I.
The issue is whether funds from a joint savings account to which a husband and wife contributed equally, which were then *319 used by the husband for support of the family, must upon divorce be deducted entirely from the husband’s share of the account. We answer in the negative.
II.
The court made the following findings of fact, to which plaintiff does not except:
Plaintiff and defendant owned, as tenants by the entirety, real property located in Virginia. They sold this property for $64,553.58, and applied $41,736.19 of that sum toward the purchase of a house in Greensboro. They placed the remaining $22,817.39 in a joint savings account from which defendant, over a period of time, withdrew $4,849.02 for application to support or enhancement of the standard of living of his wife and children.
With these funds defendant purchased the following items: a refrigerator, a TV and table, a lawnmower, landscaping at the parties’ residence, gutters for the residence, a garage door opener, and a 1974 Dodge automobile. Plaintiff now has title to the automobile and a writ of possession to the home, which contains the other items which defendant purchased with funds from the joint account.
Shortly before the parties separated, plaintiff withdrew $5,500 from the account.
III.
Plaintiff seeks to recover her share of the joint account. She claims entitlement to one-half of the original balance of $22,817.39, minus the $5,500 which she withdrew. She contends that defendant had a unilateral duty to support her and the children, and that he could not draw on her share of the joint account to fulfill that obligation.
The trial court, based on the foregoing findings of fact, concluded
as a matter of law that the cash obtained from the sale of the Virginia residence retained its characteristic as entirety property, and, as such, the defendant was entitled to exclusive possession of that cash for such time as the parties were legally separated or divorced, but that the same could *320 be charged with the support of the defendant’s wife and children; that the amounts previously referred to in findings of fact expended by the defendant were expended for the purpose of supporting his wife and children in the total amount of $4,849.02; that after said expenditures the amount of $17,968.37 was left remaining as entireties property, of which sum the plaintiff upon her divorce from the defendant was entitled to $8,984.19; that as the plaintiff has previously withdrawn the sum of $5,500.00 from said sum, she is presently entitled to recover from the defendant the sum of $3,484.19, as of October 7, 1981.
It accordingly entered judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $3,484.19 plus interest from 7 October 1981.
Plaintiff appeals.
IV.
We note that the trial court incorrectly concluded “that the cash obtained from the sale of the Virginia residence retained its characteristic as entirety property.” Under Virginia law, that would have been the case.
Oliver v. Givens,
The erroneous conclusion in this regard is immaterial to the ultimate result, however.
V.
The following principles are generally relevant:
A husband has a duty to support his family.
Ritchie v. White,
In our view, however, the facts presented differ from those of the foregoing cases; and place this case within the general rule that even though a husband has a duty to support his family, the wife has no right to reimbursement from the husband for family support expenditures from her separate estate made with her knowledge and consent.
See
Annot.,
In
Petersen v. Swan,
Where, as here, the wife commingled her funds with those of her husband and paid the household expenses out of the common fund without any attempt to segregate her earnings from those of her husband, it must be presumed, in the absence of a showing to the contrary, that she intended to contribute her share toward the household expenses.
Id.
at 104,
In
Spalding v. Spalding,
*322 While [married and living together] it is the duty of the husband to support and maintain his wife, yet such duty is not a debt within the legal acceptance of that term. If a husband uses his wife’s property for the support of the family with her knowledge and consent, a gift of such property by the wife may be inferred in the absence of proof of a contrary agreement, (citations omitted) and where a wife permits her husband to receive the income from her separate estate and use it for the family support the circumstances may justify the inference of a gift. . . . The law will not imply a contract on the part of a husband to re-pay his wife for her property brought into, used and consumed in the household ....
Id.
at 394,
In
Brell v. Brell,
We find the reasoning of these cases persuasive. That spouses today commonly contribute their separate earnings or estates to joint accounts, and periodically draw therefrom to sustain the family or enhance its standard of living, is a matter of common and general knowledge. So, too, is the fact that a standard incident of joint accounts is the unilateral right of any party to the account to make deposits thereto and withdrawals therefrom. Pursuant to the principle that courts take judicial notice of subjects and facts of common knowledge,
Smith v. Kinston,
*323
Given these facts, absent clear and convincing evidence to the contrary, creation of a spousal joint account should as a matter of law imply consent by each spouse to use by the other of funds from the account for purposes of sustaining the family or enhancing its standard of living. To require one spouse, upon divorce, to account for and reimburse sums expended for family purposes from a spousal joint account, which originated in part from the other spouse’s separate earnings or estate, and from which each spouse had the unilateral right to withdraw funds at any time, would be both highly impractical and disruptive of the marital relationship. We agree with the reasoning of the
Spalding
court that it would be “disastrous to marital felicity” to require one spouse, after a number of years of using for family purposes the other spouse’s estate which has been deposited to a spousal joint account, to account to the other spouse for the sums expended, and that “[pjublic policy, ever interested in the maintenance of a harmonious marriage relation, prohibits a contrary rule.”
Spalding, supra,
Here, the trial court found as a fact that defendant withdrew the funds in question for the purpose of supporting his wife and children; and plaintiff does not except to that finding. The record contains no basis for holding that plaintiff carried the burden of proving absence of her consent to that use of the funds. Such consent is thus implied from her volitional creation of, and deposit of funds to, the joint account; and the trial court properly declined, upon divorce, to deduct the sums expended from defendant’s share of the account.
Affirmed.
