Nelson v. Sudiek
Nelson v. Sudiek
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The petition charges the defendant with having received nine hundred dollars on deposit from plaintiff’s decedent, for which he refused to account to the plaintiff, the decedent’s lawful executor.. The answer admits the receipt of the nine hundred dollars, but denies that it was a deposit as stated in the petition. The answer further states that the decedent, shortly before his death, and in view of his speedy dissolution, being desirous of making a gift to his two minor children, delivered the money to the defendant, in trust for such children and with • instructions to loan it out in a certain manner ; that the defendant thereupon did loan out the money as then requested, and holds the note of the borrower for the same. The answer was denied by reply, the cause was tried by the court without a jury, and no declarations of law were asked or given. The court upon the evidence rendered a judgment for the defendant.
The plaintiff'complains that the court would mot permit him to prove what a former will of the decedent contained, which will is admitted to have been canceled, nor what the last will of the decedent does contain, which will is preserved in the record; also that the court would not permit him to prove that the decedent on former occasions wanted a different disposition to be made of the money. It is not conceivable on what theory the plaintiff claims .any of this evidence to be admissible under the pleadings, which raise the sole issue, whether the nine hundred dollars delivered to the defendant was a simple deposit, or was a gift in anticipation of death. The pleadings raise no issue of undue, influence, even if such issue could have been raised in this form of action.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.