Richardson v. Richardson

Mr. Justice Wilkin

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The right of the complainants to maintain this bill on the facts alleged is, we think, clear, and the only substantial question in the case is the validity of the $25,000 note mentioned in the foregoing statement. The allegation that it was never delivered is unsupported by proof. Unless valid as a gift inter vivos, which will be considered hereafter, it can only be sustained as given for a valuable consideration. Being a negotiable instrument, it, of course, imports such a consideration, and the burthen of proof is upon the representative of the deceased maker, in the first instance, to show the contrary. It was clearly shown on the hearing that at the time of her marriage, appellant had in her own right no money or property out of which she could have given a consideration for $25,000, and that she acquired nothing after her marriage to the date of the note in question, except by way of gifts from her husband. This proof established, prima facie, a want of consideration for the note, and the case is so treated in the argument,—that is to say, it is conceded that whatever consideration there was for the note came from the husband, or was given in consideration of a previous promise made by him.

Counsel for appellant insist that the proof on behalf of appellant shows a consideration upon either one of two theories: First, that there was a verbal ante-nuptial agreement between Richardson and appellant, whereby he agreed that in consideration of her becoming his wife she should have $80,000 out of his estate, and that in pursuance of that agreement, and in part performance of the same, this note was given. Manifestly this position is untenable, for the reason that a parol ante-nuptial agreement is void under the Statute of Frauds. (1 Starr & Cur. Stat. chap. 59, sec. 1, 1187.) The marriage is not sufficient to take such an agreement out of the operation of the statute. (McAnnulty et al. v. McAnnulty et al. 120 Ill. 26, and cases cited.) But if it were otherwise, the position contended for could not be maintained for want of competent proof to support the alleged agreement. Appellant herself alone testified to such a contract, and she was incompetent as a witness in her own behalf on that subject. (1 Starr & Cur. Stat. sec. 2, chap. 51, 1072; Connelly v. Dunn, 73 Ill. 218; Treleaven v. Dixon, 119 id. 548; Way v. Harriman et al. 126 id. 132.

But it is again insisted that the proof shows gifts of large sums of money by the husband to the wife, which she, from time to time, “loaned back to him,” finally taking the note in question in consideration of those loans, and in our view of the ease, if the decree of the circuit court can be sustained at all, it must be upon this theory. The only competent witness testifying to the facts upon which the position is based is a niece of appellant, Nellie Hockin. She testified that she came to the home of her aunt and Richardson, in Warren, this State, about the first of January, 1889, and remained there for some months; that shortly after her arrival she saw Richardson give his wife $10,000, and a day or two later $8000, both sums being in bank bills; that she afterwards saw him give her other sums of money, but could not state the amounts. Her language as to the manner of making these gifts is: “He brought it in and told her it was her own money, and she put it away.” On cross-examination she says she can not state what her aunt said in reply, if anything. She further testified that the money, when handed to her aunt, was put up in packages of $500 and $1000 each, being in bills of $100, $50, $20 and $10, and perhaps some $5. The $10,000,^126 says, was put in the trunk of appellant in an unoccupied room in the dwelling, and the $8000 in a trunk belonging to the witness in her room, and there remained some two or three weeks, until it was borrowed back by Richardson in different sums. According to her statement one of these loans was $3000, another $4000 or $5000. The other sums loaned she can not state, but says, “I think she had loaned it all to Mr. Richardson before that time,” viz., the date of the note. To the question by appellant’s counsel, “You may state what had become of the additional money you saw him give her in smaller packages before the 22d of February, 1889,—what had become of that,—the sums you can’t fix the time of?” she answered, “Í guess he had got all of that before that time, too.” As to the giving of the notes, she was asked what occurred at the dinner table on that day, and answered: “I think my aunt took $100 out of her pocket and asked him to loan it, and he said he would, and he took the money and loaned it with some of his money, and he said, ‘That reminds me of something else I have promised to do for you'” Question: “What, if anything, was said at that time as to the rate of interest ?” Answer : “He said he would give her eight per cent for the $100.” Question: “Now, if anything further took place on that same day, state when and where, and what you know about it?” Answer: “Mr. Richardson brought the notes up with him, but I don’t remember seeing him give -them to her, and I was in the kitchen getting supper when he came home, and he said, ‘Nellie, I have brought the notes home, and if you will go in there your aunt will show them to you,’ and I went in and she showed them to me. She had a $100 note, and a $25,000 note, and she asked me where to put them, and she said she thought it would be a good place in the bottom drawer of the dresser.” She here identified the notes described in the complainant’s bill, as the ones then shown her by her aunt.

There is much more of her testimony, drawn out by repeating questions and cross-questions, but the foregoing is the substance of her evidence relating to the gifts, loans and execution of notes. No one will deny that her statements, tested by experience and general observation in business transactions, are most unreasonable and improbable. But conceding all she says to be true, was there a complete gift of money and a subsequent borrowing of it by the husband, and does her evidence show that the note in controversy was given in consideration of those loans ?

In order that a gift inter vivos be valid there must be an intention on the part of the giver, and a delivery of the gift to or for the donee in pursuance of such intent, and also an acceptance. An intention on the part of the donor that the gift shall go into immediate and absolute effect is essential. “The mere fact of a delivery and acceptance, or permission to take, followed by possession, is not, of itself, sufficient to establish a gift, as these may be equally consistent with a loan or sale. The intention of the parties, as well as the acts done, are necessary in determining the character of the transaction.” (8 Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 1336.) “The right to a gift largely depends on the meaning and intention of the donor, as gathered by all the circumstances of the case.” (Ibid.) The delivery of money by a husband to his wife is consistent with an intention that she shall keep and take care of it for him, and it is often difficult, if not impossible, to distinguish the possession of chattel property in the wife from possession in the husband. It is therefore especially necessary in gifts between husband and wife that the evidence of intention to give should be clear.. The acts and declarations of the husband testified to by Miss Hockin by no means clearly and.satisfactorily show an intention on his part to make an absolute and unqualified gift of $25,000 in cash to his wife. In weigh- " ing this evidence, as tending to establish valid gifts, we do not ignore the testimony of the witness as to declarations by the husband of his promise, before marriage, to give his wife more than one-third of his estate; but there is much more reason to believe, from all the evidence, that an attempt was made to fulfill that promise by the gift of the note itself, than by the indirect method here insisted upon. If the gifts of the large sums of money were actually made as claimed, it must have been done in the unusual manner stated by the witness, with the purpose .of giving the wife more than the law would allow her at the husband’s death, and yet we are told that the money given was all returned to the giver without any note or memorandum to evidence the transaction. Sums amounting to thousands of dollars, it is said, were loaned out of these gifts, to the giver, without any written evidence of such loans at the time they were made. Even when the note in question was given, Miss Hockin does not pretend to say that it was understood by the parties to be for borrowed money. Eight per cent interest was to be paid for the $100. The $100 handed the husband at the dinner table reminded him, not that he owed his wife for other borrowed money, but of something he had promised to do for her, and he brought back two notes, exact copies of each other, except in amounts, and the provision in the smaller one for interest. It is passing strange, if both these notes were given for borrowed money, that two, instead of one, were given, and the one for $25,000, if for money actually borrowed, as claimed, was to run for three years, without interest.

But we think the evidence affirmatively shows that this note was not intended to he given for money borrowed. This same witness, Miss Hockin, testifying to a conversation between her aunt and Richardson in September following the date of the note, answered interrogatories by the court, as follows:

Q. “Can you recollect anything more that was said than you testified to here, why he gave her the $25,000 note?
A. “To fulfill his promise to her before their marriage.
Q. “Have you got it right, now, as you recollect it ? Go on, and state anything more you were going to in the first place. Do you recollect anything more ?
A. “I have said it all now.
Q. “You were proceeding to state something when you were interrupted. Now state to me all that he said. Just name over again why he gave her this $25,000 note.
A. “Because he had promised to give her more than a third before their marriage.
Q. “He said he had promised, before their marriage, to give her more than a third ?
A. “Yes, sir. He always said it, and he said he was going to do it.”

It was shown by a stenographer, testifying from notes taken of the testimony of appellant, given in a citation proceeding in the county court, that she there stated: “I knew he was going to make up notes. I knew it in mid-summer, 1888, before my marriage.” Question: “Who was present when the talk or arrangement was had from which you derived your knowledge that said notes were to he made, as now testified by you ?” Answer: “Mr. Richardson and myself. We had only the one conversation. It was in Rochester, New York. No one was present but he and I. I never heard him speak of them to any person. No person was present or heard the conversation about those notes prior to the time they were made. ” This testimony is uncontradicted and wholly unexplained by her. ' It shows clearly that appellant then understood the notes to have been given, not for loans, but because of the ante-nuptial promise. Three witnesses testified to the effect that she admitted to them, prior to the filing of this bill, that the notes were gifts to her from her husband.

After a careful study of this record we entertain no doubt that the motive and purpose of Norman B. Richardson in executing and delivering to appellant his promissory note for $25,000, were to make a gift to her of that sum of money in addition to her statutory rights as his widow, in all probability because he had promised her, before-the marriage, to provide for her receiving something more than the law would give her. If the gift of a promissory note could be upheld in law, the case would be free from difficulty. We said, however, in Williams v. Forbes, 114 Ill. 171: “A gift is always revocable until it is executed, and a promissory note intended purely as a gift is but a promise to make a gift in the future. The gift is not executed until the note is paid.” See, also, Fink v. Fink, 18 Johns. 145. Other authorities might be cited to the same effect, and we know of none to the contrary.

Ás we read this record, the attempted gift of $25,000, as between the parties to this bill, is of no more effect than a verbal declaration or contract to give his wife that amount out of his estate in addition to what she could receive under our Statute of Descent would have been, and that, no one will seriously contend would have been valid.

We concur in the conclusion reached by the Appellate Court, and its judgment will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.