delivered the opinion of the court:
Plаintiff, Patricia Greeling, and Margaret Cooper were joint tenants of a certificate of deposit purchased by Everette Cooper, Margaret’s husband and plaintiffs father by a previous marriage. Soon after Everette died, Margaret and her son by a previous marriage, Harry Joe Abendroth, went to the bank and, although the certificate of deposit was still in plaintiffs possession, рersuaded the bank to cash it. With the proceeds, Margaret purchased a new certificate of deposit payable to herself, Abendroth, and Debbie Brashears. Margaret has since passed away.
When the bank refused to pay her, plaintiff sued Abendroth individually and in his capacity as the executor of Margaret’s estate, seeking to recover under section 4 of the Joint Tenancy Act (Act) (765 ILCS 1005/4 (West 2000)). (We will refer to Abendroth in his two capacities as “defendants.” In his individual capacity, we will call him “Abendroth.”) At the conclusion of a trial, the trial court entered judgment against defendants and in plaintiffs favor in the amount of half the principal and accrued interest of the new certificate of deposit.
Defendants appeal on the following grounds: (1) by its terms, the certificаte of deposit purchased by Everette allowed Margaret to cash it in and keep the proceeds; (2) because section 4 applies only to actions between cotenants, Abendroth cannot incur liability under that section; and (3) Brashears, not named as a defendant in this case, was a necessary party.
We hold that while plaintiff had possession of the certificate of deposit, Margaret could not rightfully cash it. The trial court could have reasonably found that by inducing the bank to pay Margaret without the surrender of the certificate according to its terms, Abendroth committed the common-law tort of intentional interference with a contractual relationship. The court did not award plaintiff any interest in the new certificate of deposit; rather, it awarded her a money judgment payable out of no particular source, and therefore Brashears is not a necessary party. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Everette bought the certificate of deposit on January 26, 2002, for $99,449.26 and made it payable to “Everette Cooper or Margaret Cooper or Patricia Greeling.” It matured on April 4, 2002. On its face, the certificate expressly incorporated “the [additional [t]erais and [conditions stated on the reverse,” including the following:
“JOINT CERTIFICATES: When two or more persons are named as depositors on this Certificate with the conjunction ‘or’ appearing between names, then such [certificate shall be payable to any of the survivor or survivors of them[,] and payment may be made[,] upon surrender of this [c]ertificate[,] to any of them during the lifetimе of all, or to any survivor or survivors after the death of one or more of them. When the conjunction ‘and’ appears between names, the Certificate shall be payable only upon the signatures of all depositors named.”
About three weeks before his death, Everette delivered the certificate of deposit to plaintiff in the presence of Margaret. After Everette’s dеath on January 17,
On January 26, 2003, Margaret and Abendroth went to the bank and said they wanted to cash the certificate of deposit, which at that time had a face amount of $100,420.93. The bank officer asked where the certificate of deposit was. Abendroth testified:
“We said that it was still being held by [plaintiff], and it was supposed to be in the [lock]box, and the certificate that was returned to us, as we said before, we asked for this three times, and my mother asked for the [lockbox] returned three times. When the [lockbox] was returned, the [certificate of deposit] was not enclosed. And that, I would think, is my mother’s property.”
The bank allowed Margaret to cash the certificate of deposit on condition that she sign an indemnity bond, which stated “the said certifiсate of deposit is supposed to be lost” and in which she promised to “deliver up said certificate of deposit[,] when found, to said bank.” Margaret signed the bond, and the bank paid her the proceeds, $99,449.26, which she used to buy a new certificate of deposit payable to “Margaret Cooper or Harry Abendorth [sic] or Debbie Brashears.” A “Debit” of the account, signed by a bank officer, reads: “CD [(certificate of deposit)] [I]ost.”
The $99,449.26 was calculated as follows: the face amount of the old certificate of deposit, $100,420.93, plus the accrued interest, $308.69, minus a penalty, $1,280.36.
In its judgment order, the trial court awarded plaintiff half the principal of the new certificate of deposit, $49,724.63, plus accrued interest. The court reasoned that if one accepted defendants’ position, “the outcome of the case would depend on which survivor whose name appeared on the joint [c]ertificate of [d]eposit arrived at the bank ahead of the other. Surely the law does not and cannot rest upon such a frivolous basis[ ] and one wholly lacking in reason or substance.” Everette, the court found, intended “that his wife and daughter share those proсeeds equally.”
This appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Is Plaintiff “Aggrieved” Within the Meaning of Section 4?
On the authority of section 4 of the Act (765 ILCS 1005/4 (West 2000)), the trial court ordered defendants to pay plaintiff damages in the amount of one-half the value of the principal and accrued interest represented by the new certificate of deposit. That statute provides:
“If any person shall assume and exercise exclusive ownership over, or take away, destroy, lessen in value, or otherwise injure or abuse any property held in joint tenancy ***, the party aggrieved shall have his civil action for the injury in the same manner as he would have if such joint tenancy *** did not exist.” 765 ILCS 1005/4 (West 2000).
(The court also relied on section 4a of the Act (765 ILCS 1005/4a (West 2000)), but that section was actually irrelevant because it applied only to cotenants of realty (see Reichmann v. Reichmann,
In common law, one cotenant of a chattel could not maintain an action against another cotenant to gain possession of the chattel, even though the latter cotenant was acting like the chattel’s sole owner and excluding the former cotenant from all use and enjoyment of it. Benjamin v. Stremple,
Like any other plaintiff in a “civil action,” the plaintiff must be “aggrieved” (765 ILCS 1005/4 (West 2000)), that is, thе plaintiff must “suffer[ ] from an infringement or denial of legal rights” (Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 23 (10th ed. 2000)). If a cotenant assumes and exercises exclusive ownership over the chattel pursuant to a contract binding on the other cotenant, the latter cotenant is not “aggrieved” or “injured” within the meaning of any recognizable legal theory. Sondin v. Bernstein,
If, as in the present case, the trial court construes a contract as a matter of law, our standard of review is de novo: we construe the contract without deference to the trial court’s construction. Bank of Ravenswood v. Polan,
The signers of the certificatе of deposit, Everette and the bank, were the two contracting parties. Everette was the creditor, the bank was his debtor, and the nonnegotiable certificate of deposit was evidence of the bank’s contractual promise to him to repay the loan with interest. See Drenckpohl v. Barker,
According to the terms on the back of the certificate of deposit, if the conjunction “or” appears between the names of the payees, “payment may be made[,J upon surrender of this certificate[,] to any of them.” (Emphasis added.) In context, the permissive word “may” corresponds not to the surrender of the certificate of deposit but to the bank’s discretion to pay one as opposed to all of the payees.
In Drenckpohl,
“The provision on the back of the сertificates of deposit *** permits any one of the joint tenants to receive payment on the instruments by surrendering them, to [the] [b]ank. This provision conferred a benefit to each joint tenant as any of them could have received payment upon surrender of the certificates to [the] [b]ank.” (Emphases added.)Drenckpohl, 253 Ill. App. 3d at 210 ,625 N.E.2d at 656 .
Again emphasizing the surrender of the certificates of deposit, the aрpellate court stated as follows:
“According to the terms incorporated into the certificates of deposit, Velma Drenckpohl was permitted to invade the corpus of the certificates of deposit to the detriment of the other joint tenants. *** [She] was perfectly within her right as a joint tenant, under the terms of the certificates of deposit, to surrender the certificates of deposit for payment.” (Emphasis added.) Drenckpohl,253 Ill. App. 3d at 210 ,625 N.E.2d at 656 .
Defendants rely heavily on Drenckpohl, even quoting those passages. They argue that under the “Terms and Conditions” on the reverse side of the certificate of deposit, Margaret, too, could “surrender the certificate at any time and *** receive the entire proceeds.” (Emphasis added.) To “surrender” something means to “giv[ej up the possession of [it,] especially] into the power of another” (Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 1183 (10th ed. 2000)): “the act of redelivering the instrument to the obligor” (15 W Jaeger, Williston on Contracts § 1876, at 667 (3d ed. 1972)). Defendants seem to forget that Margaret never surrendered the certificate of deposit. According to plaintiff, Margaret and Abendroth “knew [pjlaintiff had possession of [the certificate of deposit, and] yet they cashed it by falsely representing it as lost.” Defendants never really respond to that argument. They never explain how, under the “Terms and Conditions,” which plainly contemplate a “surrender of this [c]ertificate,” Margaret could cash the certificate of deposit while plaintiff still had possession of it.
The law existing at the time and place of the contract is considered a part of the contract as if expressly incorporated therein (Schiro v. W.E. Gould & Co.,
To determine whether plaintiff was “aggrieved” or “injured” (see 765 ILCS 1005/4 (West 2000)), we must consider whether she has any legal basis to complain of Margaret’s “end run” around the requirement of surrendering the certificate of deposit. Because the benefit of the contract was direct rather than incidental to plaintiff and Margaret (just as direct, in fact, as it was to Everette himself), they were third-party beneficiaries of the contract. See Carson Pirie Scott & Co. v. Parrett,
Because a third-party beneficiary’s rights extend no further than the contract, the promisor can assert against the beneficiary any contractual defense that
Apparently, plaintiff believes the bank labored under the delusion that the certificate was lost and, therefore, the bank did not so much waive surrender as erroneously deem it excused. In a memorandum in the trial court, plaintiff argued that “[ijnsofar as the [b]ank was concerned, Margaret’s cashing of the [certificate of deposit] was permissible,” given her “false statement to the bank [that] *** the [certificate of deposit] was lost.” That argument is puzzling, considering Abendroth’s testimony that he and Margaret had told the bank the certificate of deposit “was still being held by [plaintiff].” Nevertheless, in affirming the trial court’s judgment, we are not limited by either the trial court’s rationale or the parties’ arguments but can rely on any grounds the record reveals. In re Estate of Bontkowski,
Even thоugh, in the indemnity bond, Margaret represented to the bank that the certificate of deposit was lost, the bank knew it was not lost, for she and Abendroth had told the bank that plaintiff had possession of it. The bank paid Margaret anyway, intentionally relinquishing (so it would seem) its right to require the surrender of the certificate of deposit as a condition of payment (see Illinois Valley Electric Co-Operativе, Inc. v. City of Princeton,
Plaintiff is “aggrieved” at defendants not because she has any interest in the specific funds the bank paid to Margaret. Everette’s deposit with the bank
We find further support for affirmance in the follоwing language from In re Estate of Taggart,
Defendants argue that even if plaintiff could recover from Margaret’s estate, she cannot recover from Abendroth, for section 4 applies only to actions between cotenants (Guth v. Texas Cо.,
B. Whether Brashears Is a Necessary Party
Defendants argue that as a joint tenant of the new certifícate of deposit, Brashears was a necessary party and the trial court should not have entered the judgment without her joinder as a defendant. They argue she “has an interest in the proceeds of that new certificate of deposit” and the court “could not order that one[-]half of those proceeds be turned over to plaintiff without affecting *** Brashears’[s] interest therein.” See Bovinett v. Rollberg,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Affirmed.
