Tierney v. Hotz

55 A.2d 39, 141 N.J. Eq. 114, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 443
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 25, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 A.2d 39 (Tierney v. Hotz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tierney v. Hotz, 55 A.2d 39, 141 N.J. Eq. 114, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 443 (N.J. 1947).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wells, J.

This is an appeal from a decree entered in the Court of Chancery directing that Lillian Hotz, the defendant-appellant, pay to her mother, Elizabeth Tierney, the complainant-respondent, the sum of $8,990 together with costs and counsel fee.

The complainant is a widow of some ninety years, partially paralyzed and faulty in memory. She has been virtually confined to her home for some years and has relied on certain of her nine children to purchase her necessities and assist her in the conduct of her business affairs. Her sources of support have been a savings account in the Mutual Savings Fund Harmonía, of Elizabeth, and rentals from a two-family house adjacent to her home.

The defendant is a daughter of the complainant who lived near her mother. Having been separated from her husband, and later widowed, with her children away from home in military service, she apparently devoted some part of each day to calling upon her mother and attending to her needs. By virtue of certain powers of attorney executed by the complainant the defendant was empowered to make withdrawals from her mother’s savings account and to enter her mother’s safe deposit box. The defendant was also called upon from time to time to make out receipts for payments of rentals.

The bill of complaint charges the defendant with receiving and holding certain funds belonging to the complainant, and sought an accounting of such funds and payment of the amount found due and owing on such accounting. Funds from three separate sources are the subject of this controversy; (1) withdrawals from the savings account in the amount of $9,600; (2) a cash sum of $4,990 entrusted to the defendant for safekeeping; (3) rentals of an unspecified amount. The *116 Yice-Chancellor rightly found that the complainant’s proofs failed as to the matter of the rentals' and they will not be considered further in this opinion. However, the YiceChancellor did find that the defendant was chargeable for $4,000 of the withdrawals from the savings account and for the entire sum of $4,990 alleged to have been entrusted to her care. Thereupon a decree was entered for the total amount of $8,990 and it is from such decree that this appeal is taken.

No questions of law are presented for the consideration of this court, but it is contended that the decree is not justified by the evidence adduced below. “On an appeal from a decree from the Court of Chancery great weight is given to a finding upon a question of fact, because the Yice-Chancellor, who hears the ease in the court below and sees the witnesses and hears them testify, has better opportunities to judge their credibility than the reviewing court. * * * However, the rale giving great weight in the appellate court to the YiceChancellor’s finding on a question of fact imposes no restraint on the power of the former to ascertain by full investigation and analysis of the evidence what the facts are, and whether the general finding is consistent therewith.” Cartan v. Phelps, 91 N. J. Eq. 312; 109 Atl. Rep. 291.

Two factors in this case create considerable difficulty in arriving at a true evaluation of the testimony presented. In the first place, it is apparent that the complainant had no understanding of the nature and purpose of the proceedings which she had invoked. It is also apparent that her memory of pertinent events, actions and statements was so hazy as to be almost unreliable. In the second place, it is evident there was bitter feeling between the children to the extent that their testimony was tempered by distrust and accusation. We are inclined to agre^ with the Yice-Chancellor’s conclusion in an unpublished memorandum that the complainant was seeking to restore good will among her children and that the defendant’s sisters were actually the persons who were pressing this suit.

Faced with this situation, it becomes particularly important that all of the oral testimony be weighed most objectively and *117 tested by the unprejudiced documentary evidence which was available. At the same time, however, the complainant bears the burden of proof and carries the initial burden of bringing forth the evidence to substantiate the charges made. It is upon these bases that this court has reviewed the evidence and the conclusions which the Vice-Chancellor drew therefrom.

With respect to the withdrawals from the savings account, it appears that the defendant was given a power of attorney on January 31st, 1944, and as of the same date a previous power of attorney to her brother, John Tierney, was revoked. For some years prior to this date, monthly withdrawals from this account had been made in the amount of $100. In February, 1944, a further $100 was withdrawn, but from March, 1944, through Juty, 1945, withdrawals were made at the rate of $500 per month. Thereafter, from August, 1945, through December, 1945, a monthly amount of $200 was withdrawn. Thus, for the period of time between the execution of the power of attorney and the end of 1945 there were total withdrawals of $9,600.

In her testimony the defendant admitted making these withdrawals, but stated that they were made at her mother’s direction and that all of the moneys were delivered to her mother. When asked about the increase in monthly amounts from $100 to $500 and later $200, she stated that this was done in accordance with her mother’s instructions. She said that her mother used her money to buy food and pay for the running expenses of the home; and she also said that her mother was accustomed to making gifts of money to her various children with the admonition that these gifts were not to be revealed to the other brothers and sisters. Defendant claimed to have been given a total of $2,000, and her brothers, John and Matthew, in their testimony, admitted receiving gifts in varying amounts.

It appears that prior to March, 1944, the complainant was supporting herself on savings withdrawals of $100 per month plus the cash-paid for rentals. It further appears that there was no decrease in the rentals during the months subsequent to February, 1944. On the other hand, there is no evidence of increased expenses which had to be met by the complainant *118 subsequent to February, 1944. The defendant stated that her mother was accustomed to living simply and, to the defendant's knowledge, her mother did not leave her home during 1944 and 1945.

Wo think that the Vice-Chancellor was justified in finding that the normal monthly living expenses of the complainant did not exceed $100 plus the amount of rentals received, and that there was no marked increase in such expenses during 1944 and 1945. Under such circumstances we believe that the records of increased withdrawals admitted by the defendant from March, 1944, through December, 1945, placed a burden upon the defendant of bringing forth evidence to explain and justify her action. We further believe that the Vice-Chancellor was correct in holding that the defendant did not meet this burden, and that he was fair in allowing her credit for $2,300 as the necessary living expenses of the complainant and $3,300 as proper gifts by the complainant to her children.

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Related

Dedonis v. Dedonis
61 A.2d 729 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
55 A.2d 39, 141 N.J. Eq. 114, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tierney-v-hotz-nj-1947.