed he was going to mail them out, mail them to the people.

“THE COURT: He told you to put them in his safe deposit box?

“THE WITNESS: Yes. He didn’t keep things, negotiable notes, things, lying around his house.

“THE COURT: I believe you stated in your testimony on direct examination that he had previously given gifts to the children and he had made investments for them.

“THE WITNESS: Yes.

“THE COURT: And to your knowledge, after he had made a gift to a child, he had never used it as his own or taken it back?

“THE WITNESS: No. Not to my knowledge.

“THE COURT: Did he tell you to put your envelope in the locked box, too?

“THE COURT: Was your envelope to be handled the same as all the others?

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.E.2d 628, 208 Va. 573, 1968 Va. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rust-v-phillips-va-1968.