This appeal on questions of law is prosecuted by the defendants from a judgment entered by the Probate Court of Cuyahoga County for the plaintiff on her petition seeking a declaratory judgment as to her rights as owner of certain property held in her possession. The defendants are the executor and heirs at law of one Walter H. Knoedler, now deceased, the *Page 22 plaintiff's claim being that just prior to his death he made a gift to her of the property which is the subject of this action.
The plaintiff's petition alleges that Milton H. Sanders is the executor of the last will and testament of Walter Knoedler and that he, as executor and as beneficiary, and the other beneficiaries under the will of Walter H. Knoedler, and next of kin of the deceased, all made defendants, claim some interest in the property; and that Walter H. Knoedler on October 12, 1951, made a gift to her of the property detailed in paragraphs two, three and four of her amended petition. The petition alleges that the executor and other defendants, next of kin, having the next right of inheritance, and legatees in the will, claim some interest in "said estate." The first petition was filed on the day the Probate Court appointed Milton H. Sanders executor of the estate (November 8, 1951). The property which is the subject of this action was in the plaintiff's possession at the time she filed this action and at no time prior thereto was ever under the control or in the possession of any of the defendants.
The errors claimed by the defendants are:
1. That the court was without jurisdiction to try the issues presented thereby.
2. That the judgment is contrary to law.
3. That the judgment is against the weight of the evidence.
4. The failure of plaintiff to rebut evidence, that is the statements of two witnesses upon issues vital to her case, required the court to accept the defendants' evidence on these questions as substantive evidence against her.
It is the conclusion of the writer of this opinion that the plaintiff's petition, when read in its most favorable light in her interest, does not present issues of fact that would give her the right to invoke the jurisdiction of the Probate Court. The other members of this court do not concur in this conclusion.
After setting forth the property which she claims as a gift from the deceased during his lifetime, plaintiff alleges that the defendants (except the banks) claim some interest in the property, and concludes with the allegation that they also claim some interest in the estate of the deceased. Whether the defendants claim an interest in the estate is wholly irrelevant, and the property listed is of such a character that, if it were *Page 23 in fact assets of the estate, only the executor would have the legal right to its immediate possession.
The jurisdiction of the Probate Court is provided for by Section 8 of Article 4 of the Constitution of Ohio, which provides:
"The Probate Court shall have jurisdiction in probate and testamentary matters, the appointment of administrators and guardians, the settlement of the accounts of executors, administrators and guardians, and such jurisdiction in habeas corpus, the issuing of marriage licenses, and for the sale of land by executors, administrators and guardians, and such other jurisdiction, in any county, or counties, as may be provided by law."
Section 2101.24 of the Revised Code provides for the jurisdiction of the Probate Court, and by paragraph (L) that court is authorized to entertain actions seeking declaratory judgments. Such jurisdiction, however, is confined to actions coming within its limited powers in supervising the administration of estates.
The Supreme Court has already considered one phase of this case, reported in 160 Ohio St. 279, 116 N.E.2d 420. It was there decided that a matter coming within the jurisdiction of the Probate Court is governed by the rules of trial procedure applicable in that court and, that if an action for a declaratory judgment is properly filed within its limited jurisdiction, the parties are entitled to the right to trial by jury only if the court, in the exercise of its discretion, grants such privilege. The court specifically excluded from its decision the question of whether the allegations of plaintiff's petition were sufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of the Probate Court. On page 281 of the opinion, the court said:
"It is to be noted that the plaintiff herself was a beneficiary under the will of the decedent to the extent of 10 per cent of the estate but the plaintiff in her petition asserts no rights because of or arising under the will."
Section 2721.05, Revised Code, provides:
"Any person interested as or through an executor, administrator, trustee, guardian, or other fiduciary, creditor, devisee, legatee, heir, next of kin, or cestui que trust, in the administration *Page 24 of a trust, or of the estate of a decedent, an infant, lunatic, or insolvent, may have a declaration of rights or legal relations in respect thereto in any of the following cases:
"(A) To ascertain any class of creditors, devisees, legatees, heirs, next of kin, or others;
"(B) To direct the executors, administrators, trustees, or other fiduciaries to do or abstain from doing any particular act in their fiduciary capacity;
"(C) To determine any question arising in the administration of the estate or trust, including questions of construction of wills and other writings."
The plaintiff claims no interest under the provisions of this section. In fact, she seeks to prevent the property described from being the subject of probate administration. It was held in the case of Kochs, Admx., v. Kochs, 49 Ohio App. 327,197 N.E. 255, that the Declaratory Judgments Act is remedial and does not establish or change any substantive rights. Prior to the Declaratory Judgments Act, one in possession of property claimed as a gift from a decedent whose estate is about to be administered could not seek a judgment concerning the ownership of the property. Being in possession under the claim of ownership, there would be no need for judicial help. This court, in the case of Carter v. Birnbaum, 68 Ohio Law Abs., 97, 113 N.E.2d 102, said on page 98:
"If the plaintiff is successful the estate will be entirely divested of any right in the property, and on the other hand, if the defendant prevails, in this action, the plaintiff can claim no legal interest therein. This must be the result where one who does not have legal capacity to enter into a marital relation because she is then lawfully married, assumes such relation with another who, because of such supposed relationship, puts title to his property in her name as his wife. The plaintiff does not seek an interest in property which is, or may be, in whole or in part property that is subject of administration in the estate of which the defendant is administrator. He seeks the property as his own clear of any claims of the estate of Ella Lumpkin."
In the case of Service Transport Co. v. Matyas, Admx.,159 Ohio St. 300, 112 N.E.2d 20, 42 A. L. R. (2d), 413, in dealing with the jurisdiction of the Common Pleas Court to declare *Page 25 the right to personal property held by an administrator, the Supreme Court said, in paragraphs one and two of the syllabus:
"1. Where a person claims the title to and the right of immediate possession of specific personal property, and that such property is being wrongfully detained from him, he has the right to recover possession of such property by an action in the Court of Common Pleas, under Section 12051 et seq., General Code.
"2. In such a case, the person claiming to be the owner of the specific personal property may institute an action in the Court of Common Pleas for its recovery against the administrator of an estate, who is wrongfully detaining the possession of the property from such owner, where there is no question of a divided interest or ownership between such owner and the estate. * * *"
So long as plaintiff is in possession of the personal property described in her petition, claiming full property rights therein as of a date prior to the death of Walter Knoedler, there is no proceeding known to the law to give her any greater right therein until her possession or ownership is challenged. An action to fix her status with respect thereto, if allowed, as is suggested by Borchard on Declaratory Judgments, pages 6 to 11, inclusive, must relate to the date she became the owner before the death of Walter Knoedler, wherefore the Court of Common Pleas and not the Probate Court has jurisdiction of the controversy.
A procedural statute does not enlarge the jurisdiction of a court of limited jurisdiction. The Supreme Court's holding that litigants acting within the jurisdiction of the Probate Court are not entitled to a trial by jury as a matter of right highlights the claim of a litigant, seeking to have his rights judicially determined, that his rights and those of the other parties in the action should not be forced under the jurisdiction of a court where the constitutional privileges of a jury trial are denied, unless the subject of the controversy comes clearly and exclusively within the jurisdiction of such court.
The evidence in this case establishes that if in fact a gift of the property here claimed by the plaintiff was made, it was a *Page 26 gift causa mortis (hereafter more fully considered) and not a gift inter vivos. The plaintiff's sister testified that Walter Knoedler started to get dressed to go to the hospital at about two o'clock in the afternoon of October 12, 1951. He was to leave at four. After saying he wanted to get the bill he owed, for staying at the house of the witness for eight months, straightened out (which he had tried to get settled on other occasions but was prevented from doing so by the plaintiff for her own purposes, his conduct on this occasion being a clear indication that he was concerned with getting his account in order before his final trip to the hospital), he said: "Peg, * * * I don't think I am coming back from the hospital again."
The witness then testified as follows:
"Q. Did you see Walter at any time again before he left for the hospital? A. Yes, I did.
"Q. Where did you see him? A. In the bedroom.
"Q. Who was with him? A. Mabel and I.
"Q. What, if anything, happened? What was said? What was done? A. Well, it was almost time for Walter to leave for the hospital, and he put on his hat and coat and he was about ready to leave for the hospital.
"Q. What, if anything, did he say or do? A. Well, I was brushing off his coat, and he handed Mabel a key.
"Q. What did he say? A. He said, `Mabel, here is a key to my safe deposit box. I want you to have everything that is in that box.'
"Q. Did he do anything after that? A. Yes, he did.
"Q. What did he do? A. He went into his clothes closet and brought out a box.
"Q. I will hand you what has been marked for identification as plaintiff's exhibit 13. Is this the box? A. Yes.
"Q. That he took out? A. Yes. That is the box.
"Q. What, if anything, did he do with the box, and what did he say? A. He handed the box to Mabel and he says, `Mabel, this is yours. I want you to have everything that is in it, and everything in it belongs to you.'
"Q. What, if anything, did Mabel do? A. Mabel took the box, she put it on the desk, and started crying.
"Q. What did you do? A. Well, I started crying also and I left the room. *Page 27
"Q. By the way, what did Mabel do with this key to the safe deposit box? A. I don't know where the key is. I don't know.
"Q. Did she take it from Walter when he handed it to her? A. Yes, she took the key.
"Q. Did Walter go to the hospital? A. Yes. Walter left for the hospital."
That is all there is in the record dealing with the making of the alleged gift and the circumstances under which it is claimed to have been made. Walter Knoedler was in the act of leaving for the hospital. He said he did not expect to return. He was a very sick man. Can it be claimed, with these facts in mind, that if in fact a gift was made it was not made in contemplation of death? Can it be said that the donor was disposing of one-third of his estate of over $150,000, the property claimed being all the money and liquid assets he owned, as a gift to the plaintiff, a paid employee, to be absolute even if he were to survive the peril of death? We think he was not.
The plaintiff was unquestionably a trusted confidante of the decedent. She called many witnesses to establish her close and confidential relationship with him during the last 10 years of his life. The plaintiff worked for the decedent in the conduct of his "Men's Shop" for a number of years and gradually assumed authority in its operation until he went to the hospital for the first time in October 1950, when she was left in full charge. She had access to all his valuable papers, took care of his banking and in every way acted with regard to his business and personal affairs in his stead from that time until the business was sold January 1, 1951.
The plaintiff testified that, after January 1, 1951, she spent all her time taking care of the decedent. She continued as before to maintain her residence at 2026 East 107th Street, although staying with Walter Knoedler, for which she received for her services at least $250 per month. She also took out of his accounts other sums (in excess of $5,000), most of which were deposited to her personal account, and some of which were used to pay medical and doctor expenses. She did not pay his room rent at her sister's home during the eight months he lived there, as above suggested, although a claim was filed for such *Page 28 living expense immediately after his death, such claim being discussed with Sanders even before he was appointed executor. At one period prior to 1950, Walter Knoedler asked the plaintiff to marry him, which request was refused, but she continued to live, in relation to him, in a close and confidential way.
Walter Knoedler was described by his employees, business associates and friends alike, as a man not given much to sentiment or unusual generosity, somewhat stubborn and demanding, fairly but firmly, exactitude in the conduct of his employees, with reasonable friendliness to those about him.
The plaintiff arranged with her sister, Peg Wilkinson, after Walter Knoedler left Grace Hospital, to let him come to live at her residence at 2501 Euclid Heights Boulevard, where he continued to reside until two weeks before his death, when he was moved to Doctors Hospital. He had an apartment at that time at 1930 East 85th Street. Sometime after January 1, 1951, Mabel Renee changed Walter's address on his commercial banking account and with some of the companies in which he was a stockholder, so that dividend checks and bank statements would be addressed to her residence at 2026 East 107th Street. Before leaving Grace Hospital, the decedent, by codicil dated December 5, 1950, added to the provisions of his will by providing that Mabel Renee should receive 10 per cent of his estate because of kindness and service to him, and a provision of five per cent of his estate to Milton H. Sanders, his lawyer, for like reasons was included in the codicil. The total estate of Walter Knoedler, including the property involved in this lawsuit, was about $150,000. There is no evidence that Mabel Renee was ever informed of the codicil.
The operation to which the decedent was subjected at Grace Hospital was, in medical terms, a "colostomy." The patient was taken to surgery on three occasions and was in the hospital from October to February. One witness, a registered nurse, who knew Walter Knoedler through Mabel Renee, having taken a post-graduate course in surgery at the Cleveland Clinic, and who had 14 years experience as a nurse, gave some assistance to Mabel in the care of Mr. Knoedler. She testified as follows as to one occasion when she was giving help:
"A. I saw him two weeks before he went to Doctors Hospital. *Page 29
"Q. What did you observe about him? A. Well, that he was a very sick man, too sick, I felt, for Mabel to try to take care of at home. However, I helped her and taught her to give him an enema which gave him a lot of relief and his pain was localized more in the lower bowel and she also gave him hot compresses which relieved him."
This witness also testified that Walter Knoedler wanted her to help teach Mabel to drive, that he had registered her for that purpose at the auto club, but that she had been unable to take her lessons regularly.
Walter Knoedler died about 2:00 p. m., October 24, 1951. The plaintiff was notified at about that time and testified that she went at once to the hospital and stayed there until the body was removed to Salem, Ohio. She testified that she then went to her sister's home from the hospital, and she directly and categorically denies that on that afternoon she was at any time at or in the office of The Cleveland Trust Company at East 105th Street and Euclid Avenue.
The plaintiff drove with Walter's brother's widow from Cleveland to Salem, Ohio, to attend the funeral, the trip being made on Friday evening, October 26. The funeral was held Saturday, October 27, in the afternoon. The plaintiff testified that, after a reading of the will, a wife of one of the nephews came to tell her that she was to receive ten percent of the property. She testified that she was not interested and that she did not talk to or see the nephew. She testified also that she did not disclose to her hostess or to the nephew's wife that she had received a gift of the property she now claims by this proceeding.
The plaintiff returned to Cleveland on Saturday evening, October 27, and, on Sunday evening, opened the green safety box left in Walter Knoedler's room and, in the presence of her sister, started to make a list of the "stuff," but did not finish, returned the documents to the box and put it in the dresser.
On Tuesday afternoon, October 30, Mr. Milton H. Sanders, defendant herein, who was subsequently appointed executor of the estate as directed by the will, with one of his office associates, called at 2501 Euclid Heights Boulevard and asked to list "Walter's property." There is some evidence in the record that this trip was suggested by Mrs. Wilkinson to talk over her *Page 30 claim for Knoedler's keep. The plaintiff took them to "Walter's room" and unlocked the box; and at least a partial list of his property was made. They also called the next day to finish the work, but she refused to let them proceed with the listing of the property. It was at this meeting that she told Mr. Sanders he would have to talk with her lawyer, Clarence Snyder. At no time on either of these days, by her own testimony, did she disclose that she claimed a gift of the property in the box or in the safety box at the bank. The plaintiff's testimony and her actions and disclosures on this subject after the death of Walter Knoedler were equivocal, indecisive, lacking in forth-rightness and, in many instances, contradictory.
The defendants' evidence was introduced tending to establish the following facts:
On the day the plaintiff checked Walter Knoedler into Doctors Hospital, she specifically directed that he was not to have visitors, particularly lawyers. This fact as to plaintiff's conduct was testified to by the admitting officer at the hospital, who made the notation "no visitors" on the admission record, the receptionist and one of the nurses. The record shows that the doctor in charge of the case made no such request but said that the patient could have visitors. The evidence shows also that a lawyer was permitted to visit the patient and, after he left Mabel Renee, complained bitterly about it and said she did not want his lawyer up there. While Mabel Renee was in Salem, both Leland Knoedler and his wife (after the funeral and the reading of the will) visited her at the residence where she was staying to tell her of the interest in the estate given her by the will, at which time she became emotionally angry. She is alleged to have said: "I don't see how they could do these things so soon," and, "She knew what Walter wanted. She could tell us things that would make her hair curl." She is also said to have spoken in a very derogatory way about Mr. Sanders and that he had sold the store right from under her nose. The evidence concerning this interview placed both Leland Knoedler and his wife as participants in the conversation, rather than just the wife as testified to by the plaintiff.
A bank teller from The Cleveland Trust Company testified that Mabel Renee came into the bank to make a deposit for *Page 31 Walter Knoedler at or after closing hours, that is, about 2:30 p. m. on the afternoon of October 24. This was the day Walter Knoedler died, his death occurring at or before 2:00 p. m. The deposit slip which he made out for her was for $514.01, consisting of eight checks, one of which was a bonus check to the decedent for $322.39, dated September 12, from Adams Hat Stores, Inc. This check had been delivered to Walter Knoedler by Wilber Stiel, who had purchased one-half of Walter Knoedler's business and who was in complete charge of the store when the check was received at the "Men's Shop." He said that when he gave the check to Walter shortly after September 12 he claimed it was not the right amount and refused to cash it. The deposit was to Walter Knoedler's commercial account. This account was listed as one of the gift items in the amended petition, so that if the plaintiff made such deposit after Walter's death her purpose must have been to increase the amount of the claimed gift. Having been deposited after banking hours, it shows on Walter Knoedler's bank statement as of October 25, the day after his death; but the testimony of the bank teller with the bank records challenges completely the plaintiff's testimony that she was not at the bank on the afternoon of Walter Knoedler's death, when the deposit was made. The checks which made up the deposit must have been taken from Walter Knoedler's room at 2501 Euclid Heights Boulevard, the same address where the green safety box was kept. One of the checks, dated September 28, 1951, was addressed to Walter Knoedler at plaintiff's address 2026 East 107th Street.
The two lawyers testified to having called at the Wilkinson residence at 2501 Euclid Heights Boulevard on October 30 to make a list of Walter Knoedler's property found in his room after his death — John J. Fuerst, Jr., and his then employer, Milton H. Sanders, who had been named as executor in Walter Knoedler's will. They both testified that the plaintiff got the key for the box, which was among a bunch of keys taken out of a man's suit in Walter Knoedler's closet, opened the box and in a friendly way helped to list his property. Fuerst made a list as Sanders called out the items taken from the box by the plaintiff. The plaintiff made no claim of ownership of any of the property listed except the automobile which she said Knoedler gave *Page 32 her, but, when she was shown that the title certificate had not been indorsed, she suggested that she might buy it if it was for sale.
The next day, when there was an attempt to complete the listing of Knoedler's property, she refused to let them proceed, referred them to her lawyer, but even then did not make a direct claim of ownership of the property or disclose that she claimed it as a gift. This testimony also shows that her lawyer, who was contacted, made no claim of gift for his client. Concerning this occasion, Fuerst testified as follows:
"A. And then became very emotionally upset, and said: `My God, Walter's nephews won't get any of this property if I can help it.' And she said: `I have got some bonds and other things that you or nobody else is going to find out about.' Then it was a very — She was very emotional and upset."
It will be remembered that Wilbur Stiel, the purchaser of a one-half interest in the "Men's Shop," testified that in September 1953 he found two $1,000 bonds belonging to Walter Knoedler "mixed up in some of the property and things in the basement."
At the conclusion of defendants' case, the plaintiff rested her case without taking the stand to rebut or attempt to explain any of the evidence which challenged her veracity and her attempt to establish a gift, or was her lawyer called. The defendants' evidence on these subjects, introducing new factual matters such as the testimony that the plaintiff claimed a gift of the automobile without mentioning the other property which she helped to list as "Walter's property," now stands unchallenged on the face of the record.
In this case, where the degree of proof required of the plaintiff is by clear and convincing evidence and the facts of the gift are supported by the testimony of but a single witness closely related to the donee, and the plausibility of the plaintiff's claim is strongly challenged by the testimony of reputable lawyers (who are officers of the court) and the testimony of others of unchallenged veracity with respect to facts which, if true, clearly establish that the plaintiff's conduct was most unusual under the circumstances in failing to claim ownership of the property by gift on the many occasions when she had the opportunity *Page 33 to speak, and where such evidence tends to establish that her actions did not "square" with what would naturally be expected of one claiming the ownership of a large amount of property as a gift, the failure to rebut such evidence casts grave doubt as to the positive value of the plaintiff's evidence introduced to make out her case. From an examination of all the evidence, we hold that the plaintiff did not sustain the allegations of her petition by the proper degree of proof, and that the judgment is against the manifest weight of the evidence.
There are other questions presented by the record challenging essential elements of proof in plaintiff's case. The only proof of what was in the box as of the date of the gift was as to its contents 18 days later. During this period (from October 12 to October 30, 1951) the donor was in the hospital, until his death on October 24, and the box was in his room at 2501 Euclid Heights Boulevard, to which room the plaintiff had access at all times. That she had access to the box even before October 12 is established by her own testimony. When being cross-examined about what she did with the box and its contents on the Sunday evening after the funeral, she testified:
"Q. Do you know without refreshing your recollection what was the first thing you saw when you opened the box? What was on top? A. Well, naturally, the first thing that was on top was bonds.
"Q. Bonds? A. Yes, sir, because I put them there."
There is no principle of law which supports the claim that a status shown to exist on a particular date operates retrospectively to establish that such status existed at a time prior thereto. As to the circumstances of this case, no such presumption could be indulged in prospectively. The box, claimed to be in the possession of the plaintiff, could have been filled and emptied every day. The contents of a box is not such a static thing as to invoke the presumption that once its status is established, it is presumed to continue until change is shown, or could such presumption apply retrospectively. In 1 Jones Commentaries on Evidence (2 Ed.), 440, Section 267, it is said:
"It is at once evident that the presumption can have no application except to those conditions which, from their nature, must continue for some appreciable length of time. One court *Page 34 has brought out this feature of the presumption by tersely remarking, `It is a general rule that a condition shown to exist is presumed to continue until negatived, but this rule applies only to permanent and continuing conditions. * * *'"
The author further says on page 440:
"The presumption cannot be reversed. There is no presumption from the fact that a condition exists at a particular time that it existed in the past." (See citation of authorities under note 19; see, also, The Science of Judicial Proof by Wigmore, 3 Ed.)
The failure of direct proof of the contents of the "box," or the subject of the gift, at the time of the gift causa mortis was claimed to have been made is fatal. A death-bed donation was made in the shadow of the grave, disposing of one-third of a large estate by one who has previously made a will, and who within a year of his death amended his will by the execution of a codicil, which was witnessed as provided by law, by which this plaintiff was remembered to the extent of one-tenth of the estate, and the donor as a responsible business man and by experiences was fully cognizant of the formality necessary to dispose of property after death. Where under such a background a gift, witnessed by a single person by chance, is claimed, such facts constitute one of the basic reasons for strict proof of such a claim.
Here, where only one member of the household other than the donee claims to have been present at the making of the gift just as the donor is leaving for the hospital, never to return, and where at least one other member of the household with whom he was sufficiently close to kiss good-bye upon leaving for the hospital was within the call of his voice, the circumstances as provided by the great weight of authority call for clear proof of all the elements of such gift.
The elements of a gift causa mortis are not greatly different from those of a gift inter vivos, but some distinction is to be found from the cases. A gift causa mortis is one made in contemplation of death from a peril then confronting the donor and is revoked if the donor survives the peril from which death was anticipated. Could it be doubted in this case that had Knoedler survived the illness for which he was hospitalized and *Page 35 had returned to his residence, the ownership of the subject of the alleged gift, constituting all his liquid assets, would have been in him instead of Mabel Renee?
It is also true that the proof of delivery and surrender of dominion over the subject of a gift causa mortis requires a clear and convincing showing that all vestige of control has been surrendered to the donee, putting the property beyond any control by the donor. In a gift inter vivos the donor is available as a witness should such gift be challenged, while in a gift causamortis, when it becomes absolute, the donor's lips are sealed by death. Property found in the donor's box or receptacle or in his living quarters after death is strong evidence that if a gift was intended it has been completely revoked or was not in fact completed for want of sufficient delivery.
In the case of Parker v. Copland, Admx., 70 N. J. Eq., 685,64 A. 129, the plaintiff, at the request of the deceased, took a tin box from its place in donor's closet and handed it to him. The deceased took some bank books out of the box and presented them to the plaintiff as a gift. Thereafter, the plaintiff returned the subject of the gift to the box, put the box in the closet from which it had been taken, locked the closet door and put the key back in the deceased's dresser. It was held that a gift was not accomplished for want of surrender of dominion over the property by the deceased donor.
The facts here claimed by the plaintiff are that the decedent took the box out of the closet, handed it to her with the key and the key to this safe deposit box in the bank and said, "I want you [the plaintiff] to have everything in this box," and in the safe deposit box in the bank. The box was still in the deceased's room at the time of his death; and while the plaintiff had some of her things in the same room and claimed to have been staying there, her reason for being there was to render care to the deceased, but her residence during that time was 2026 East 107th Street, where she returned after Knoedler's death. The securities and bank books, representing over $50,000, were in the same green box and in his room upon his death, the box admittedly being the property of the deceased, it, together with some jewelry that was in the box, being turned over to the executor by the plaintiff a few days after the list of its contents *Page 36 was made out on October 30, with no claim or right asserted either to the box or the jewelry found therein. Under the facts, the donee's possession of the subject of the gift was not sufficiently exclusive, and the donor's dominion over the property not in fact so completely surrendered as to make out a gift causa mortis under all the surrounding facts and circumstances, such circumstances challenging the gift being strongly supported by the unrebutted testimony of Fuerst and Sanders that when they went to Knoedler's room on October 30 to list "Walter's property" with the willing assistance of the plaintiff, the box was in his closet and the key, which was said to be one of a bunch of keys, was taken from a man's suit hanging in his closet.
Chief Justice Vanderbilt of the Supreme Court of New Jersey, in the case of Foster et al., Exrs., v. Reiss, 18 N.J. 41,112 A.2d 553, considered fully the history of gifts causamortis. The court held that such gifts are an invasion of the province of the Statute of Wills and are not favored. To constitute a gift causa mortis, actual, unequivocal and complete delivery during donor's lifetime, wholly divesting him of possession, dominion and control, is required, and this can be satisfied only by delivery by the donor through an affirmative act and not by mere taking possession by the donee.
It is generally held that even though words of gift are spoken, if the property remains in the donor's room and with his effects so that no apparent change was made in the possession or control of the property, it being unlikely that the parties would intend to make a bailee out of one who is facing dissolution, a sufficient delivery cannot thus be made out to support a gift causa mortis. McGrath, Admr., v. Reynolds,116 Mass. 566.
Delivery as well as intent to give are absolutely essential. In commenting on the case of Parker v. Copland, supra (70 N.J. Eq. 685), in 20 Harvard Law Review, 152, it is said:
"In the case at hand there had, indeed, been a manual delivery of the gift, but since it was immediately restored to its former position, it cannot be said to have been placed beyond the control of the donor. Further, the fact of the gift here must needs be shown by evidence rather than by possession, which is the very thing that the rule as to delivery is designed to avoid. *Page 37 The decision, therefore, seems eminently sensible, and the few cases in point are in accord. Bunn v. Markham, 7 Taunt., 223;Dunbar v. Dunbar, 80 Me. 152, 13 A. 573."
We hold, therefore, that the judgment of the Probate Court is not supported by the proper degree of proof, and, for that reason, such judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings according to law.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
KOVACHY, P. J., concurs in part and dissents in part.
HURD, J., dissents.