Schuyler v. Stephens

68 A. 311, 28 R.I. 506
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 18, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 68 A. 311 (Schuyler v. Stephens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schuyler v. Stephens, 68 A. 311, 28 R.I. 506 (R.I. 1907).

Opinion

Parichurst, J.

This is an appeal in equity from a decree of the Superior Court setting aside a gift of -personal property made by Mary T. Merriss, late of Pawtucket, deceased, to the respondent, and ordering that a certain so-called deed of gift be delivered up to be cancelled and that said personal estate which was the subject of said gift be turned over to the complainant.

The record discloses the following state of facts:

Mary T. Merriss died at the house of the respondent, in Central Falls, R. I., on the 7th day of May, 1904, leaving a will which was admitted- to probate in the city of Pawtucket, R. I., June 17, 1904, and this decree of probate was subsequently affirmed on appeal.

The respondent is a physician. He became acquainted with the testatrix Mary T. Merriss in 1893, when he attended her grandmother professionally in Barrington, Miss Merriss being the nurse in charge of the patient. He afterward attended Miss Merriss, who was suffering from cancers, in his professional capacity from time to time, and later, by a written agreement dated February 16, 1903, entered into a contract of copartnership with her for conducting a sanatorium at *508 Central Falls, she giving him her note for $5,000 as securitj'-for the performance of this agreement on her part. A house was leased for five years, by the respondent, in his own name, for use as a sanatorium, and the respondent moved there with his family.

It is to be noted that the respondent admits that the articles of copartnership above referred to were written wholly by him, in his own hand; and it does not appear in testimony that Miss Merriss had any advice as to the same, or as to the giving of the $5,000 note as security, from anyone, unless it be inferred that she relied upon the advice of the respondent himself. Negotiations for the opening of the sanatorium progressed from the date of the partnership, and Miss Merriss and the respondent were frequently together in these negotiations, as well as in the relation of physician and patient.

The sanatorium was not opened as planned, on account of the illness of Miss Merriss, who continually grew worse; and the respondent continued to attend her as her physician' at her rooms at Park Place, Pawtucket, and also occasionally performed various necessary services for her not ordinarily performed bj1, an attending physician.

In February, 1904, owing to lack of proper conveniences at her home in Pawtucket, she went to the house in Central Falls where the respondent lived, and where the sanatorium was to be, and she remained there continuously under his care until her death, which occurred May 7, 1904.

On April 11, 1904, she executed her will and gave it, in a sealed envelope, to the respondent for safe keeping; he kept it in his safe-deposit box till after her death, and then gave it to the person named as executor; who presented it for probate, and declined to serve; whereupon this complainant was appointed administrator with the will annexed.

It is to be noted that the will was drawn in accordance, with the specific and carefully considered instructions of Miss Merriss, bjr an attorney in good standing whom she specially called in for that purpose some days prior to the date of the will; that the first draft of the will was taken to her by her attorney, and was changed in several particulars after careful *509 consideration; that the will was then rewritten by the attorney and was executed, in form as now appears in evidence, on the 11th day of April, 1904; that in giving the instructions for the will she stated what property she had, and mentioned quite specifically the various items of stock and money in bank (which are enumerated in the bill and which were claimed subsequently by the respondent under the gift), and stated that she had carefully considered the amount of her income; and was particularly desirous of securing to her father an annuity of $600 for his life; and that after his death she desired her estate to be given as stated in the will. The will places most of her property in trust for the purpose of this-annuity, and provides for the distribution of upwards of $10,000 in specific legacies after her father’s death, to individuals in varying amounts (including $3,000 to the respondent), and to various charitable and religious corporations. It appears also that Miss Merriss had some undivided interests in real estate, most of which was unimproved and produced little or no income, but was subject to the payment of taxes. Just how much real estate there was, or where it was or what was its value, the record does not disclose, except in a vague and unsatisfactory way; but we are satisfied that the various stocks and moneys in bank and other personal estate which are here in controversy constituted, in the estimation of the-testatrix, the substantial portion of her estate from which she expected her father’s annuity, as well as the specific bequests in her will set forth, to be realized.

After the death of Miss Merriss, which occurred on the seventh day of May, 1904, and after the appointment of the complainant as administrator with the will annexed, the complainant sought to find the personal estate of the deceased testatrix; and then learned from the respondent that he had in his possession a tin box which contained the certificates of stock, bank-books, and other papers herein referred to and which respondent claimed had been given to him by Miss Merriss in April, 1904. The respondent testifies, in regard to this alleged gift, as follows, in answer to questions by his-solicitor of record in this case: “Q. 120. I will ask you *510 whether or not at any time she made you a gift of the box .and its contents? A. She gave me this box and all of its contents. Q. When? A. On the thirtieth day of April, 1904. Q. Where was she at the time she gave it to you? A. She was sitting in bed. Q. Where? A. In my house. Q. 801— A. 801 Broad street, Central Falls. Q. I will ask you whether or not the box was locked when given to you? A. It was locked. .Q. Was there any key given with it? A. No. Q. When she gave you that box, Doctor, what did she say to you? A. She told me to go into the closet drawer there where the box was and to give it to her. I went in the closet, opened the door, got the box out and she took it with both her hands,' — -her hands were shaking and her voice trembling-just like this. She says, ‘ I am through with this life. I have no more, no further use for this box and its contents, and you have been more than a father to me and your wife more than a mother to me. You have done everything that man could do to save my life, and I give you this to use as you see fit. It is yours forever.’ • Q. The box, then, was handed to you?, A. To me. Q. What did you do with it? A. I took the box in my own room and put it into the bureau drawer and left it there. Q. Your room was where, Doctor? A. On the east side of the house. Q. On the same floor with Miss Merriss? A. On the same floor. Q. And you said you placed that in your bureau drawer? A. I did. Q. Was the door of that room left open? A. Yes. Q. The bureau drawer unlocked? A. No, locked. Q. Where did that box remain, so far as your knowledge, until after her death? A. It remained in my bureau drawer. Q. Until after her death? A. Until after her death. Q.

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Related

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190 A.2d 582 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
68 A. 311, 28 R.I. 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuyler-v-stephens-ri-1907.