Smith v. Smith

270 P. 174, 39 Wyo. 107, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 84
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1928
Docket1497
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 270 P. 174 (Smith v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Smith, 270 P. 174, 39 Wyo. 107, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 84 (Wyo. 1928).

Opinion

*113 UiNER, Justice.

This is an action brought by Nellie M. Smith, plaintiff in error, in the District Court of Albany County, Wyoming, against Julia A. Smith, as Administratrix of the Estate of Dwight P. Smith, deceased, defendant in error, on a promissory note signed by Dwight P. Smith, dated at Laramie, Wyoming, January 17, 1912, payable to the order of plaintiff in error, in the sum of $3,000, due two years after date, with interest at six per cent per annum and collection costs, including attorneys’ fees in case payment was not made at maturity. As the parties are aligned here as they were before the trial court, they will be referred to hereinafter as plaintiff and defendant respectively.

Plaintiff’s petition,' after alleging defendant’s qualification as administratrix, pleaded the note, the substance of which has already been given, and set out also that Dwight P. Smith had, in part payment of the alleged indebtedness, paid the plaintiff certain sums of money, as follows:

“1914 (The more particular date being to the plaintiff unknown $100.00; 1917, Aug. 22, $100.00, December 21, $50.00; 1918, Mar. 15, $100.00, August 24, $100.00, December 24, $30.00; 1919, Feb. 5, $100.00, Apr. 7, $25.00; 1922, Dec. 20, $25.00; 1923, Dec. 19, $25.00; 1924, April 12, $25.00; Total payments, $680.00.”

The rejection after due presentation of the claim of plaintiff as made to the defendant in her capacity as ad-ministratrix' of the Dwight P. Smith estate is also pleaded.

Defendant’s answer denied the execution and consideration of the above described promissory note, admitted *114 tbe payments set out by plaintiff, denied that said payments were given or intended by Dwight P. Smith as payments upon the note, and alleged that the payments were made for the purpose of financially assisting the plaintiff while she was in straightened circumstances. In further answer, defendant pleaded the ten-year statute of limitations, and by way of counter claim, also averred that Dwight P. Smith delivered to plaintiff $1200 in Liberty Bonds of the United States, whereon plaintiff became liable to defendant as for money had and received.

Plaintiff’s, reply was by general and specific denials of the new matter contained in defendant’s answer.

A jury trial having been demanded, the verdict went in favor of the defendant generally, but against her upon her alleged counter-claim. The jury also found specially that the cheeks offered in evidence in proof of the sundry payments alleged to have been made by Dwight P. Smith to Nellie M. Smith were not given by the former to the latter “with the intention on the part of Dwight P. Smith that the same were to be applied as partial payments upon the promissory note” in suit; that such checks were not applied by plaintiff or her agents at the time of the receipt of the same as partial payments upon said note; that the endorsements on the note were not placed there at the times and in the years they bore date, but at a later date, and that the “payments by Dwight P. Smith to plaintiff of $344.50 on April 27, 1922, and the delivery of the $850 in Liberty Bonds on July 7, 1921” were intended as gifts.

Motions for a directed verdict upon the conclusion of the introduction of evidence in the case, for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and for a new trial, were all presented by the plaintiff to the trial court and all were overruled. Judgment was duly entered on the jury’s verdict, and from that judgment the proceedings now at bar were prosecuted. Before continuing further it may be noted that neither the jury’s finding that the $1194.50 *115 in cash and in Liberty Bonds turned over by Dwight P. Smith to plaintiff were gifts from the former to the latter, nor that portion of the judgment which confirmed this finding, have been complained of here by either party.

The evidence bearing upon the controverted issues in the case is not as full as could be wished, and not very satisfactory. But three witnesses testified, one of them by deposition. The principal material facts presented by the record which are, in our judgment, necessary to be considered in disposing of the cause are briefly these: Plaintiff and Dwight P. Smith, defendant’s intestate, were brother and sister. The brother had been engaged in business in Laramie, Wyoming,.for a number of years preceding his death, the sister, meanwhile, residing in the neighborhood of Tonawanda, in the state of New York, where the father of both had lived. Shortly after the note in suit was given, it was delivered by plaintiff for safe keeping to one George Smith, her cousin, who also resided in New York State, was a graduate physician, and engaged in educational work. The latter, in the course of his deposition, stated that while the note was in the possession of the plaintiff at the time of the death of Dwight P. Smith, it had remained in his (George Smith’s) possession for a good many years, and during that time, at the request of plaintiff, as moneys were received by her from her brother, she requested her cousin to make, and he did make, certain endorsements on the note, the amounts and dates of which are shown by said endorsements to be: $100 — 1917; $50 — 1918; $100 — 1919; $100 — 1921; $50— 1923; $50 — 1924; $25 — 1925. The first four of these notations, with the exception of the dates, were made in ink; the remaining three, and all the dates, with pencil. George Smith had no independent knowledge of the receipt of these amounts by plaintiff, she being his source of information on the matter. He testified also for the plaintiff, referring to the first endorsement, that:

*116 “Moneys which had been received previous to this date had been considered as payments upon the principal sum, of which the note was less than half. The sums which had been received had been not even nominal interest on the principal sum and Miss Smith and myself considered that we were under no legal or moral obligation to endorse them. ’ ’

By cancelled checks of Dwight P. Smith exhibited to plaintiff by defendant, and offered in evidence by the former, the various money payments by Dwight P. Smith to plaintiff totalling $680, and extending from August 26, 1919 to April 12, 1924, were established as alleged in her petition.

George Smith, the cousin, was the executor of the estate of one George Martin, his uncle. In that estate plaintiff and Dwight P. Smith, by reason of their relationship, were also interested as legatees, each to the extent of between $3800 and $3900.- When the time for distribution of this estate drew near, in the spring of 1921, George wrote to Dwight, suggesting that the latter turn over to plaintiff his share in the Martin estate, the sister being at that time in very straightened circumstances, and having very limited resources. This correspondence, received in evidence without objection, shows that she could not secure board and room without running behind her income and being under the necessity of writing to Dwight for funds every little while,- that her sight and her hearing had seriously failed, she being nearly sixty years of age; that she owed the Martin estate $670 for money borrowed in 1915, so that her share of the estate would be about $1200, as she expected to assume an $1800 mortgage for part of her legacy therein.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 P. 174, 39 Wyo. 107, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-smith-wyo-1928.