What are the facts?
The decedent, gravely ill and aware of his impending death, summoned his longtime housekeeper and companion, Newman, and expressed an intention that she should have his property in the house. He handed her a ring of keys that operated a bureau and other locked furniture and reiterated that she was to have the contents. Among the items located in the room and within the bureau were substantial pieces of furniture and a life insurance policy on the decedent's life that was payable to his estate. The decedent died shortly thereafter from the illness then afflicting him. After his death, the administrator of the estate, Bost, took possession of the decedent's personal property, including the insurance policy and other items. Newman brought suit claiming title to the property by virtue of a valid gift causa mortis. The trial court recognized some part of her claim. On appeal, the state supreme court addressed whether the delivery of keys and words of gift sufficed to transfer ownership of various categories of property, particularly the bulky furniture and the life insurance policy kept in the locked bureau.
What is the legal issue?
Whether a donor's deathbed delivery of keys to furniture, accompanied by an expression that the donee should have his property in the house, constitutes a valid gift causa mortis of (1) bulky tangible items of furniture and (2) a life insurance policy stored in a locked bureau, when the donor could have manually delivered the policy but did not.
What rule applies?
A valid gift causa mortis requires: (1) present donative intent to make a gift effective upon the donor's death from an existing peril; (2) delivery of the subject matter—actual delivery if practicable; constructive or symbolic delivery is permitted only when actual delivery is impracticable or impossible; (3) acceptance by the donee (often presumed if the gift is beneficial); and (4) the donor's death from the contemplated peril, with the gift revocable if the donor recovers. Such gifts are limited to personal property. For documents embodying rights (choses in action), the donor must actually deliver the instrument (and comply with applicable transfer formalities); constructive delivery will not suffice if manual delivery is reasonably possible.
What did the court hold?
The court upheld the gift causa mortis as to the bulky items of furniture, finding the delivery of the keys sufficient constructive delivery under the circumstances. The court rejected the purported gift of the life insurance policy found in the bureau, holding that because the policy could have been manually delivered, constructive delivery via the keys was insufficient; consequently, the policy (and the proceeds) remained with the estate.
What is the reasoning?
The court first found clear donative intent: the donor, in extremis, verbally expressed a desire that Newman have his property and contemporaneously transferred the means of access and control by handing over the keys. Acceptance posed no problem because the gift was plainly beneficial. The crux, therefore, was delivery. Delivery serves as a safeguard against fraud and as a solemnizing act differentiating a present transfer from a mere testamentary wish. Where actual manual delivery is reasonably possible, the law insists on it; constructive or symbolic delivery is tolerated only when the nature or location of the subject matter renders actual delivery impracticable. Applying that principle, the court concluded that handing over keys validly transferred dominion over heavy furniture in the house—items not conducive to physical hand-to-hand delivery at a sickbed. By contrast, the life insurance policy, a discrete paper located in the very bureau to which the keys gave access, was readily capable of manual delivery; the donor could have physically handed it to Newman but did not. Allowing keys alone to stand in for delivery of such a document would undermine the cautionary and evidentiary functions of the delivery requirement and open the door to evasion of testamentary formalities. Additionally, because the policy represents a chose in action, courts demand strict compliance with delivery and any applicable formalities. Absent actual delivery (and any necessary assignment), the attempted gift of the policy failed. The court also reiterated that gifts causa mortis are confined to personalty and cannot operate as a stealth substitute for a will.
Why is this case significant?
Newman v. Bost is a leading authority on delivery in the law of gifts, frequently cited to demonstrate that constructive delivery is the exception, not the rule. It teaches that courts will parse a single deathbed transaction and uphold it in part (for bulky chattels) while invalidating it in part (for easily deliverable documents) to preserve the integrity of the delivery doctrine and the Statute of Wills. For students, it is a cornerstone case for exams and practice: it frames how to analyze donative intent, evaluate the practicability of delivery, distinguish between tangible goods and choses in action, and appreciate the policy-driven limits on deathbed gifts.
What is the core difference between a gift causa mortis and an inter vivos gift?
Both require donative intent, delivery, and acceptance. A gift causa mortis is made in contemplation of imminent death from a present peril, is effective only if the donor dies from that peril, and is revocable if the donor recovers. It is also limited to personal property and is scrutinized more strictly—especially as to delivery—because it operates like a will substitute. An inter vivos gift is irrevocable once completed and is not contingent on the donor's death.
Why were the keys insufficient to transfer the life insurance policy?
Because the policy, a discrete paper sitting in the bureau, could have been manually delivered; when actual delivery is practicable, constructive delivery (like handing over keys) is not enough. Delivery must be as perfect as the nature of the property and the circumstances reasonably permit. For documents representing rights (choses in action), courts are especially strict about actual delivery (and any required assignment).
What property did the court allow to pass by gift causa mortis in this case?
The court allowed bulky items of furniture and similar chattels—things not readily susceptible to hand delivery at the deathbed—to pass via constructive delivery using the keys. It did not allow the life insurance policy or other small items that could have been manually delivered to pass by the same method.
Can real property be transferred by a gift causa mortis?
No. Gifts causa mortis are limited to personal property. Real property transfers must comply with applicable conveyancing formalities (e.g., deeds) or testamentary formalities if the transfer is to take effect at death. Newman v. Bost reiterates this limitation to prevent gifts causa mortis from functioning as de facto wills.
Would the outcome have changed if the donor had physically handed the policy to Newman?
Possibly. Actual delivery of the policy would satisfy the delivery element for a gift of the chose in action, though any additional formalities required by the policy or governing law (such as a written assignment) would also need to be satisfied. Without at least actual delivery, however, the gift fails under Newman v. Bost.
What policy concerns drive the strict delivery requirement in deathbed gifts?
Courts worry about fraud, mistake, and the evasion of the Statute of Wills. Requiring actual delivery when practicable supplies objective evidence of a present transfer, channels donor intent into a clear act, and deters after-the-fact claims that could disrupt orderly estate administration.