Estate of Newman v. Newman
Estate of Newman v. Newman
Opinion of the Court
The claim upon the part of appellant is that the transaction amounted to a loan of $3,000 to Newman and that the thirty shares of stock issued to appellant were given to qualify him as a director in the S. H. Newman Ore Company and as “some security.”
There is no dispute but that on April 24, 1926, appellant issued his persoñal check to the order of deceased in the sum of $3,000; that the check was indorsed by Mr. Newman, paid by the bank on which it was drawn, and charged to
“I never talked to him or asked him to pay me interest. I never talked to him after he sold out his interest to Stein-hart, in order to organize the Steinhart Ore Company, in reference to this thirty shares; never said a word to him. I only had Newman’s word for it that the par value of the thirty shares was worth $3,000; I didn’t know. He told me that they were worth $3,000. I knew Mr. Steinhart; Stein-hart and I were not on friendly terms. I knew that about the time Mr. Newman gave me these thirty shares, then he sold Mr. Steinhart twenty-five shares for $5,000.”
Upon the certificate of stock, the stub in the certificate book showing the receipt by Mr. Nelson of the thirty shares of stock under date of April 22, 1926, and from the testimony of the appellant, it appearing that he is a man of considerable business experience, together with the fact that he had received no evidence of a loan and that there was no showing that there was an intention on the part of the deceased to give the stock to appellant, the learned trial court concluded that there was no evidence warranting its finding that the loan had been made as against the theory that appellant had purchased the stock, and therefore disallowed the claim. The findings and conclusions of the trial court are supported by the evidence.
Some difficulty was encountered resulting from the ruling of the trial court upon objections made to the admissibility of evidence leading into transactions between the claimant and deceased. The court quite generally followed the practice
Under the circumstances we hold that the evidence fully sustains the conclusion reached by the trial court and that the judgment must be affirmed.
By the Court- — Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Estate of Newman: Nelson v. Newman
- Status
- Published