Hironymous v. Hiatt
Hironymous v. Hiatt
Opinion of the Court
This action was brought to obtain a decree adjudging void a certain promissory note executed by the plaintiff and still outstanding, as authorized in such a case by section 3412 of the Civil Code, which reads as follows: “A written instrument, in respect to which there is a reasonable apprehension that if left outstanding it may cause serious injury to a person against whom it is void or voidable, may, upon his application, be so adjudged, and ordered to be delivered up or canceled.”
The ward of the defendant guardian is the daughter of a son of the deceased husband of the plaintiff by a former wife. In the month of December, 1904, the plaintiff made and executed her promissory note, in favor of certain trus *729 tees, in trust for the said minor, for the sum of $1,000, payable on or before five years after date, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from date until paid and payable annually. Attached to said note was a writing disclosing the following conditions to which said trust was subject:
“The trustees above named shall collect the interest upon the above note as the same becomes due, and expend the same as far as it will go in the suitable maintenance and education of the aforesaid minor child. They shall receive the aforesaid principal sum when the same shall fall due, and invest said sum in a safe manner, and apply the interest received therefrom for the benefit of said minor child as above stated, until said minor arrives at legal age, at which date the whole amount remaining in their hands shall be paid to said Jessie Bernice Hironymous. In case of the death of said minor before arriving at legal age, the amount remaining in the hands of said trustees shall at the date when she would have become of legal age, be paid to the said Hattie Hironymous, to be by her paid in equal-shares to any brothers or sisters of said minor (should any survive her) upon their arriving at the age of majority.
“We accept the foregoing trust and hereby agree that we will comply as far as in our power with the conditions therein named. Dated Cedarville, Cal., December 17th, 1904.”
The foregoing was subscribed to by the trustees, named as defendants herein, but was not signed by the trustor.
On the twenty-eighth day of October, 1913, no part of the principal of said notes then having been paid, the plaintiff took up said note and executed and delivered to the said trustees in lieu thereof and in trust and for the benefit of said minor a note for the principal sum of the former note, payable on or before six years after the date thereof, with interest at six per cent per annum until said note was paid, the interest payable annually. The conditions of the trust, which was accepted by said trustees, were precisely the same as those above set forth.
The complaint alleges that plaintiff signed said note as a voluntary act, never having received from said defendants, or any of them, any consideration of any kind or character for the “signing and executing of said note” and *730 that “by reason thereof the same is void.” It is alleged that plaintiff has paid to said defendants on said note as interest the sum approximately of $840, and that the interest so paid “is still in the possession of said defendants, and has never been delivered to said Jessie Bernice'Hironymous, said minor, or to her said guardian, E. L. Hiatt.”
Besides asking for a decree adjudging said note void and that the trustees be required to produce the instrument in court for cancellation, the prayer is also for a judgment for the return by the said trustees of the full amount of interest paid on said note by plaintiff.
A demurrer, upon both general and special grounds, was interposed to the complaint by the defendant Hiatt and overruled. Thereupon, the defendant Hiatt, as guardian, and the defendant Penland, as trustee, filed separate answers, denying the vital averments of the complaint, and also alleging that the note in suit was made and delivered to the trustees for a valuable consideration, and further setting up in bar of the action the statute of limitations (Code Civ. Proe., sees. 337-339, 344) and laches and estoppel. The last-named defense is stated as follows in each of said answers: “That by reason of the long delay and the recognizance of said note as a valid obligation, and by reason of renewing the original note of December 17, 1904, and paying the sum of $840 interest on said note and the renewal note in question in this ease plaintiff is now estopped from asserting that said note is invalid.”
The court found that the note in suit was by plaintiff executed and delivered to the said trustees, as alleged in the complaint; that the plaintiff had paid to said trustees interest on said note in the sum of $840; that plaintiff received no consideration of any kind or character for said note and its execution and delivery was a voluntary act on her part. No findings were made on the special pleas in bar set up by the answering defendants.
It was concluded from the findings as a matter of law that “the said note and the whole thereof is void and of no effect” because of having been given without a consideration, “and that plaintiff is entitled to have said note surrendered up and canceled.”
The judgment accords with the findings and conclusions of law, and requires the said trustees to deliver said note *731 to the clerk for cancellation, etc. The sum paid to the trustees by plaintiff as interest on said note is awarded to the guardian of the minor for her benefit.
The case is brought here by the defendants on an appeal from the judgment, under the alternative method.
The special grounds of demurrer, viz., that the complaint is uncertain in that it cannot be told therefrom how the sum of $840 could have accrued as interest on said note, and that the plaintiff is without capacity to sue, are obviously devoid of merit, and their further consideration herein is not required.
*732 It is next contended that the findings are not sufficiently supported and that the failure of the court to find on the special defenses is fatal to the judgment.
The plaintiff, on both her direct and cross examination, repeatedly declared that neither for the original note nor for the note in suit, given as a renewal of the former, did she receive any consideration whatever from the trustees or from any other person. She declared that the note was a gift to the minor. She testified that she was led to make the gift to the minor because “I loved the little child and because she was my husband’s granddaughter, and I felt sorry for her; the father and mother were not doing anything to take care of this property, and I thought some time in the future she might need some help, and this amount of money when she became of age might help to educate her. It was a voluntary gift on my part.”
It appears that the husband of the deceased devised to his son, Frank Hironymous, father of the minor made the beneficiary of the note in suit, a small parcel of land in Modoc County. It further appears that Frank defaulted in the payment of the taxes assessed against said land for several years and that the property was finally sold to the state and in due legal time purchased from the state by the plaintiff; that, thereafter, the plaintiff brought an action in the superior court of Modoc County against said Frank Hironymous to quiet her title to said land; that, while said action was pending and before it was brought to trial, said Frank signed and filed in the action a stipulation in writing to the effect that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment in said action quieting her title to said land as against him and all others who might claim any part thereof or interest therein under or through him, and that he would not defend against said suit but would allow plaintiff herein as plaintiff therein to take judgment according to the prayer of her' complaint in said action; that, upon the filing of said writing or stipulation in said action, the plaintiff was awarded judgment therein in harmony with the prayer of her complaint therein. There was no consideration stated in the stipulation for its execution. Said stipulation, together with the judgment-roll in said action, was received in evidence in the present action, and counsel for the defendants, on cross-examination sought *733 to induce plaintiff to say or admit that, in consideration of the execution by Frank Hironymous of the said stipulation, she promised to pay or give her note for the sum of $1,000 to the trustees for the use and benefit of Frank’s infant daughter, Jessie Bernice. But the plaintiff, replying to counsel’s questions, repeatedly asseverated that the making of the said stipulation by Frank Hironymous had no connection whatever with the making of the note; that, when the stipulation was first suggested and finally agreed to and made by said Hironymous, nothing whatever was said to her by any person, nor did she say anything about making the note or a promise to give or pay the minor or any other person for her any money or the note in suit.
Smalls and Stanley, two of the trustees, testifying for plaintiff, each stated that he was present in the law office of the attorney conducting the transaction for plaintiff, when the stipulation was signed and that he heard nothing said about any consideration therefor.
The deposition of Frank Hironymous, a resident of Sacramento County at the time the deposition was taken on the fourteenth day of June, 1919 (the trial of the action was begun on the 28th of July, 1919), was received as evidence, and therein the deponent declared that the stipulation referred to was made and executed by him in consideration of a promise by the plaintiff to pay his daughter, the minor herein mentioned, the sum of $1,000 or to give her promissory note therefor. He further testified that the land in dispute between him and plaintiff, and as to the title to which the stipulation mentioned was made by him, was, at the time it was purchased by plaintiff, of the value of about $1,500, but that it had since enhanced considerably in value.
A gift is a transfer of personal property, made voluntarily, and without consideration (Civ. Code, sec. 1146), and a verbal gift, to be valid, must be executed, unless the means of obtaining possession and control of the subject of the gift are given, or, if it is capable of delivery, there be an actual or symbolical delivery to the donee of the thing sought to be given. (Civ. Code, see. 1147.)
In Tracy v. Alvord, 118 Cal. 654, [50 Pac. 757], the defendants’ testator, about a year previously to his death, “made and signed a paper Avriting having the form of a promissory note for $10,000, payable sixty days from its date to the order of Felix Tracy, the plaintiff.” The latter brought an action founded on said note as a demand against the estate of the deceased, claiming that the writing was delivered by the testator to a third person for *735 plaintiff’s use, and that a valid gift thereof, either inter vivos or in view of death, was made by the testator to the plaintiff. There was there, as here, no consideration for the note, the plaintiff having first learned of its existence by information from the executors' some months after the testator’s death. Rejecting the argument advanced by appellant, the court in that case said: ‘ ‘ The court below found that there was no delivery of the note as alleged by plaintiff, and held therefore that the instrument never had effect; whether the evidence justified such finding is made a question in the case, but it is not necessary to be decided. For if it were conceded that delivery was proved, yet, as between the donee and the donor or his estate, the gift of the donor’s own promissory note created no enforceable obligation; being a mere promise without consideration to give a sum of money in the future, it was of no legal consequence. The gift of such a note causa mortis is within the rule; besides tending to subvert the statute of wills, it is still but a promise to make a gift, and invalid because the thing promised is not delivered. Authorities are numerous; the following are among the more recent: Bartlett’s Petition, 163 Mass. 509, [40 N. E. 899]; Sanborn v. Sanborn, 65 N. H. 172, [18 Atl. 233]; Matter of James, 146 N. Y. 78, [48 Am. St. Rep. 774, 40 N. E. 876]; Shaw v. Camp, 160 Ill. 425, [43 N. E. 608] ; Johnson v. Otterbein University, 41 Ohio St. 527; 1 Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, see. 25.”
The case of Wisler v. Tomb, 169 Cal. 383, [146 Pac. 876], is, in the facts, quite similar to the case at bar, a promissory note having been made and delivered by the defendant’s testator to the plaintiff in trust for the use of a minor, without any consideration, and payable on or before one year after date, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum. Accompanying the note was a declaration of trust by the maker, explaining the purpose of the note, and naming the plaintiff trustee. No part of the principal of said note was ever paid, but interest accruing thereon in the sum of $150 was paid. The maker died before the maturity of the note, and the plaintiff as trustee presented and filed a claim based upon the note against the estate of deceased. The claim was rejected, and action followed. A demurrer to the complaint was sustained, *736 plaintiff refused to amend, and an appeal was prosecuted from the judgment entered upon the order sustaining the demurrer. The judgment was affirmed and the case of Tracy v. Alvord, 118 Cal. 655, [50 Pac. 757], supra, was cited in support of the conclusion arrived at by the court.
Further authorities to the same effect need not be noticed herein. The purported note constituted a mere unexecuted voluntary promise, unsupported by a consideration of any kind or nature, to make a gift of money, and is a nudum pactum, imposing upon the maker no legal or enforceable obligation whatever.
It follows from the views thus expressed respecting the special defenses interposed against plaintiff’s action that there was no necessity for specific findings upon those special pleas.
The judgment is affirmed.
Burnett, J., and Finch, P. J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ALICE HIRONYMOUS, Respondent, v. E. L. HIATT, Guardian, Etc., Et Al., Appellants
- Cited By
- 18 cases
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- Published