296 Mass. 89 | Mass. | 1936
The plaintiff appeals from a final decree dismissing his bill after the entry of an interlocutory decree sustaining a demurrer thereto. Although no appeal from the interlocutory decree was taken, its correctness is open for consideration upon the appeal from the final decree. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 214, § 27. Nochemson v. Aronson, 279 Mass. 278, 280. See also Carleton & Hovey Co. v. Burns,
The bill alleges that in 1930, at the solicitation of the defendant, his wife, the plaintiff caused savings accounts in two banks, which were his individual property, to be transferred from his name into the names of himself and his wife “payable to either or the survivor of either” [sic]; that “said transfer so made was not made in any way as a gift or transfer of said moneys represented by said deposits to his said wife, or with intent to pass title thereto to her, but solely under an agreement with his said wife that the same was to be and remain his property, with the right in him to make withdrawals thereon, and to protect her in the event of his decease”; and that thereafter he retained possession of the books representing said accounts and handled the accounts as his own until August 26, 1935, when his wife without his knowledge or consent took the books from his possession, withdrew substantially all the money on deposit with the intent to convert it to her own use, and refused to return it.
We need not consider the final proposed amendment to the bill which the judge refused to allow, for we think the bill as previously amended was good. We treat as waived the plaintiff's appeal from the denial of the final motion to amend, for such appeal seems to have no present importance in view of the result to which we have come.
If there had existed an intent to make the wife one of the owners of the deposits in quasi joint tenancy (Marble v. Treasurer & Receiver General, 245 Mass. 504; Johnson v. Nourse, 258 Mass. 417; Splaine v. Morrissey, 282 Mass. 217), then what was done in 1930 would have been valid as a novation, vesting in the wife an interest derived, not by gift from the plaintiff, but from the new.contracts made by the banks with the parties, even though a valid gift from the plaintiff of the books which represented the accounts (Stebbins v. North Adams Trust Co. 243 Mass. 69, 75, 76) or of any interest therein could not be shown. Brown v. Brown, 174 Mass. 197, 201. Chippendale v. North Adams Savings Bank, 222 Mass. 499, 501, et seq. Perry v. Leveroni,
But though it “may be assumed that, as between the banks and these parties, the banks would be justified in treating the deposits as funds in which the parties had a joint interest” (Bradford v. Eastman, 229 Mass. 499, 500, 501), the fact that the defendant was a promisee under the contracts made by the banks does not establish her rights against the plaintiff. He may show by oral evidence, since the bank accounts are personalty, that she held her contractual rights in the bank accounts as trustee for him. See Koutoudakis v. Great American Indemnity Co. 285 Mass. 466, 469. In Bradford v. Eastman, 229 Mass. 499, the original owner of savings bank deposits obtained a decree for the redelivery to her of the bank books, although she had transferred the accounts into the names of herself and her niece, where she did so for her own convenience and with no intent to transfer a present title. See also Milan v. Boucher, 285 Mass. 590; Coolidge v. Brown, 286 Mass. 504. In the present case, the bill negatives any intention to vest a present interest in the wife, and declares that the intention was merely testamentary. Battles v. Millbury Savings Bank, 250 Mass. 180. R. H. White Co. v. Lees, 267 Mass. 112.
The bill alleges in substance a breach of trust. It can be maintained notwithstanding the existence between the parties of the relationship of husband and wife. Moreau v. Moreau, 250 Mass. 110. Druker v. Druker, 268 Mass. 334, 338. Weidman v. Weidman, 274 Mass. 118, 122.
Interlocutory decree sustaining demurrer reversed.
Final decree reversed.