Ward v. Daniels

269 P. 913, 51 Nev. 125, 1928 Nev. LEXIS 19
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1928
Docket2812
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 269 P. 913 (Ward v. Daniels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Daniels, 269 P. 913, 51 Nev. 125, 1928 Nev. LEXIS 19 (Neb. 1928).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Ducker, J. :

This is an appeal from an order of the above-entitled court denying appellant’s motion for an order directing respondent to deliver to the administrator of said estate certain moneys in possession of respondent alleged .to belong to said estate. The administrator filed in said court a complaint for conversion and nondelivery of property of said estate, wherein it was alleged that Mrs. M. L. Daniels of Hawthorne; Mineral County, Nevada, had money and other property belonging to said estate which she had withheld and concealed and converted to her own use, and had refused after demand by the administrator to deliver the property to him. Citation was *128 issued thereon directing respondent to appear before said court and show cause why she should not answer, under oath, concerning said property.

On the 15th day of October, 1927, respondent appeared with her counsel in response to the citation, and was examined upon her oath concerning the matters set out in the complaint. Her testimony is substantially as follows : At all times during the year 1927 she was matron in charge of the Mineral County hospital, at Hawthorne, Nevada. On the 7th day of June, 1927, Sven August Peterson was brought to said hospital for medical and hospital attention. On the arrival of Peterson at the hospital she took possession of his personal effects, among which were twenty-eight dollars in cash, a deposit book of the Inyo County Bank, at Bishop, California, showing a balance on deposit in that bank in the name of Peterson in the sum of $4,000, and four cashier’s checks, issued by the cashier of the Lone Pine Branch of said Inyo County Bank, for the sum of $100 each, or a total of $400. On the 8th day of June Peterson drew a check for $4,000 upon said bank in favor of respondent and gave it to her as a present. Thereupon the administrator objected to the answer of the witness, on the ground that it was incompetent for the reason that it attempted to state facts concerning a transaction between the witness and a person since dead, out of which transaction the witness was then attempting to establish a benefit to herself. The objection was sustained and the answer stricken out.

The respondent further testified that, at some time between the 7th and the 11th days of June, 1927, the said Peterson indorsed the four cashier’s checks and gave them to respondent, stating that he desired her to keep said checks for the purpose of paying his funeral expenses, and if there was any left over, that respondent was to keep the surplus as a gift. An objection was also made to this answer. It was sustained and the answer stricken out. The respondent testified further substantially as follows:

On the 10th day of June, 1927, Peterson assigned to *129 respondent a passbook for said savings account in said bank, which assignment was acknowledged before S. T. Kelso, county clerk of the county of Mineral, State of Nevada. The check for $4,000, passbook and assignment were presented to said bank on June 11, 1927, and the amount of $4,000 was transferred to the account of respondent, together with an additional sum of $80 as interest on said deposit. Peterson died in the said Mineral County hospital on the 11th day of June, 1927.

After his death respondent cashed the four cashier’s checks and out of the proceeds paid the sum of $328.28 on account of the funeral expenses, and on June 15,1927, delivered to said county treasurer all of the personal property of deceased which she had received belonging to said Peterson, except the checks, the money in bank, and $28 which Peterson had upon his person when he arrived at the hospital. On or about the 15th of June respondent caused the sum of $4,080, which prior to the death of Peterson had been on deposit in his name in said bank, to be withdrawn therefrom and to be transferred to her own account in another bank.

In response to examination by her counsel respondent again stated that, prior to the time of Peterson’s death and during the time he was in said hospital, he gave to her his check and passbook on the Inyo County Bank as a gift to herself, and indorsed and gave to her four cashier’s checks on the Lone Pine Branch of the Inyo County Bank, for $100 each, with the request that she was to use the proceeds thereof to pay his funeral expenses and accept as a gift to herself all that might be left over after paying said expenses; and that she did accept the above-mentioned gifts and claimed the money as realized from said checks as her own, except so much as was paid out by her on account of funeral expenses as aforesaid. To these answers, so far as they related to facts concerning a transaction between the witness and the deceased, administrator entered his objections, but there was no further ruling upon the point raised.

The proceedings were taken under and in pursuance *130 of sections 5953 and 5954 of the Revised Laws of Nevada. The former section reads in part:

“If any executor or administrator, heir, devisee, legatee, creditor, or other person interested in the estate of any decéaséd person shall complain, on oath, to the district judge that any person has, or is suspected to have concealed, converted to his or her own use, conveyed away or otherwise disposed of any moneys, goods, chattels, . or effects of the deceased, or that he has in his possession or knowledge any deeds, conveyances, bonds, contracts or-other writings, which contain evidence of, or tend to "disclose the right, title or interest of the deceased in or to any real or personal estate, or any claim or demand, or any last will of the deceased, the said judge may cause such person to be cited to appear before the district court to answer upon oath upon the matter of such complaint. * * *”

The latter section, as amended by Stats. 1925, p. 335, provides in part: -

“If upon such examination it shall appear that such person has concealed, converted to his or her own use * * * any moneys, goods or chattels of the deceased, * * * . the district court may make an order requiring such person to deliver any such property or effects to the executor or administrator.. * * * ”

It is insisted by appellant that the showing made on the hearing was -.sufficient to require the district court to make an order requiring respondent to deliver the moneys in question to appellant by virtue of the provision last quoted. - The position taken is that title to the moneys1 in question was shown on the hearing to-have been in Peterson shortly before -his death, and that no competent evidence was.adduced at the hearing showing a transfer of. title to respondent.

It must be conceded that -title to disputed property cannot be- adjudicated under these provisions. Similar probate provisions are found in the statutes of • other states. While-in some of these states the object. is ;the discovery, and in others to compel the production and delivery of property, it is well established in these jurisdictions that such provisions confer no power upon the *131 court-to determine a question of. title between: an-estate and a- person in possession of personal property; claiming ownership thereof. Koerber v. Superior Court, 57 Cal. App. 31, 206. P. 496; Barto v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 P. 913, 51 Nev. 125, 1928 Nev. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-daniels-nev-1928.