Kraus v. Kraus
Decision Date | 12 March 1956 |
Docket Number | No. 29400,29400 |
Citation | 235 Ind. 325,132 N.E.2d 608 |
Parties | John KRAUS, Appellant, v. John KRAUS, Executor of Estate of Rudolph Kraus, Deceased, Margaret Kraus, Irvin Kraus, Christian Kraus, Nordis Tavenier, Appellees. |
Court | Indiana Supreme Court |
Allen & Allen, South Bend, J. Chester Allen, Elizabeth F. Allen, South Bend, for appellant.
Richard C. Kaczmarek, South Bend, for appellees.
This appeal is from a judgment entered upon special findings of facts and conclusions of law that the sum of $18,000 held by John Kraus constituted assets of the estate of Rudolph Kraus, deceased, and that John Kraus be ordered to deliver the $18,000 to the executor of decedent. The error assigned here is the overruling of appellant's motion for a new trial. The motion for a new trial charged the decision was not sustained by sufficient evidence, and was contrary to law.
Rudolph Kraus died testate December 9, 1952, at his residence on LaPorte Avenue in South Bend. He had been a widower for twenty years and left no children. Appellant was his brother, and children of other deceased brothers were also heirs at law.
On April 27, 1950, decedent, in company with his brother, John Kraus, went to a law office and there executed a will. He had been in ill health for approximately a week before this time, and had been attended by his brother who stayed with him during his illness. About a year before this time he had been the victim of an attempted robbery by two men who came to his house, attempted to find where he kept his money and rob him, and in the ensuing struggle he sustained cuts on his head caused by a blackjack that was used by one of the robbers. Police were called and he was taken to a hospital where his wounds were stitched and treated. At the suggestion of his brother and his wife he installed a telephone so that they could call each other every day.
For some time the decedent had kept large sums of money about the house, and the evening after the will was executed he and his brother returned to the house, where the decedent handed a large round oatmeal box containing $18,000 in currency to his brother John Kraus. The lid was sealed with tape, and the brother testified he never opened the box during the lifetime of the decedent. There is a conflict in the testimony as to what was said by the parties when the box was handed over, and upon how this evidence is interpreted depends the outcome of this appeal.
When an issue concerning the credibility of witnesses or the weight of the evidence is presented for our determination on appeal, we should carefully avoid any tendency to place ourselves upon the trial bench and usurp the functions of the trial judge. We are dealing with a cold record and cannot observe the witnesses, their conduct, and manner of testifying while on the witness stand.
The weight of the evidence does not depend upon the greater number of witnesses who may testify upon any proposition or issue. Cottrell v. Shadley, 1881, 77 Ind. 348, 353. 1 Robertson Bros, Department Store v. Stanley, 1950, 228 Ind. 372, 379, 90 N.E.2d 809, 811.
The same rule applies to conflicts in the testimony of any witness.
(Italics added.) Hummel v. New York Cent. R. Co., 1946, 117 Ind.App. 22, 25, 66 N.E.2d 901, 902.
See also Kallas v. State, 1949, 227 Ind. 103, 83 N.E.2d 769, where we held the credibility of self-serving statements in a confession was for the jury.
The trial court correctly concluded there was no gift causa mortis. The transfer was not made when decedent was in peril of death or while he was under the apprehension of impending dissolution from an existing malady, nor did the donor die without recovery. Bulen v. Pendleton Banking Co., 1948, 118 Ind.App. 217, 231, 78 N.E.2d 449.
The trial court concluded there was no valid gift inter vivos. The Appellate Court, in the Bulen case, supra, well states the law on a gift inter vivos as follows:
118 Ind.App at pages 230, 231, 78 N.E.2d at page 455.
From the testimony of the witness Earl McCrum, who was a son-in-law of the brother John Kraus, the trial court was authorized in finding there was no gift. A portion of his testimony is as follows:
'Q. When this box was handed over to John Kraus did you hear any conversation at the time Rudolph handed it to John? A. No; the only words I heard--.
'Q. That is all you heard? A. Yes.
* * *
* * *
'Q. * * *'
Pauline McCrum, a daughter of John Kraus, testified in part as follows:
'Q. Try to recall everything that might have been said by Rudolph or John or you or your husband or anybody else in this place at the time this box was passed. A. All I can remember, my uncle gave it to my dad. He said, 'Take this with you'.'
A mere statement 'take this with you' accompanied by transfer was not sufficient to establish the fact of a gift. And notwithstanding other testimony given by the witnesses regarding statements made by decedent at the time of the transfer of the box containing the money, the trial court had a right to believe that the above testimony actually recited 'everything that might have...
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