Lela B. Bland (decedent) died on 16 October 1998. Decedent’s son, Marshall E. Bland (plaintiff), was appointed Administrator of decedent’s estate. At the time of her death, decedent had funds in a savings account (the savings account) at Branch Banking & Trust Company (BB&T). The savings account had been opened on 13 March 1990. In connection with the savings account, decedent had signed and executed an instrument entitled “Discretionary Revocable Trust Agreement” (the trust agreement), also dated 13 March 1990. The trust agreement names decedent as trustee, and names her three sons as beneficiaries, all three of whom were living at the time: Marshall E. Bland, A. Frank Bland, and Charlie D. Bland. The trust agreement provides, in pertinent part:
The funds in the account indicаted on the reverse side of this instrument, together with earnings thereon, and any future additions thereto are conveyed to the trustee as indicated for the benefit of the beneficiary as indicated. The conditions of said trust are: (1) The trustee is authorized to hold, manage, pledge, invest and reinvest said funds in his sole discretion; (2) The undersigned grantor reserves the right to revoke said trust in part or in full at any time and any partial or complete withdrawal by the original trustee if he is the grantor shall be a revocation by the grantor to the extent of such withdrawal, but no other revocation shall be valid unless written notice is given to the institution named on the reverse side of this card;... (4) This trust, subject to the right of revocation, shall continue for the life of the grantor and there *284 after until the beneficiary is_[left blank] years of age, or until his death if he dies before such age, and then the proceeds may be delivered by the institution to the beneficiary, or to his heirs, or to the trustee on his or their behalf, and if the age of the beneficiary is not specified this trust is for twenty-one years.
At the time of decedent’s death, plaintiff was thе only one of the three named beneficiaries still living. The other two named beneficiaries, A. Frank Bland and Charlie D. Bland, were survived by their respective children. BB&T acknowledged the death of decedent and its obligation to pay the principal balance of the account plus interest. However, BB&T expressed to plaintiff that it was unable to determine the respective parties’ entitlements to the funds. Therefore, on 14 May 1999, plaintiff filed a declaratory judgment action, naming as defendants BB&T, as well as the surviving children of A. Frank Bland and Charlie D. Bland (the individual defendants). The complaint seeks a declaratory judgment as to the rights and obligations of the parties, and specifically requests that the court instruct BB&T as to hоw it should distribute the funds in the account. BB&T and the individual defendants filed answers admitting each and every allegation of the complaint; thus, the pertinent facts are undisputed.
On 14 September 1999, plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment pursuant to N.C.R. Civ. P. 56 (Rule 56). On 5 October 1999, the individual defendants also filed a motion for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56. On 11 October 1999, plaintiff and the individual defendants appeared before the trial court for a hearing on the summary judgment motions. BB&T notified the parties that it would not appear at the hearing, and that it would distribute the funds as determined by the court. On 21 October 1999, the trial court entered an order setting forth nine findings, including a finding that decedent had opened the account with BB&T on 13 March 1990, and a finding that the residuary clause in decedent’s will instruсted that the residue of her property be distributed to her three sons. The order also sets forth two conclusions as a matter of law: (1) that the savings account at issue failed to comply with N.C.G.S. § 54B-130 (1999) (“Trust accounts”) as that statute existed on 13 March 1990; and (2) that the funds in the savings account therefore became the property of decedent’s estate upon her dеath and should be distributed in accordance with the residuary clause of her will. Thus, the order instructs BB&T to disburse the funds to decedent’s estate, and further instructs the administrator of the estate to distribute one-third of the funds to the surviving children of A. Frank Bland, one-third to the surviving chil *285 dren of Charlie D. Bland, and one-third to plaintiff, in accordance with the residuary clause of decedent’s will. Plaintiff apрeals from this order.
On appeal, plaintiff raises six assignments of error. In his first and second assignments of error, plaintiff contends that the trial court was without authority to include findings and conclusions in its summary judgment order. Findings of fact and conclusions of law are not necessary in an order determining a motion for summary judgment.
See Mosley v. Finance Co.,
Plaintiff’s four remaining assignments of error all essentially challenge the trial court’s two conclusions of law: that decedent’s savings account failed to comply with G.S. § 54B-130 as it existed on 13 March 1990, and that the funds in the account became the property of decedent’s estate upon her death to be distributed in accordance with the residuary clause of hеr will. We therefore turn to an examination of whether the trial court’s legal conclusions, and its order, were in accordance with applicable law.
Plaintiff contends that decedent established a valid trust pursuant to either G.S. § 54B-130 or the common law. In general, when a savings account is established by a grantor to be held by the grantor as trustee for the benefit оf another, the resulting trust is referred to as a “tentative trust” or a “Totten Trust.”
See Baker v. Cox,
The person establishing an account under this subsection shall sign a statement containing language set forth in a conspicuous manner and substantially similar to the following: . . .
I understand that by establishing a trust account under the provisions of North Carolina General Statute 54B-130(a) that:
1. During my lifetime I may withdraw the money in the account; and
2. By written direction to the savings and loan association ... I may change the beneficiary; and
3. Upon my death the money remaining in the account will belong to the beneficiary, and the money will not be inherited by my heirs or be controlled by my will.
Id. The trust agreement here does not reference G.S. § 54B-130; it purports to name three beneficiaries rather than one; and it does not contain provisions substantially similar to either the change of beneficiary provision, or the provision that the funds in the account are not to be inherited by the grantor’s heirs or controlled by the grantor’s will. Thus, the purported trust agreement does not comply with G.S. § 54B-130.
However, G.S. § 54B-130 itself states in subdivision (al):
This section shall not be deemed exclusive. Deposit accounts not conforming to this section shall be governed by other applicable provisions of the General Statutes or the common law, as appropriate.
Id. As there are no other provisions of the General Statutes applicable to tentative trusts established at a savings and loan association, the issue is whether the trust agreement created a valid trust pursuant to the common law.
Defendants argue that a valid trust was not created by the trust agreement. Defendants rely primarily on two cases which have held
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that a valid trust requires the transfer of a “present beneficial interest.” In
Wescott v. Bank,
An express trust has been defined as “a fiduciary relationship with respect to property, subjecting the person by whom the property is held to equitable duties to deal with the property for the benefit of another person, which arises as a result of a manifestation of an intention to create it.” ... To constitute this relationship there must be a transfer of the title by the donor or settlor for the benefit of another. The gift must be executed rather than executory upon a contingency.
Id.
at 42,
This Court reached a similar result in
Kyle v. Groce,
Defendants contend “[t]hese cases were based on common lаw principals which bar testamentary dispositions in the form of trusts unless the Wills Act is complied with,” and further that these cases control the outcome in the instant case. However, defendants’ assertion that testamentary dispositions must comply with the Wills Act, while correct, merely begs the question presented here: whether the
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disposition was, in fact, “testamentary” in nature. A testamentary disposition is defined as a disposition that does not take effect until the testator’s death.
See, e.g., In re Seymour’s Will,
In
Ridge v. Bright,
Here, decedent transferred title to the savings account to herself as trustee, subjecting herself as trustee to equitable duties to deal with the property for the benefit of the named beneficiaries. Thus, there was a transfer of a present beneficial interest such that the instrument was not testamentary in nature. Furthermore, the instrument satisfied the three elements necessary to establish a valid trust: (1) sufficient words to show intention to create the trust; (2) a
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definite subject; and (3) an ascertained object.
See, e.g., Finch v. Honeycutt,
Having determined that the trust agreement in question established a valid trust pursuant to the common law, the issue then becomes how the assets in the savings account should be distributed given that two of the three named beneficiaries pre-deceased decedent. The trust agreement, as we have stated, transferred a present beneficial interest, which interest vested in the beneficiaries upon the execution of the trust agreement. The interest was vested, rather than contingent, because the right of the beneficiaries to the savings account assets at the death of decedent did not depend upon the happening of some future, contingent event. From the very instant of the execution of the trust agreement, the possession of the trust assets by the beneficiaries was capable of taking effect upon the death of decadent.
See Power Co. v. Haywood,
In sum, we agree with the trial court’s preliminary conclusion of law that the savings account at issue failed to comply with G.S. § 54B-130 as that statute existed on March 30, 1990. However, we reverse the trial court’s second conclusion of law that the funds in the savings account therefore became the property of decedent’s estate upon her death and should be distributed in accordance with the-residuary clause of her will. We also reverse the trial court’s instruction to BB&T to disburse the funds to decedent’s estate. We hold that the trust agreement established a valid tentative trust under the common law. We hold that upon creation of the trust, each beneficiary received a present vested interest, and that, upon the death of A. Frank Bland, and upon the death of Charlie D. Bland, their vested interests passed to their respective heirs. Thus, upon the death of *291 decedent, the trust assets, passing outside of decedent’s estate, should be distributed by BB&T as follows: one-third of the assets to plaintiff, one-third of the assets to the surviving heirs of A. Frank Bland, and one-third of the assets to the surviving heirs of Charlie D. Bland. We reverse and remand for the trial court to enter conclusions of law and instructions to the parties consistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
