Waugh v. Richardson

147 S.E. 17, 107 W. Va. 43, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 39
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1929
Docket6350
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 147 S.E. 17 (Waugh v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waugh v. Richardson, 147 S.E. 17, 107 W. Va. 43, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 39 (W. Va. 1929).

Opinion

HatcheR, Judge:

Frank H. Richardson died November 3, 1926, leaving three daughters and one son, Dennis, his heirs. This suit was brought by the daughters against Dennis, as administrator of his father’s estate, charging, among other things, that he wrongfully withholds' from the estate the assets of the Easy Payment Loan Company, and the sum of fifteen thous- and dollars. .The son claims the loan company as a gift inter vivos, and the money as a gift causa mortis, from his father. The lower court found for the defendant.

Frank H. Richardson was married twice. These litigants are children of the first wife, who died in 1919. In 1921, he became estranged from his daughters, and in consequence made a will bequeathing practically everything to his son. In 1922, the father remarried, but never re-executed or added a codicil to the will. The second wife died in 1925.

Under section 6, Chapter 77, Code, the marriage of the father revoked the will. It is evident from the record, however, that both the father and the son were ignorant of this statute, and believed the will to be valid.

The evidence shows that the father and Dennis had been equal partners in the loan company since about 1915. Several witnesses testify that during the last few years prior to the father’s death, he told them that he had given the business to Dennis. Others state that Avhen they had gone to the father on business in connection with the loan company, he *45 directed them to deal witb Ms son, saying that he had given the business to Dennis, and that then they did deal with the son. One witness testifies that several years prior to the father’s death, the sign at the loan company’s place of business was changed from “Frank H. Richardson & Son” to the son’s name only. Three transcripts from a justice’s docket were introduced. One was a suit brought in November, 1923, against F. H. and D. E. Richardson doing business as the Easy Payment Loan Company, and the other two were of suits brought in September, 1926, by D. E. Richardson doing business as the Easy Payment Loan Company. One witness testifies that the father told him he had given Dennis his money, and the government could not tax anything but the real estate. Evidence also shows that in August, 1925, while away on a visit, the father felt he must hurry home because as he said: “You know when a man is in business he has to take care of it, there is nobody who will take care of it like himself;” and that until his final illness, he remained in his office during business hours. One of the plaintiffs who worked in her father’s office from 1917 to 1921 says that so far as she knew the business belonged to the father, and the son was on a salary. After the death of his father, the defendant wrote the tax commissioner as follows: “The conveyance of the Easy Payment Loan Company in 1926 was not given to me as part of my father’s estate, but was sold to me for consideration. I have always owned a one-half interest in the Easy Payment Loan Company up to 1926, and I bought my father’s one-half interest then, and paid him for the same.”

The gift of the $15,000.00 is claimed by Dennis to have been made on October 30, 1926, at which time both the father and son knew that the father’s death was imminent. The father had been engaged in a check cashing business for which he was accustomed to withdraw from his bank account considerable sums of money on the pay days of the large industrial corporations of Huntington. On C. So O. pay days ten to fifteen thousand dollars would be withdrawn for that purpose. October 30th was a C. So O. pay day, and on that morning the defendant drew ten thousand dollars from his *46 father’s bank account to use in check cashing, signing his father’s name to the check as he had authority to do. He then went to see his father, and, according to a nurse who was the only other present, “Mr. Richardson told Dennis to take fifteen thousand dollars out of the bank and use it in his business, and he also said the business belonged to him” (Dennis). The son then drew five thousand dollars more from his father’s account and that evening deposited fourteen thousand to his own account, retaining one thousand in the office safe. When he deposited the money he remarked to the cashier that his father had willed him everything. J. W. Hagley states that he was visiting the father the evening of October 30th, and heard Dennis say to his father, “I put that money in the bank in my own name,” to which the father replied: “That is all right, that is the way I wanted it to be.” The money was not returned to the father’s account. On December 6, 1926, the defendant wrote to the appraisers of his father’s estate: “Some days prior to my father’s death, he gave me $15,000.00 that he had on deposit in the Twentieth .Street Bank of Huntington, West Virginia, and the same was drawn by him out of his account, and placed by me to my individual account in consequence of the gift.”

The uncontradicted evidence of the declarations of the father that he had given the loan company business to Dennis taken in consideration with the change of the sign to the name of the son and the management of the business by the son as his own at the father’s direction, warrant the view that the father had voluntarily surrendered to the defendant complete dominion over that business a year or so before his father’s death. The transaction will be accordingly sustained as an executed gift inter vivos. 28 C. J. p. 626, sec. 15; 12 R. C. L., p. 932, sec. 10.

The evidence as to the alleged gift of money, being a gift causa mortis, requires a most careful analysis. 14 A. & E. Ency. Law, 1060. Note to Ward v. Turner, White & Tudor Leading Cases in Eq. (8th ed.), p. 437.

The instruction of the father on October 30, 1926, that the son use the money in his business does not of itself imply *47 a gift. Tbe mere right to use an article does not confer a property in it. Thornton on Gifts, sec. 137. The father’s alleged declaration then that “the business” belonged to Dennis, was not different in effect from prior declarations that he had given the business, and had given his money to Dennis. Yet after the prior expressions, he had retained as his own, cash in bank approximating $19,000.50 together with notes aggregating about the same amount. What the father presumably had in mind in making the prior statement was the gift of the loan company and the will by which he had devised all his property to his son. There was nothing said by the father on October 30th to place the statement on that day in a different light from his former expressions. No explanation appears for making a gift causa mortis at that time. He was thoroughly under the impression that the son would ultimately receive the money under the will. There is no testimony of a specific intention of the father to hasten or anticipate the effect of the will. No emergency had arisen to necessitate an earlier gift of the money to the son than the father intended under the will. No reason is offered why the father should change the devolution of his property as he had previously arranged it. It had been the father’s custom to draw from the bank large sums of money on pay days.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 S.E. 17, 107 W. Va. 43, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waugh-v-richardson-wva-1929.