Sands v. Dildine

1936 OK 67, 54 P.2d 171, 175 Okla. 520, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 21, 1936
DocketNo. 22949.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1936 OK 67 (Sands v. Dildine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sands v. Dildine, 1936 OK 67, 54 P.2d 171, 175 Okla. 520, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 33 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This cause was commenced in the district court of Osage county, Okla., by defendants in error filing therein on the 12th day of December, 1930, their petition in replevin, whereby said defendants in error sought to recover from the plaintiff in error three $1,000 bonds described in said petition. After the necessary pleadings were filed, said cause was tried to the court on the 9th day of April, 1931. Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants in error for the recovery of said bonds. Motion for pew trial was filed by plaintiff in error, overruled by the court, and exception saved, and this, cause brought to this court on appeal from such decision.

The petition alleged in substance that the plaintiffs were the joint administrators of the estate of Nellie Michelle, deceased, and that A. S. Sands and Harry Big Eagle wrongfully detained certain goods and chattels which wer;ei described as three bonds in the sum of $1,000 each, which said bonds were specifically described in said petition, and said petition prayed for return of said bonds to said plaintiffs. Along with said petition was filed affidavit of replevin and replevin bond, and sa'id bonds were taken into custody and delivered to plaintiffs, and on the 10th day of January, 1931, the defendants filed their demurrers to the petition, which demurrers were by the court overruled and exceptions saved. Thereafter, and on the 9th day of February, said defendants filed their answers, which answers were in the form of ,a general denial.

As a defense to the action it was contended that Nellie Michelle, during her lifetime, gave the said bonds to Big Eagle. The pivotal question of this appeal, therefore, is: Was there a gift inter vivos to Harry Big Eagle, the alleged donee?

Under the proof, Nellie Michelle, a full-blood Osage Indian woman, who was the sister of Harry Big Eagle, called Mr. A. S.Sands, an attorney at law of Pawhuska, Okla., and informed him that she was going away on a vacation and as soon as she came b'aek shp. would make a will, and that she had three bonds, which she had received from the Mo-ho-gla estate, that she wanted to give Harry Big Eagle; and that she would bring them down and le^ive them with him to give to her brother, Harry Big Eagle. Nellie Michelle brought the bonds to the office of Mr. Sands and delivered them to Mrs. Betty West, an employee in said office, *521 and sa'id that she was leaving them for her brother, Harry Big Eagle, and would like for her to give them to him. Mrs. West placed them in a safe located in the office. No mention was made to Mr. Sands concerning the transaction. Neither was any information concerning the same imparted to Harry Big Eagle until -after tlfe- demise of Nellie Michelle. The testimony further showed that the said bonds were not indorsed or assigned to Big Eagle by Nellie Michelle before leaving them with Betty West to be delivered to him; that Nellie Michelle, on several occasions previous to leaving the bonds with Mrs. West, had left the said bonds with Mr. Sands shortly before the interest paying dates for him to collect the interest and to give same to her, which he faithfully pie-rformed; that Big-Eagle usually accompanied Nellie Michelle upon her visits to Mr. Sands’ office.

There are two essential elements necessary to constitute a gift inter vivos, namely, an intention to makje a gift and a delivery of the thing given during the lifetime of llie donor. Sauls v. Whitman, 171 Okla. 113, 42 P. (2d) 275. A gift cannot be established by proof of declaration of the donor that she intends to give or had given the property to the claimant, in the absence of actual delivery. There must be some act or circumstance shown amounting to an actual delivery. It is not lessential that delivery be made to the donee himself, but may be made to another for the donee, or to his agent. But delivery to the donor’s agent is never sufficient, as it is essentially no delivery -at all. It is as if the donor had merely shifted possession of the property from onie pocket to another. The courts all seem 1o be in accord as to the principle itself, hut the trouble arises on the question whether the person to whom the property is delivered is the agent of the donor or a trustee for the donee. The determination-' of this fact rests on the intention of the donor, the situation and relationship of the parties, the kind 'and character of the property, and the things said, written or done in regard thereto. (Sauls v. Whitman, supra.)

Did A. S. Sands, whom the trial court found had possession of the bonds at the commencement of this action, hold them as the agent of Nellie Michelle, and upon her death, for her estate, or did he hold them as trustee for Big Eagle, and upon his death, for his estate? The correct answer to this question will determine the issues in this, appeal. The trial court in rendering judgment for the plaintiffs held, in substance, that A. S. Sands was the agent of Nellie Michelle.

The evidence in this casj© clearly shows that Nellie Michelle was a client of A. S. Sands, and that she often left the said bonds with him for the purpose of cashing the interest coupons semiannually and later having the bonds returned to her. The evidence further shows that on the last occasion she left the bonds at the attorney’s office, whiein she was intending to make a trip to Colorado, when and for what length of time the record fails to reveal. At no time d'id Nellie Michelle indorse or make an assignment of the said bonds to Big Eagl,ei or to A. S. S'ands in trust for Big Eagle, The United States of America 4%% gold bond specifically provided the manner in which a transfer of said bond should be effected. No attempt to comply with th|es:> instructions was made by the o-wner. The Duncan Hotel bond provided: “This bond shall pass by delivery unless it has been registered as to payment of the principal as provided by the form for registration indorsed on the back hereof.” On the back of same we find said bond registered in the name of N|ellie Michelle. July 18, 1029, by the Citizens Trust Company, by E. E. Grin-stead, President. This indicates that said bond could not be transferred by mere delivery. The National Building & Loan Association of Pawhuska, Okla., bond does not indicate how a transija- shall be effected-

In view of the relationship of the partie’s and the situation existing at the time' ■ of the delivery of the bonds to Mr. Sands’ office, the trial court assumed, and justly so, that the bonds were delivered to Mr. Sands as her agent and not as the agent of or as trustee for Big Eagle, and that upon her death the agency was revoked, at which time the .defendant still had thp- bonds in his possession. The death of either party terminates the agency, except where this agent has a pecuniary interest of his own in the execution of the agency. Kimmell v. Powers, 19 Okla. 339, 91 P. 687. It is specifically admitted that the defendant did not have such a vested interest in the said bonds as Lo constitute “a power coupled with an interest.” In the second paragraph of the syllabus in the case of Hickman, Ex’r, v. Barrett, 175 Okla. 262, 52 P. (2d) 40, this court said:

“Delivery to alleged donor’s agent, as agent, and not as donjee, is not sufficient to constitute such delivery as is required in *522 gifts inter vivos.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 67, 54 P.2d 171, 175 Okla. 520, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sands-v-dildine-okla-1936.