Swayze v. Huntington

87 A. 106, 82 N.J. Eq. 127, 12 Buchanan 127, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 71
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 4, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 87 A. 106 (Swayze v. Huntington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swayze v. Huntington, 87 A. 106, 82 N.J. Eq. 127, 12 Buchanan 127, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 71 (N.J. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Howell, V. C.

The bill in this case is in form a bill filed by the complainant as sole surviving executor and trustee under the will of Henry W. Merriam for a settlement of his accounts and those of his deceased co-executors, and the ascertainment of the balance in his hands. As incidental thereto and part thereof it was prayed that the court might ascertain whether certain persons who were made defendants to the suit were accountable for the value of shares of stock of the H. W. Merriam Shoe Company which stood in the name of the testator on the books of the company at the time of his death, or for any part thereof, and, if so, what part; and whether a certain attempted gift of the same by the testator was perfected or not in his lifetime. There was likewise a prayer for the discharge of the trustee.

The principal question raised by the pleadings and presented by the evidence is whether the testator made a gift inter vivos of certain shares of stock of the said shoe company. This question affects the question of the accounting in this respect. If it shall be found that the gift of the shares was perfected, then the complainant is exonerated from accounting for them; if, on the [129]*129other hand, it is found that the gift was not perfected, then the lega] title to the shares remains vested, in the complainant in his trust capacity, and they must be accounted for as assets of the estate.

The salient facts are these: The testator had a sister who lived in Hyde Park, Massachusetts, who came to Newton, in the state, the home of her brother in 1897, and lived in his family as a member of it until the time of his death. Some time in that year he gave her a large envelope with eight small ones enclosed in it, and directed that the small envelopes should be delivered by her to the various parties to whom the same were addressed. He asked her to take charge of them and deliver them to the parties, but stated that he would like to have it done quietly, as he did not feel able to bear a great deal of excitement, and that she should use discretion so as to avoid any public comments that he might be forced to listen to. Mrs. Huntington accepted the package and placed the same in a safe which belonged to Mr. Merriam and which stood, in his house in a small room on the second floor, sometimes called the office. This safe was used by both Mr. Merriam and Mrs. Huntington; both had keys to the outside door, and by means thereof had access to the interior of the safe. Mr. Merriam kept his valuable papers, such as bonds and mortgages, &c., in a private compartment in the safe, to which he only had the key. He assigned to Mrs. Huntington another portion of the safe for her private and separate use, to which she only had the key. This assignment to her appears to have been made shortly after she became an inmate of her brother’s family. It does not appear that any of the witnesses ever saw the contents of these eight envelopes; the only evidence on that subject is the very slight evidence given by Mrs. Huntington on page 256 of the state, of the case, in which she says’that, on that occasion he spoke of his shoe company’s stock and’ said that he proposed to distribute some among his relatives, and' that she was directed to see that they had it, and that it was to. be distributed at her discretion.

Several weeks after this first deposit, if it may he so called, and early in the month of March, 1898, Mr. Merriam remarked to Mrs. Huntington that his wife had died, that he had no children,, [130]*130that lie hacl just made a codicil to his will which had revoked the provisions of that instrument concerning the disposition of his shoe company's stock so that fit was "released/' as he put it, from the operation of the will, and that he desired to change the arrangement of the certificates. Thereupon, at his request, she delivered to him the large envelope containing the eight small ones, which he took out of her sight. Several weeks later, perhaps two or three, Mr. Merriam and Mrs. Huntington met in the so-called office at the house, on which occasion he gave her another large envelope, describing orally its contents, which consisted of small envelopes, each containing an endorsement of the name of a person. On the witness-stand she stated the subsiance of her conversation with him at that time. She says that he directed her to take charge of the envelopes and deliver them at her discretion, for the reason that he wished it done rather quietly, and not to have a public announcement of it, which might bring excitement to him or compel him to listen to all the public might say about it, and that he thought she could so arrange it; and, continuing, he said, “There is an envelope with your name on, and you can receive it now.” And opening it, she found therein a certificate of the shoe company’s stock for five hundred and sixty-eight shares, which he said he hoped she would live to enjoy. The small envelope which had been addressed to Mrs. Huntington was destroyed, and on the same day, or the next, she obtained a new envelope into which she put the certificate for five hundred and sixty-eight shares, sealed the same, wrote her own name on the address side, placed the same in the large envelope with the others, and then deposited the large envelope in her private ■drawer in her brother's safe, locked the same and retained the key in her possession from that time forward until the testator’s death. She occasionally opened this private drawer between that time and the date of her brother’s death, and probably occasionally removed the large envelope therefrom for the purpose of rearranging the contents of the compartment, but she retained the actual custody and possession of the package as she originally received it, and at the date of the death of her brother it was still in her possession. On the day of the funeral, and after the burial, there had assembled at the house a number of relatives [131]*131of tlie family, and among the others, decedent’s brother, John J. Merriam. William L. Dutcher and the complainant, who were the executors of the will. John J. Merriam called u.pon Mrs. Huntington to produce Mr. Merriam’s private papers. She must in some way have obtained the'key to the testator’s private compartment in the safe, because she appears to have produced papers therefrom, and at the time of their production and delivery to her brother, John J. Merriam, she delivered to him the large envelope containing the nine small ones, including the one addressed to herself, all of which he took out of the room with him. Fifteen or twenty minutes later Mrs. Huntington received the envelopes again into her possession from William L. Dutcher, now deceased, who was one of the executors, to whom they had apparently been delivered by John J. Merriam, and who said that it was thought proper, inasmuch as she had been custodian of the papers, that she should present them to Judge Swayze in the presence of those who were to hear the reading of the will. To this she assented, and, at the time of the reading of the will, she gave them to Judge Swaj^ze, but she does not remember that a word was said by either of them about it at the time. From that time forward the envelopes remained in the possession and custody of the executors of Mr. Merriam’s will, until the distribution thereof in accordance with the arrangement made on March 26th, 1901, by Exhibit C 8, called the indemnity agreement.

Down to the date of the indemnity agreement it does not appear that anybody had full knowledge of the contents of all the nine envelopes.

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Bluebook (online)
87 A. 106, 82 N.J. Eq. 127, 12 Buchanan 127, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swayze-v-huntington-njch-1913.