Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/107/602/
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 10:20:20+00:00

Document:
"EVANSVILLE, Ind, Sept. 8, 1875"
"H. M. Chaney has deposited in this bank twenty-three thousand five hundred and fourteen 70/100 dollars, payable in current funds, to the order of himself on surrender of this certificate properly endorsed, with interest at the rate of six percent per annum, if left for six months."
may, as a subsisting chose in action, be the subject of a valid gift if the person therein named endorse and deliver it to the donee and thus vest in him the whole title and interest therein or so deliver it without endorsement as to divest the donor of all present control and dominion over it and make an equitable assignment of the fund which it represents and describes.
"Pay to Martin Basket, of Henderson, Ky.; no one else; then not till my death. My life seems to be uncertain. I may live through this spell. Then I will attend to it myself."
and then delivered it to Basket, and died at his home in Tennessee.
Held that Basket by such endorsement and delivery acquired no title to or interest in the fund.
3. An appeal will not be dismissed by reason of the omission of certain persons who were parties to the suit in the court below if they have no interest in maintaining or reversing the decree.
This is a bill in equity filed by the appellee, a citizen of Tennessee, to which, besides the appellant, a citizen of Kentucky, the Evansville National Bank of Evansville, Indiana, Samuel Bayard, its President, and Henry Reis, its cashier, and James W. Shackelford and Robert D. Richardson, attorneys for Basket, citizens of Indiana, were made parties defendant.
The single question in the case was whether a certain fund, represented by a certificate of deposit issued by the bank to Chaney in his lifetime, belonged to Basket, who claimed it as a gift from Chaney, having possession of the certificate, or to the appellee as Chaney's administrator. Basket asserted his title not only by answer, but by a cross-bill. The final decree ordered the certificate of deposit to be surrendered to the complainant, and that the bank pay to the complainant, as its holder, the amount due thereon. The money was then tendered by the bank in open court, and the certificate was deposited with the clerk. It was thereupon ordered, Basket having prayed an appeal, that until the expiration of the time allowed for filing a bond on appeal, the bank should hold the money as a deposit at four percent interest, but if a bond be given, that the same be paid to the clerk, and by him loaned to the bank on the same terms. Basket failed to give the bond required for a supersedeas, but afterwards prayed another appeal, which he perfected by giving bond for costs alone. To this appeal Basket and the appellee are the parties respectively, the codefendants not having appealed or been cited after severance. And, on the ground that they are necessary parties, the appellee has moved to dismiss the appeal.
"EVANSVILLE, IND., Sept. 8, 1875"
"H. M. Chaney has deposited in this bank twenty-three thousand five hundred and fourteen 70-100 dollars, payable in current funds, to the order of himself, on surrender of this certificate properly endorsed, with interest at the rate of six percent per annum, if left for six months."
"Pay to Martin Basket, of Henderson, Ky.; no one else; then, not till my death. My life seems to be uncertain. I may live through this spell. Then I will attend to it myself."
Chaney then delivered the certificate to Basket and died without recovering from that sickness in January, 1876.
It is apparent that the sole controversy is between Basket and Hassell, the present parties to the appeal. By the delivery of the certificate of deposit to the clerk, the attorneys of Basket are exonerated from all responsibility, and the payment of the money by the bank to Hassell equally relieves it and its officers, for, not being parties to the appeal, and the execution of the decree not having been superseded, the decree will always furnish them protection, whether affirmed or reversed, because if reversed, it would only be so as between the parties to the appeal. So that the omitted parties have no legal interest either in maintaining or reversing the decree, and consequently are not necessary parties to the appeal. Forgay v. Conrad, 6 How. 203; Cox v. United States, 6 Pet. 182; Germain v. Mason, 12 Wall. 261; Simpson v. Greely, 20 Wall. 152. The motion to dismiss the appeal is accordingly overruled.
It is claimed on behalf of the appellant that this constitutes a valid donatio mortis causa, which entitles him to the fund, and whether it be so is the sole question for our determination.
The general doctrine of the common law as to gifts of this character is fully recognized by the Supreme Court of Tennessee as part of the law of that state. Richardson v. Adams, 10 Yerg. 273; Sims v. Walker, 8 Humph. 503; Gass v. Simpson, 4 Cold. 288.
In the case last mentioned, that court had occasion to consider the nature of such a disposition of property, and the several elements that enter into its proper definition.
taking effect only at the death of the donor. At the termination of this contest, it seems to have been settled that a gift causa mortis is ambulatory and incomplete during the donor's life, and is therefore revocable by him and subject to his debts, upon a deficiency of assets, not because the gift is testamentary or in the nature of a legacy, but because such is the condition annexed to it, and because it would otherwise be fraudulent as to creditors, for no man may give his property who is unable to pay his debts, and all now agree that it has no other property in common with a legacy. The property must pass at the time and not be intended to pass at the giver's death; yet the party making the gift does not part with the whole interest, save only in a certain event, and until the event occurs which is to divest him, the title remains in the donor. The donee is vested with an inchoate title, and the intermediate ownership is in him; but his title is defeasible until the happening of the event necessary to render it absolute. It differs from a legacy in this, that it does not require probate, does not pass to the executor or administrator, but is taken against, not from, him. Upon the happening of the event upon which the gift is dependent, the title of the donee becomes by relation complete and absolute from the time of the delivery, and that without any consent or other act on the part of the executor or administrator; consequently, the gift is inter vivos."
"All the authorities agree that delivery is essential to the validity of the gift, and that, it is said, is a wise principle of our laws, because delivery strengthens the evidence of the gift and is certainly a very powerful fact for the prevention of frauds and perjury."
subsequent -- that is, upon actual revocation by the donor, or by the donor's surviving the apprehended peril, or outliving the donee, or by the occurrence of a deficiency of assets necessary to pay the debts of the deceased donor. These conditions are the only qualifications that distinguish gifts mortis causa and inter vivos. On the other hand, if the gift does not take effect as an executed and complete transfer to the donee of possession and title, either legal or equitable, during the life of the donor, it is a testamentary disposition, good only if made and proved as a will.
This statement of the law we think to be correctly deduced from the judgments of the highest courts in England and in this country, although, as might well have been expected, since the early introduction of the doctrine into the common law from the Roman civil law, it has developed, by new and successive applications, not without fluctuating and inconsistent decisions.
"the law has undergone some changes. Originally it was limited with some exactness to chattels -- to some object of value deliverable by the hand; then extended to securities transferable solely by delivery, as banknotes, lottery tickets, notes payable to bearer or to order, and endorsed in blank; subsequently it has been extended to bonds and other choses in action in writing or represented by a certificate, when the entire equitable interest is assigned, and in the very latest cases on the subject of this commonwealth it has been held that a note not negotiable, or if negotiable, not actually endorsed, but delivered, passes, with a right to use the name of the administrator of the promisee, to collect it for the donee's own use,"
citing Sessions v. Moseley, 4 Cush. 87; Bates v. Kempton, 7 Gray 382; Parish v. Stone, 14 Pick. 203.
security is a valid subsisting obligation for the payment of a sum of money, and the gift is in effect a gift of the money by a gift and delivery of the instrument that shows its existence and affords the means of reducing it to possession."
He had, in a previous part of the same opinion, stated that "the necessity of an actual delivery has been uniformly insisted upon in the application of the rules of the English law to this species of gift." P. 204.
"It is true that was a donation causa mortis, but the principle involved is the same in both cases, as there is no difference in respect to the requisites of a delivery between the two classes of gifts."
And so Justice Wilde, delivering the opinion of the court in Grover v. Grover, 24 Pick. 261, 264, expressly declared that "a gift of a chose in action, provided no claims of creditors interfere to affect its validity, ought to stand on the same footing as a sale;" that the title passed, and the gift became perfected by delivery and acceptance; that there was therefore "no good reason why property thus acquired should not be protected as fully and effectually as property acquired by purchase," and showed, by a reference to the cases, that there was no difference in this respect between gifts inter vivos and mortis causa.
"Gifts, however, are valid without consideration or actual value paid in return. But there must be delivery of possession. The contract must have been executed. The thing given must be put into the hands of the donee or placed within his power by delivery of the means of obtaining it. The gift of the maker's own note is the delivery of a promise only, and not of the thing promised, and the gift therefore fails. Without delivery, the transaction is not valid as an executed gift, and without consideration it is not valid as a contract to be executed. The decision in Wright v. Wright was founded on a supposed distinction between a gift inter vivos and a donatio mortis causa. But there appears to be no such distinction. A delivery of possession is indispensable in either case."
"Delivery to the donee of such an instrument as will enable him, by force of the instrument itself, to reduce the fund into possession will suffice, is the plaintiff's doctrine. This might safely be conceded. It might even be conceded that a delivery out of the donor's control of an instrument without which he could not recover the fund from his debtor or agent would also suffice."
"When a man on his deathbed gives to another an instrument, such as a bond, or a promissory note, or an I.O.U., he gives a chose in action, and the delivery of the instrument confers upon the donee all the rights to the chose in action arising out of the instrument. That is the principle upon which Amis v. Witt, 33 Beavan 619, was decided, where the donor gave the donee a document by which the bankers acknowledged that they held so much money belonging to the donor at his disposal, and it was held that the delivery of that document conferred upon the donee the right to receive the money. But a cheque is nothing more than an order to obtain a certain sum of money, and it makes no difference whether the money is at a banker's or anywhere else. It is an order to deliver the money, and if the order is not acted upon in the lifetime of the person who gives it, it is worth nothing."
Accordingly, the Vice-Chancellor, In re Beak's Estate, L.R. 13 Eq. 489, refused to sustain as a valid gift a check upon a banker even although its delivery was accompanied by that of the donor's passbook.
The same rule as to an unpaid and unaccepted check was followed in Second National Bank of Detroit v. Williams, 13 Mich. 282. The principle is that a check upon a bank account is not of itself an equitable assignment of the fund. Bank of the Republic v. Millard, 10 Wall. 152, but if the banker accepts the check or otherwise subjects himself to liability as a trustee prior to the death of the donor, the gift is complete and valid. Bromley v. Brunton, L.R. 6 Eq. 275.
Contrary decisions have been made in respect to donations mortis causa of savings bank books, some courts holding that the book itself is a document of title, the delivery of which, with that intent, is an equitable assignment of the fund. Pierce v. Boston Savings Bank, 129 Mass. 425; Hill v. Stevenson, 63 Me. 364; Tillinghast v. Wheaton, 8 R.I. 536. The contrary was held in Ashbrook v. Ryan, 2 Bush 228, and in McGonnell v. Murray, Irish Rep. 3 Eq. 460.
in the record in this case might constitute a valid donatio mortis causa does not admit of doubt. It was so decided in Amis v. Witt, 33 Beavan 619; in Moore v. Moore, L.R. 18 Eq. 474; Hewitt v. Kaye, L.R. 6 Eq. 198; Westerlo v. DeWitt, 36 N.Y. 340. A certificate of deposit is a subsisting chose in action, and represents the fund it describes, as in cases of notes, bonds, and other securities, so that a delivery of it as a gift constitutes an equitable assignment of the money for which it calls.
The point, which is made clear by this review of the decisions on the subject, as to the nature and effect of a delivery of a chose in action is, as we think, that the instrument or document must be the evidence of a subsisting obligation and be delivered to the donee, so as to vest him with an equitable title to the fund it represents and to divest the donor of all present control and dominion over it absolutely and irrevocably, in case of a gift inter vivos, but upon the recognized conditions subsequent in case of a gift mortis causa, and that a delivery which does not confer upon the donee the present right to reduce the fund into possession by enforcing the obligation according to its terms will not suffice. A delivery in terms which confers upon the donee power to control the fund only after the death of the donor, when by the instrument itself it is presently payable, is testamentary in character, and not good as a gift. Further illustrations and applications of the principle may be found in the following cases: Powell v. Hellicar, 26 Beavan 261; Reddell v. Dobree, 10 Sim. 244; Farquharson v. Cave, 2 Colly.C.C. 356; Hatch v. Atkinson, 56 Me. 324; Bunn v. Markham, 7 Taunt. 224; Coleman v. Parker, 114 Mass. 30; Wing v. Merchant, 57 Me. 383; McWillie v. Van Vacter, 35 Miss. 428; Egerton v. Egerton, 17 N.J.Eq. 420; Michener v. Dale, 23 Penn.St. 59.
represented by it, and might have been valid as a donatio mortis causa. That transaction would have enabled the donee to reduce the fund into actual possession by enforcing payment according to the terms of the certificate. The donee might have forborne to do so, but that would not have affected his right. It cannot be said that obtaining payment in the lifetime of the donor would have been an unauthorized use of the instrument inconsistent with the nature of the gift, for the gift is of the money, and of the certificate of deposit merely as a means of obtaining it. And if the donee had drawn the money, upon the surrender of the certificate, and the gift had been subsequently revoked, either by act of the donor or by operation of law, the donee would be only under the same obligation to return the money that would have existed to return the certificate if he had continued to hold it uncollected.
while the donor is alive; how much less so when, as in the present case, it is made payable only upon his death.
"In order to render the endorsement and delivery of a promissory note effectual they must be such as to enable the endorsee himself to endorse and negotiate the note. That the respondent Simon Smith could not have done here during the testator's life."
It was accordingly held that the disposition of the notes was testamentary and invalid.
It cannot be said that the condition in the endorsement which forbade payment until the donor's death was merely the condition attached by the law to every such gift. Because the condition which inheres in the gift mortis causa is a subsequent condition that the subject of the gift shall be returned if the gift fails by revocation; in the meantime, the gift is executed the title has vested, the dominion and control of the donor has passed to the donee. While here the condition annexed by the donor to his gift is a condition precedent which must happen before it becomes a gift, and, as the contingency contemplated is the donor's death, the gift cannot be executed in his lifetime, and consequently can never take effect.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER did not sit in this cause nor take any part in deciding it.

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