DocketNumber: 33215
Judges: Simmons, Carter, Messmore, Chappell, Wenke, Boslaugh
Filed Date: 6/12/1953
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
Plaintiff in this action is the president of the Crowell Elevator Company, a corporation.
One of the defendants is the administrator of the estate of Rena S. Milligan, deceased. The deceased was a maiden lady, who lived to advanced years and accumulated a considerable estate. She was frugal with her expenditures so far as she herself was concerned. She was quite generous with relatives and friends. She directed her own business affairs. She consulted with and trusted the plaintiff on many matters of business.
She died intestate October 24, 1950.
The defendant Viola Mae Milligan was a sister-in-law of deceased. The defendant Elizabeth M. Mathewson was an old friend of deceased and a beneficiary, at least on one occasion, of deceased’s generosity.
Plaintiff brings this action as a stakeholder to determine the ownership of three items of personal property which he holds. The issues go to whether or not the property belonged by gift inter vivos to the two women defendants or to the administrator for the estate.
For convenience we will refer to the deceased as Rena, to the alleged donees as Viola and Elizabeth, and to the administrator by that designation.
The trial court decreed that the property belonged to the estate. Viola and Elizabeth appeal. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
There is evidence that plaintiff discussed with Rena the matter of making a will, and she declined, stating that she would have all of her property disposed of at the time of her death.
Viola was the second wife of Rena’s brother. He died intestate. There is evidence that Rena considered that Viola did not receive her proper share of the property of her husband’s estate.
Rena was the owner of a block of stock of the elevator company.
At different times Rena discussed this money and the stock and its disposition with plaintiff. After such a conversation in late October 1947, plaintiff dictated a letter directed to the elevator company which contained the following two paragraphs: “Will you please transfer all stock of your company now issued in the name of Rena S. Milligan to ‘Rena S. Milligan and Viola M. Milligan as Joint Owners with Rights of Survivorship.’ Will you please transfer any funds that now stand to my credit on the books of. Crowell Elevator Company to account which is to be known as ‘Rena S. Milligan and Viola M. Milligan as Joint Owners with Rights of Survivorship.’ ” This was prepared for Rena’s and Viola’s signatures. It was mailed to Rena. She did not return it at once.
On December 1, 1947, plaintiff wrote Rena calling her attention to the matter and stating: “We would have to have these before we can transfer your stock or your account into joint ownership. We have heard nothing from you and wonder if you still want to put this into effect.” Thereafter, in late December 1947, Rena and Viola came to the office of the plaintiff and Rena signed the letter. Viola signed below: “Approved: Viola M. Milligan.” The letter, so signed, was delivered to the plaintiff. Thereafter a new certificate of stock was issued reciting that “Rena S. Milligan and Viola M. Milligan as Joint Owners with Rights of Survivorship are the owner of” the shares involved. This stock was mailed to Rena January 14, 1948. She receipted for it and returned it to plaintiff. On January 30, 1948, plaintiff, signing as “President,” acknowledged receipt of the
Plaintiff testified that he had” Viola sign the approval of the letter of October 25, 1947, as “a good idea, seeing she .had an interest in those bonds at the time.” He also testified that Rena “intended” to' control the property during her lifetime and to handle and treat it as her own during her lifetime. These were obviously his conclusions. Viola testified that she never claimed any share of the dividends and considered they were Rena’s property, and that she took it for granted that Rena meant the stock was to remain hers (Rena’s). She testified that Rena said, “if anything happens to her it would go to me and if anything would happen to me it would go back to her.”
At the end of October 1947, Rena had a credit balance with the company of $7,513.53. On January 6, 1948, after the execution and delivery to it of the letter of October 25, 1947, this account was set up on the books of the company under the heading: “Rena S. Milligan and/or Viola M. Milligan.”
On September 16, 1949, plaintiff wrote a letter to Rena with reference to Rena’s agreement to pay him $50 a month for his services. The letter contained this statement: “As I understand it, you wish to deposit certain funds with me from time to time, which I will carry for you in a special bank account. Also, from time to time you will instruct me to pay out funds from this account on your order.” Also, on the same day, Rena signed a letter directed to plaintiff, the body of which is as follows: “This will be your authority to transfer the funds now held by Crowell Elevator Company in an
On September 22, 1949, the balance in that account was $3,719.36. On that day the account was balanced and that amount deposited in the Omaha National Bank under the name of “Herman F. Crowell, Agent.” Thereafter the funds were deposited and handled through that account. At the time of Rena’s death an amount in excess of $11,000 was in the account. The plaintiff kept a ledger account of it under the name of “Herman F. Crowell, Agent Bank account of Rena S. Milligan and Viola M. Milligan, as joint tenants.”
There is evidence that all funds paid into or out of this account were done by and at the direction of Rena. Viola testified that she did not have knowledge of the fund in the bank until after Rena’s death. However, without question she had knowledge of the fund while it was being held in the elevator company accounts.
We have held in In re Estate of Scott, 148 Neb. 182, 26 N. W. 2d 799: “The essential elements of a gift inter vivos are donative intent, delivery, and acceptance.
“Once it is ascertained that it was the intention of the donor to make a gift inter vivos of an undivided interest
“In such cases, the delivery may be symbolical or constructive if as nearly perfect and complete as the nature of the property and the attendant circumstances will permit.”
As of the time of the writing of the letters and the action taken by plaintiff immediately thereafter there was a patent donative intent as to the elevator stock and the money. The question comes as to whether or not the separate actions of Rena subsequent to the writings, the reissue of the stock, and the transfer of the funds; the construction later placed by the plaintiff on the rights of the parties; and the views of Viola as to her rights are to be considered on the question of intent.
The rule is that where the intention to make a gift is not clearly manifested, subsequent acts may aid in clarifying that intention, but where the intention is clear, inquiry must be confined to what occurred at the time of the transaction. In re Chappie’s Estate, 332 Pa. 168, 2 A. 2d 719, 121 A. L. R. 422; Glessner v. Security-Peoples Trust Co., 156 Pa. Super. 56, 39 A. 2d 165; Dinslage v. Stratman, 105 Neb. 274, 180 N. W. 81, 14 A. L. R. 702; Annotations, 1 A. L. R. 1241, 105 A. L. R. 402.
As of the time of the letter of October 25, 1947, and immediately thereafter, there was also a delivery of the stock and money to Viola and Rena jointly with rights of survivorship as the circumstances required. By endorsing her approval on the letter Viola accepted the gift.
There is a contention made that plaintiff held the stock and the money as Rena’s agent solely. Whatever plaintiff’s status was before reissue of the stock and the book transfer of the funds is not material. After that time it is patent that he held for both Rena and Viola.
In the letter dated October 1947, it is noted that the _ designation “Joint Owners with Rights of Survivorship”
It is clear that it was intended that the right of survivorship exist. That was the real object in view. That right of survivorship is to be carried out in accord with the intent of the donor. Anson v. Murphy, 149 Neb. 716, 32 N. W. 2d 271.
Accordingly we hold that there was a complete gift inter vivos, and the title to and right of possession of the Crowell Elevator stock, held by plaintiff, vested-absolutely in Viola upon the death of Rena, and that judgment should be entered accordingly, and that the trial court erred in holding otherwise.
We also hold that there was a completed gift inter vivos of the funds standing to the credit of Rena with the Crowell Elevator Company in 1947 and that Viola thereby became a “joint owner” of that chose in action, with rights of survivorship. The gift transaction was consummated in both instances when the transactions involving the gift had been completed.
The administrator contends, however, that in the event we reach that conclusion, that relationship and interest was severed by Rena when in September of 1949, she, without the knowledge or consent of Viola, directed that the funds there held in the account be transferred to a bank, to be there deposited in the name of “Herman F. Crowell, Agent,” to be paid out only on the order of Rena. It is to be remembered that at that time Rena directed that those funds were for Rena “and/or” Viola as “Joint Tenants and not as tenants in common, with rights of survivorship.”
The question then comes, did she have the power to divest Viola’s interest in the fund by the act of claiming the right to withdrawals of money from the fund.
The administrator cites no authority for his contention that Rena severed the interest of Viola by the 1949 directions as to the fund.
It is patent if Viola’s interest in the fund was that of a tenant in common, Rena could not ex parte divest that interest. If we treat it, as Rena did in the 1947 letter, as a joint tenancy, then the same result follows.
It is to be remembered that we are here dealing with a case where one of the two joint owners, of a fund held with rights of survivorship, is dead. We are not dealing with a case involving the rights of each in the fund while both are living.
The courts of other jurisdictions have considered the question and arrived at the rule that: One of two joint owners of money, deposited in a joint account payable to either or the survivor, cannot divest the survivorship right in the jointly owned account by withdrawing the money and depositing it in his individual account, without the knowledge and consent of the other.
O’Connor v. Dunnigan, 158 App. Div. 334. 143 N. Y. S. 373, affirmed in 213 N. Y. 676, 107 N. E. 1082, presented these facts. Money was originally deposited “Payable to ‘Mary Guilfoyle or Joseph Guilfoyle. Pay to either or the survivor of either.’ ” Mary withdrew the money, without the knowledge or consent of Joseph, and deposited it in her own name. She made a will, and then
State v. Gralewski’s Estate, 176 Or. 448, 159 P. 2d 211, 161 A. L. R. 66, presented this set of facts. There a father deposited money in two banks in the joint accounts of himself and his son. The agreement in one instance provided that the money “ ‘shall be paid * * * to us or either of us, or the survivor of us,’ ” in the other “ ‘payable to the undersigned or the survivor.’ ” The son caused the two joint accounts to be withdrawn and re-deposited in his own name. The father was insane at that time and could not consent. The son made a will, then died, the father surviving and died later. The state claimed the money as belonging to the father and on the ground that it had escheated to the state, it being undisputed that the father died intestate and without heirs. The court held that the property escheated to the state. It held: “* * * the codepositors became each vested with a
Moskowitz v. Marrow, 251 N. Y. 380, 167 N. E. 506, 66 A. L. R. 870, presented, as to two of four deposits there considered, this set of facts. There a grandmother, with substantial accounts in two banks, directed that the money be transferred to a new account payable to “ ‘either or the survivor of them.’ ” The pass books
The court then turned to the provisions of their statute. The statute considered has substantial analogy to our section 8-167, R. S. 1943, which provides: “When a deposit in any bank in this state is made in the name of two or more persons, deliverable or payable to either or to their survivor or survivors, such deposit, or any part thereof, or increase thereof, may be delivered or paid to either of said persons or to the survivor or survivors in due course of business.”
Under this provision we have held: “Section 8046, Comp. St. 1922, relating to the payment by a bank of deposits entered as payable to any one of two or more persons named therein, not only is intended for the protection of the bank, but also fixed the property right of the persons named, unless the contrary appears from the terms of the deposit.” We also said: “While it may be conceded the husband in fact made the deposit, he certainly, by that deposit, gave his wife an indivisible and unseverable interest in the deposit. It must, therefore, be an interest in the nature of a joint tenancy with the attendant right of survivorship.” In re Estate of Johnson, 116 Neb. 686, 218 N. W. 739.
We followed that decision in Kehl v. Omaha Nat. Bank, 126 Neb. 695, 254 N. W. 397, and there held: “Where a wife deposited money in a bank payable to
“A deposit of money in a bank by a wife and made payable to herself and husband, with the express provision that it was a joint tenancy with survivorship, and not as tenants in common, is presumed to have been made by the wife with donative intent and for the benefit of the husband with the intention of giving to him, if he survives, the complete title to the funds * *
In McConnell v. McCook Nat. Bank, 142 Neb. 451, 6 N. W. 2d 599, we removed the “close relationship of the parties” as a determining element. We followed these cases in Young v. McCoy, 152 Neb. 138, 40 N. W. 2d 540, and again in Scriven v. Scriven, 153 Neb. 655, 45 N. W. 2d 760.
Returning to the Moskowitz case the court analyzed their statute as follows: “* * * we find that section 249 in terms declares that, where a deposit is made by one person in his name and that of another person, payable to either or the survivor, the deposit and any additions thereto ‘shall become the property of such persons as joint tenants;’ that they ‘shall be held for the exclusive use of such persons;’ that they ‘may be paid to either during the lifetime of both or to the survivor after the death of one of them.’ ” The court held: “That the purpose and effect of the enactment was to reverse the common-law rule and to make a deposit in the statutory form presumptive evidence of an intent to make a gift presently to take effect * * *. Assuming that, upon the making of the deposits by Fannie Manheimer, in the-joint names of herself and Pearl Harris, the two became ‘joint tenants,’ it is immaterial whether Pearl Harris-then acquired an interest in a moiety or an interest in-the whole of the funds deposited. If she received the-former, rather than the latter, to that extent at least
The court then held that “for all these reasons” the grandmother, “in originally making the joint deposits, transferred to” the granddaughter “a present property interest in the moneys deposited, which was not subject to cancellation at the instance of” the grandmother “and was not destroyed or in the least affected by the notice not to pay * * * served upon the banks.” There was a concurring opinion by Cardozo, C. J., in which five other members joined. In the course of that opinion it was said: ■ “If the form of the deposit was an expression of the true agreement, there could be no change of ownership thereafter by an ex parte declaration. As to what the true agreement was, the door to contro
In re Culhane’s Estate, 334 Pa. 124, 5 A. 2d 377, involved this fact situation. Two joint owners had a deposit in a trust company which failed. The receiver made percentage distribution to one of the joint owners who deposited the money in a safety box. When she died $1,900 from that source remained in the box. The other joint owner was awarded the sum so deposited. The court held: “The account- — a chose in action— belonged to both as in joint tenancy. The provision in the contract that ‘either of us may draw and receipt for the whole or any part thereof’ meant that either had authority as agent for the joint owners to withdraw and receipt on behalf of both exactly as if they had appointed some third party to be their agent for the purpose.”
Daniels v. Harney, 111 Cal. App. 2d 400, 244 P. 2d 773, involved three bank accounts held in joint tenancy. One joint tenant withdrew the funds and then died. The proceeds were in the hands of the administrator. The court held that the surviving joint tenant was entitled to the money. The court said: “The settled rule in this state is that upon the death of one' holding a joint tenancy in personal property, which is the case here, the whole interest vests in the surviving ’ tenant, not by descent, but by the fact of survivorship alone. * * * Applying the principle to the facts of this case the rule is that were (where) one joint tenant without consent withdraws
Applying these rules to the facts here we hold that the rights of Viola, in the money held by the Crowell Elevator Company, was not destroyed by the act of Rena in directing that it be deposited in the Omaha National Bank, and that Viola has the right to trace that money and to be awarded that which has retained the joint-ownership character.
As hereinbefore pointed out there was ¿3,719.36 so transferred. As a result of additions and withdrawals from the Omaha National Bank fund the amount on deposit there was in excess of $11,000 at the time of Rena’s death.
As to the additions made to the fund by Rena’s deposits, although a donative intent appears, Rena held control of this money so that the requisite delivery to complete the gift is negatived. It appears from evidence in the record that, as a result of withdrawals, this fund on December 30, 1949, was reduced to the sum of $2,061.41, and that thereafter while the balance fluctuated it was at all times in excess of that amount. Viola’s right in the fund is limited to that part of the jointly owned money which can be traced to and shown to have remained in the Omaha National Bank at the time of Rena’s death. That sum is $2,061.41. Accordingly, we hold that Viola is entitled to be awarded that sum from the funds on deposit in the Omaha National Bank, and that the remainder is an asset of Rena’s estate.
The third item of property involved here is some railroad bonds of a Republic of Mexico company. It appears that many years ago, as a result of a bank fail
In December 1944, Rena brought these bonds to plaintiff and said: “I don’t know if they are any good, but if they are, if you ever get anything, give them to Mrs. Mathewson of Wakefield, she is a friend of mine, and I would like to do something for her.” As a result of that conversation Rena signed a letter to plaintiff reciting that: “I hand you herewith twenty-four (24) first mortgage gold bonds of the Pan-American Railroad Company numbered 337 to 360 inclusive for $1,000 each. When and if you collect interest on these bonds, please forward the money to Mrs. Elizabeth Mathensen, Wake-field, Nebraska. Please hold the bonds until Mrs. Mathensen requests them, when you have my permission to deliver them to her.” It is not disputed that the defendant was meant, although the last name was misspelled.
The bonds were left with plaintiff under that direction. At the time Rena said she had not told Elizabeth about what she was doing and instructed him not to tell Elizabeth of it. Elizabeth did not know about it until after Rena’s death.
At the time of this delivery or shortly thereafter Rena asked plaintiff to get an idea as to the value of the bonds. Plaintiff did that and advised Rena thereof by letter dated January 13,. 1945.
The bonds were bearer bonds. Pursuant to “Presidential Decree of the United States of Mexico” and at Rena’s direction, plaintiff sent the bonds to a New York bank for registration “for exclusion from their assumed status under Mexican Law as ‘Enemy Bonds’.” They were there registered in Rena’s name. However, that registration was one on the books of the bank. The payable-to-bearer provision of the bonds was not changed. The bonds were thereafter returned to plain
There is no question here as to donative intent of Rena as to these bonds. The question is one of delivery so as to make the gift effective inter vivos. It appears from the record that plaintiff was Rena’s agent with instructions to deliver to Elizabeth when delivery was requested. Elizabeth did not know of the delivery to plaintiff. Rena, for a reason not disclosed, directed that plaintiff not tell Elizabeth. The bonds remained in plaintiff’s hands when Rena died.
The rule is stated by the authorities as follows: “While delivery may be made by an agent of the donor, delivery to the agent is not enough. The gift is not complete until there is an actual delivery to the donee or to someone for him, and until the gift is completed by delivery, the donor may reassert title to the property. Moreover, since the authority of an agent is revoked by the death of his principal, the death of the donor before the actual delivery of the property to the donee terminates the authority of the agent to make such delivery, and works a revocation of the gift.” 24 Am. Jur., Gifts, § 30, p. 747. “While a delivery may be made to a third person in order that the latter may deliver the subject of the gift to the donee as agent of the donor, the gift is not complete until there is an actual delivery to the donee; and until the gift is completed by delivery the donor can revoke the agent’s authority and resume possession of the gift. As the authority of an agent' is revoked by the death of his principal, the death of the donor before the actual delivery of the property to the donee terminates the authority of the agent to make such delivery, and the gift, therefore, fails for want of delivery, * * 38 C. J. S., Gifts, § 25, p. 804.
The above rule was cited with approval in Ladman v. Farmers & Merchants Bank, 130 Neb. 460, 265 N. W. 252. Accordingly, it is held that the attempted gift of the bonds to Elizabeth failed for want of delivery in
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed in part, and in part reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter a decree that the elevator stock held by plaintiff passed by right of survivorship to Viola and that it be delivered to her; also that of the money on deposit in the Omaha National Bank $2,061.41 be paid to Viola and the balance be paid to the administrator; and that the railroad bonds be delivered to the administrator.
All costs are taxed to the administrator.
Affirmed in part, and in part reversed AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.