From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

In re Estate of Hatch

Supreme Court of Ohio
Jul 19, 1950
154 Ohio St. 149 (Ohio 1950)

Summary

holding that one who has by contract changed his account to the joint and survivorship form cannot thereafter direct special disposition of the fund by the survivor

Summary of this case from Shipman v. Hance

Opinion

No. 32120

Decided July 19, 1950.

Banks and banking — Joint and survivorship accounts — Surviving joint owner succeeds to title to account — Executors and administrators — Inventory and appraisement included joint bank account — Exceptions to inclusion of account sustained — Appeal — Reviewing court will not interfere, when — Evidence established joint and survivorship account.

1. Two or more persons may contract for the joint ownership of a bank account with the right of survivorship, and, where such a contract has been entered into, the joint owner or owners who survive succeed to the title to the proceeds of the account by virtue of such contract.

2. Where exceptions are filed by an interested person to an inventory and appraisement of a decedent's estate in which inventory and appraisement is included a bank account as an asset of the estate and, upon hearing, the Probate Court sustains the exceptions as to the inclusion of such account, a reviewing court will not interfere, where it appears there was sufficient evidence presented at the hearing to support a determination that the bank account in question was a joint and survivorship account between the decedent and the exceptor and that the exceptor succeeded to the title to the proceeds thereof as the survivor.

CERTIFIED by the Court of Appeals for Hardin county.

This case involves the ultimate question of whether, from the evidence adduced, it could properly be determined that a valid and enforceable joint and survivorship bank account was created between a mother and daughter, entitling the daughter, as survivor, to the proceeds thereof.

Amy J. Hatch, an aged woman, died intestate on February 16, 1949, domiciled in Hardin county, Ohio. Ray Hatch, a son, was appointed administrator of her estate by the Probate Court of Hardin County. Included in the inventory and appraisement of the estate was a savings account in the Kenton National Bank in Kenton, Ohio, amounting to $1,977.88.

Ruth Ella Gerlach, a daughter of the decedent, filed exceptions to the inventory claiming that such savings account included therein "was not the property of Amy Hatch, deceased."

A motion was filed by the administrator to require the exceptor to make her exceptions definite and certain and to strike out certain parts of the same, which motion was overruled. This is a minor and unimportant feature of the case.

A hearing on the exceptions was had and at the conclusion thereof the Probate Court stated:

"And it is the view of the court that on the pleadings here presented and upon the issue of exceptions to the inventory, and upon the evidence presented on those exceptions that the matter in dispute, the sum of $1,977.88, should be deleted from the inventory and, therefore, the court sustains the exceptions. All exceptions are saved * * *."

From the judgment sustaining the exceptions an appeal on questions of law was perfected to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the judgment. However, the judges of the Court of Appeals found the judgment of affirmance in conflict with the judgment of another Court of Appeals in the case of Schmitt, Admx., v. Schmitt, 39 Ohio App. 219, 177 N.E. 478, and certified the record to this court for review and final determination.

Messrs. Kaylor Kaylor, for appellee, exceptor.

Mr. Fred Markley, for appellant, administrator.


From the evidence in this case, as contained in the bill of exceptions, the following narrative of events and deductions is warranted:

Amy J. Hatch, confined to bed by reason of illness, resided with her daughter, Ruth Ella Gerlach. Mrs. Hatch had on deposit in a savings account in the Kenton National Bank the sum of $1,977.88. At her request, a printed card was secured from the bank, which when signed would prima facie create a so-called joint and survivorship account between or among the signers as to the bank account to which the card referred.

Such card was signed by Mrs. Hatch as well as by her daughter, Ruth Ella Gerlach, before or about the middle of January 1949. At or about the same time, the bankbook evidencing the savings account was delivered by Mrs. Hatch to Mrs. Gerlach.

Contained in the "Joint Account" card signed by the two women was the following language:

"The undersigned, joint depositors, hereby agree each with the other and with The Kenton National Bank that all sums now on deposit or heretofore or hereafter deposited by either or both of said joint depositors with said bank to their credit as such joint depositors * * * are and shall be owned by them jointly, with right of survivorship and be subject to the check or receipt of either of them or the survivor of them and payment to or on the check of either or the survivor shall be valid and discharge said bank from liability."

The day after the card was signed and the bankbook was delivered to Mrs. Gerlach, Mrs. Hatch told Mrs. Gerlach to pay out of the proceeds of the account her, Mrs. Hatch's, funeral expenses, give "Aunt Ella" $100 and divide the balance between Mrs. Gerlach and Pauline Myers, Mrs. Gerlach's sister.

Whether such signed card creating the joint and survivorship account was taken to the bank before or after the conversation relating to the disposition to be made of the funds in the account is uncertain. At any rate, the card was promptly delivered to the bank and the account thereafter appeared on the records of the bank as a joint and survivorship account, the proceeds thereof payable to "Amy Hatch or Ruth Ella Gerlach." A corresponding notation was made on the bankbook together with the words, "either or survivor."

Obviously, the creation of a joint and survivorship bank account is a matter of intention to be ascertained from the conduct and actions of the persons concerned. Beginning with the case of Cleveland Trust Co. v. Scobie, Admr., 114 Ohio St. 241, 151 N.E. 373, 48 A.L.R., 182, this court has adopted the view that persons may contract for the joint ownership of a bank account with the right of survivorship, and, when such a contract has been entered into, the joint owner who survives succeeds to the title to the whole of the proceeds of the account by virtue of the contract. See Berberick v. Courtade, 137 Ohio St. 297, 28 N.E.2d 636, and cases cited, and Rhorbacker, Exr., v. Citizens Bldg. Assn. Co., 138 Ohio St. 273, 34 N.E.2d 751, 135 A.L.R., 988. Compare Union Properties, Inc., v. Cleveland Trust Co., 152 Ohio St. 430, 89 N.E.2d 638.

This court is not required to and ordinarily does not weigh the evidence. Upon the record in this case, the lower courts were warranted in reaching the conclusion that when Mrs. Hatch and Mrs. Gerlach signed the agreement referred to above without conditions or reservations the manifest intention was to establish a joint and survivorship account then and there, in accordance with the wording of such agreement and binding on the bank when brought to its notice.

Mrs. Hatch took no affirmative action during the remainder of her life to impair, alter or nullify the agreement, as she might have done, and the wishes she expressed as to what should be done with the proceeds of the account, made subsequent to the signing of the agreement and on the supposition that Mrs. Gerlach would survive her, did not create a condition to the present vesting of title in Mrs. Gerlach. 38 Corpus Juris Secundum, 816, Gifts, Section 36. Compare Oleff, Admr., v. Hodapp, Gdn., 129 Ohio St. 432, 195 N.E. 838, 98 A.L.R., 764.

By their judgments the lower courts determined in effect, upon sufficient evidence, that a joint and survivorship bank account had been established, entitling Mrs. Gerlach, as the survivor, to the proceeds thereof; this court can therefore discover no valid reason for reversing the judgment of the Court of Appeals, and such judgment is accordingly affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

WEYGANDT, C.J., MATTHIAS, HART, STEWART, TURNER and TAFT, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

In re Estate of Hatch

Supreme Court of Ohio
Jul 19, 1950
154 Ohio St. 149 (Ohio 1950)

holding that one who has by contract changed his account to the joint and survivorship form cannot thereafter direct special disposition of the fund by the survivor

Summary of this case from Shipman v. Hance
Case details for

In re Estate of Hatch

Case Details

Full title:IN RE ESTATE OF HATCH

Court:Supreme Court of Ohio

Date published: Jul 19, 1950

Citations

154 Ohio St. 149 (Ohio 1950)
93 N.E.2d 585

Citing Cases

Shipman v. Hance

It is now well established that by the contract in the present case the defendant acquired a present vested…

In re Estate of Voegeli

In addition to holding shares of the company appraised at $20,000, the decedent had four other savings…