Two appeals—one by defendant Ann Guidotti and the other by plaintiff. The nature of these appeals is hereinafter set forth.
Questions Presented
A. Defendant Ann Guidotti’s Appeal.
1. Was a joint tenancy created under section 852, Financial Code?
2. Are the findings of fact supported?
B. Plaintiff Crocker-Anglo’s Appeal.
Was it error to deny plaintiff’s motion to deposit $39,304.99 in court and to allow interest on that sum ?
Record
Plaintiff filed a complaint in interpleader against defendants American Trust Company, as executor of the estate of Alfred J. Guidotti, and Ann Guidotti, which stated that it had $39,304.99 on deposit which sum was claimed by both defendants. Plaintiff prayed that defendants be required to interplead and that upon deposit by plaintiff of said sum in court, plaintiff be discharged from any and all liability to any and all of the defendants in relation thereto. Defendant American Trust as executor filed an answer and cross-complaint against plaintiff and defendant Ann wherein it sought the sum of $43,005.78 (the amount which at the time of Alfred’s death was in the bank accounts hereafter discussed, plus certain interest). Plaintiff filed answer to this cross-complaint and a cross-complaint against defendant Ann Guidotti praying that in the event plaintiff should be required to pay defendant American Trust the sum demanded by said defendant, defendant Ann be required to repay plaintiff such sum. The court found that the bank accounts in question were not joint tenancy accounts, belonged to defendant American Trust as executor, that defendant Ann had no right therein, and gave judgment in favor of defendant American Trust against plaintiff in the sum of $43,005.78 plus interest from *292 September 27, 1956. It then gave judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Ann in the sum of $4,922.82.
Facts
The controversy is whether certain bank accounts in plaintiff's bank at Salinas (formerly Salinas National Bank) were held in the joint tenancy of Alfred J. Guidotti, now deceased, and his wife, defendant Ann Guidotti. Alfred and Ann were married October 21,1950, and lived as husband and wife until Alfred’s death. At the time of marriage Alfred had standing in his name in the Salinas National Bank two accounts, one savings, the other commercial. In October, 1953, Ann’s signature was added below that of Alfred on the savings account signature card. The bank’s assistant cashier testified that Alfred came in to the bank and “wanted to have his wife added to that card so that she could withdraw funds and so that it would be a joint account, and so that if something happened that the account would go in her name.” Ann then signed the card below Alfred’s signature. The heading of the card “A. J. Guidotti” was not changed. A few days after the official had given Alfred a signature card headed “A. J. Guidotti or Mrs. A. J. Guidotti,” Alfred and Ann came to the bank and signed it where indicated by the assistant cashier. This was for the commercial account. Thereafter Ann wrote checks on the commercial account. To impeach the assistant cashier defendant bank introduced his deposition in which after stating that Alfred ‘ ‘ asked to have his checking account set up as a joint account with his wife” he was asked if Alfred said anything more. The witness answered “No” but corrected the answer to read “I don’t remember at this time.” To the question “Did he tell you the purpose for which he wanted that joint account set up” he answered “No” but corrected the answer to read “I can’t recall right now.” The witness explained the difference in Ms testimony at the deposition and at the trial by saying that he was upset at the former and could not think clearly. At all times the bank’s ledger sheets for both accounts were in Alfred’s name solely. The assistant cashier testified that in determining the relationship between the bank and the depositor, the bank depended on the signature card and not on the ledger or other bookkeeping items. The reverse sides of the signature cards containing forms for the creation of joint tenancy accounts were not signed by either party. Two Salinas National employees testified that the practice of the bank was rarely to use the reverse side of the *293 signature card, although instructions had been given by the bank that in the event a joint tenancy account was to be opened the reverse side of the signature card should be signed. Alfred had been the survivor of a joint account with his mother which had been set up similarly to the instant ones in that the joint tenancy portion of the signature card had not been signed. (There is a difference, however, in that the signature card of the mother’s contained the notation “Two signatures required to withdraw funds.”) Depositors in the Salinas bank were personally known to the officials and employees and accounts were opened, transferred or changed with informality. Mr. Corbin, an employee of the Salinas bank, testified that he overheard the conversation between the assistant cashier and Alfred. All that he could recall was that Alfred asked to have his wife’s signature on his checking account “For the purpose of writing checks.” Immediately thereafter Alfred asked the witness, “Will my wife have any trouble getting the money if anything should happen to me ? ’ ’ The witness told him “no,” that the only thing that would be necessary would be the consent of the county treasurer. He then stated that in 1953 if a customer desired to open a joint tenancy account he would have had the signature card signed only on the front, and that on many occasions he had opened joint tenancy accounts that way. In fact his own joint tenancy account was set up that way. However, he testified that the employees were instructed in cases of opening joint tenancy accounts to stamp the signature cards with a rubber stamp reading “Joint Tenancy with Eight of Survivorship.” He had not known of this until after he opened many accounts and could not say whether the instructions were given prior to 1953, although it should have been the practice in 1953. Even after the instructions were given he and other employees did not always follow the instructions.
Ann’s son, Gene Collins, testified that in 1955 Alfred told him that his mother was well taken care of in the event of Alfred’s death. “ [W]e have our joint banking accounts . . . is hers already because she will have—in case something should happen to me ...” Ann testified that Alfred told her he had made arrangements with the bank to set up joint tenancy accounts “for us,” “that he thought it was best to set up a joint tenancy account in case that anything should ever happen to him that I would have money.” After she signed the signature card, he said “That money is yours, in case anything ever happens to me, that money is yours.” In another *294 hearing Ann stated that the first time the joint account was mentioned was when she told him she would need some money. He then said “I see no reason why you should not write checks yourself because I have had a joint account made out.” She also testified that she did not know in 1953 or at all that Alfred had a savings account in the Salinas bank. In a deposition she said the first conversation on the subject was after she signed the signature card. On his returning home he told her that “he had made out joint accounts—joint savings accounts . . .”
Alfred died December 16, 1955. At that time there was $10,922.27 in the savings account and $32,083.51 in the commercial account—total, $43,005.78. In his will drawn in March, 1954, Alfred stated “I am the owner of certain accounts which I have maintained in the Salinas National Bank . . .’’At that time as well as upon his death Alfred had at least two accounts in his name other than the two claimed to be joint tenancy accounts. (Unless otherwise designated all reference herein to accounts will mean the latter two accounts.) Three days after Alfred’s death Ann and her attorney went to the bank and had the alleged joint tenancy accounts closed and the moneys transferred to Ann’s individual account. On January 13, 1956, an officer of the American Trust Company, executor, inquired at the Salinas bank as to the status of accounts in Alfred’s name. The assistant manager informed him that the accounts were joint tenancy accounts in Alfred’s and Ann’s names. The executor then listed them in the estate inventory as joint tenancy accounts. In September, 1956, defendant executor demanded of plaintiff Crocker-Anglo, which had succeeded to the ownership of Salinas National Bank, payment of the amounts which were in the accounts at Alfred’s death, plus interest.
The court found that both accounts were the separate property of Alfred, and were not held in joint tenancy, that the pass books were at all times in decedent’s possession, that Alfred did not inform Ann nor the bank at the time the cards were signed that he intended to transfer the funds in said accounts to a joint tenancy of himself and wife, or to create any joint tenancy; that the sole purpose of causing the name of his wife to go on the cards “was for a convenience in withdrawing monies from said accounts” and that defendant American Trust as executor was entitled to the $43,005.78 on deposit at Alfred’s death with interest at 7 per cent per annum from September 27, 1956, the date defendant bank demanded payment from plaintiff. On that date plaintiff withheld from *295 Ann’s account the balance of the $43,005.78 which it had theretofore transferred to her, amounting to $38,082.96, as Ann had withdrawn the difference, $4,922.82. Defendant bank as executor was awarded on its cross-complaint judgment against Ann for the latter amount.
A. Defendant Ann’s Appeal.
1. Joint tenancy.
Section 683, Civil Code, provides “A joint interest is one owned by two or more persons in equal shares, by a title created by a single will or transfer, when expressly declared in the will or transfer to be a joint tenancy. ... A joint tenancy in personal property may be created by a written transfer, instrument or agreement.” (Emphasis added.) It is obvious that there was no written transfer, instrument or agreement here. Therefore defendant Ann may not claim a compliance with said section. However, the section states further: “Provisions of this section shall not restrict the creation of a joint tenancy in a bank deposit as provided for in the Bank Act.” The provision in the Bank Act to be considered here is section 852, Financial Code, which in part provides: “When a deposit is made in a bank in the names of two or more persons ... in such form that the moneys in the account are payable to the survivor or survivors then such deposit and all additions thereto shall be the property of such persons as joint tenants. ’ ’
Defendant Ann contends that this section was complied with (1) as a matter of law and (2) as a matter of fact.
Defendant Ann contends that the two signatures on the face of the signature cards coupled with the testimony of the bank employees that the practice was rarely to use the reverse side of the cards to create a joint account shows a complete compliance with section 852. Defendant Ann contends further that “in such form” does not require a writing, particularly as in the same section the Legislature made a requirement of a writing for a limitation on the right of a joint tenant to withdraw funds; and that the Legislature has left to the particular bank the determination of what the “form” shall be. It is not reasonable to assume that the Legislature in section 852, Financial Code, intended to leave to the banks the right to permit the creation of a joint tenancy orally. In view of section 683, Civil Code, “in such form” in section 852, Financial Code, can only mean that the bank may determine the particular form of writing, provided that it clearly indicates an intention of the declarant or de
*296
clarants to create a joint tenancy. The necessity for a clear written declaration of joint tenancy is shown by the decision in
California Trust Co.
v.
Bennett,
Typed at the top of the savings account card was “A. J. Guidotti”; at the head of the commercial account card, “A. J. Guidotti or Mrs. A. J. Guidotti.” Here, too, there was no declaration of joint tenancy or of payment to survivor. (Fin. Code, § 852, does not require statement of joint tenancy but does require statement of payment to survivor.) The language in
Opp
v.
Frye,
In
Denigan
v.
Hibernia etc. Society,
*298 While there was evidence that individual employees of the bank did not always follow the practice required, the bank had instructed its employees that when a joint tenancy account was desired the signature cards should be stamped “Joint Tenancy with Bight of Survivorship” with the stamp provided for that purpose. Even were it bank practice to require no writing, such practice could not supersede the law. Moreover, it appeared that the bank had provided the reverse side of the card with a proper writing which would comply with both section 683, Civil Code, and the Bank Act. This writing was, in effect, the bank’s endeavor to supply the “form” mentioned in section 852, Financial Code.
Young
v.
Young
(1932),
2. Findings.
Defendant Ann contends that in any event the evidence brings the case within the rule that where a joint tenancy fails for technical reasons, the property becomes that of the survivor under a trust theory. (See
American Bible Soc.
v.
Mortgage Guar. Co.
(1932),
Defendant Ann contends that the statement was hearsay and not admissible. However, no objection was made to its introduction in evidence. Material evidence which is technically inadmissible under an exclusionary rule, if offered and received without objection, may be considered in support of the judgment.
(Powers
v.
Board of Public Works
(1932),
B. Plaintiff’s Appeal.
Denial of Deposit in Court.
Plaintiff filed a notice of motion for an order authorizing it to deposit in court the sum of $39,304.99 which it *300 held in its possession after stopping payment of the balance in Ann’s account, which was that sum. The notice stated that plaintiff would also move for an injunction restraining the other parties from taking any proceedings or action “in relation thereto” and for an interlocutory decree for the discharge of plaintiff “from any and all liability in the premises” to the parties. The motion when made was denied, apparently upon the ground that plaintiff’s offer to deposit was conditioned upon a complete discharge, while the amount offered was not the whole amount in dispute. Section 386, Code of Civil Procedure, provides: “. . . The amount which plaintiff or cross complainant admits to be payable under a contract may be deposited by him with the clerk of the court at the time of the filing of the complaint or cross complaint in interpleader without first obtaining order of the court therefor.” The section then provides that interest on the amount deposited shall cease to accrue after the date of deposit. Plaintiff did not purport to deposit under section 386, which apparently permits a partial deposit, that is, a sum which the party admits it owes but which is less than the amount claimed by the opponent, for two reasons: (1) it made no deposit at the time of filing the complaint or cross-complaint as required by the section; (2) a reading of the "notice of motion indicates clearly that the making of the deposit was conditioned on the court granting plaintiff a complete discharge and the granting of an injunction prohibiting defendants from taking any action or proceeding against plaintiff concerning defendants’ claims. This, of course, the court could not do, as defendant American Trust was claiming (and eventually succeeded in its claim) that $43,005.78 was due from plaintiff and not only the $39,304.99 which plaintiff offered to deposit. The record fails to show that plaintiff at any time offered to make a partial deposit. Thus, the court properly denied plaintiff’s offer to deposit.
For the same reasons, the court properly allowed interest on the total sum of $43,005.78 from September 27, 1956, the date demand for payment was made by defendant bank upon plaintiff. (See Civ. Code, § 3287.) Had plaintiff offered to make a partial deposit, and had it been refused, interest could not accrue thereafter on the amount of the partial deposit offered. But this was not done.
Subsequent to the denial of said motion plaintiff filed a cross-complaint against defendant Ann in which it prayed that the court designate a person to receive “the funds re *301 ferred to in the Complaint” and that upon delivering “the funds referred to” to such designated person, plaintiff be discharged from all liability to defendants. The “funds” referred to in the complaint is the sum of $39,304.99, not the whole amount claimed by defendant bank. Again, no offer was made to deposit said sum as a partial deposit under section 386. No action was taken by the trial court on the offer in this cross-complaint. It is not clear whether the offer was called to the attention of the court. However, if it were, the court would have been required to deny it, as it, like the offer in the motion, was conditioned on a discharge of plaintiff.
The judgment is affirmed.
Wood (Fred B.), J., and Hanson, J. pro tem., * concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 9, 1959, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Appellants’ petitions for a hearing by the Supreme Court were denied July 8, 1959.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
