43 A. 43 | Md. | 1899
This is another Savings Bank deposit case, but it is unlike any of the numerous ones that have preceded it. The facts are few and simple. Elizabeth O'Neill, on the 24th day of *213 April, eighteen hundred and ninety-five, opened an account in the Metropolitan Savings Bank. In the pass-book which she then received, the following entry appears: "Metropolitan Savings Bank, in account with Miss Elizabeth O'Neill. In trust for herself and Mrs. Mary Whalen, widow, joint owners, subject to the order of either; the balance at the death of either to belong to the survivor." This entry was made at the instance and upon the request of Miss O'Neill; and the teller of the bank testified that "the entry as it appears in this book carried out * * * and embodies the instructions given * * * at the time the account was opened." There is a by-law of the bank which provides that "every deposit made by one person for the benefit of another person shall be expressed to be `in trust,' and no deposit shall be received, or be expressed to be received, from one person `by' another person, or by one person `for' another person." The bank-book was retained by Miss O'Neill. The aggregate of the deposits foots up two thousand three hundred and twenty-three dollars and forty cents. There was drawn out by Miss O'Neill in varying amounts, during her life, the sum of five hundred and twenty dollars; and, after the death of Miss O'Neill, Mrs. Whalen withdrew one hundred and twenty-five dollars. There are two claimants of the balance now on deposit, viz., Mrs. Whalen and Miss O'Neill's executor. Upon a bill filed by the bank they have been required to interplead. On this state of facts the law is well settled.
"Where a person intends to give property to another, and vests that property in trustees, and declares a trust upon it in favor of the object of his bounty, by such acts, the gift is perfected, and the author of the trust loses all dominion over it; and in such gifts of mere personal estate, the declaration of trust may be made and proved by parol, without the aid of writing. And the cases go the length of maintaining that where the author of the gift retains the legal dominion over the subject of the gift in himself, but fully and completely declares himself to be trustee of the property *214
for the purposes indicated, there he will be treated as trustee, and the object of his bounty will be given the benefit of the trust. In all such cases the declaration of trust is considered in a Court of Equity as equivalent to an actual transfer of the legal interest in a Court of Law; and, if the transaction by which the trust is created be complete, it will not be treated as invalid for want of consideration." Taylor v. Henry Bruscup,
There are many cases to be found in the reports where these familiar principles have been applied to deposits in Savings Banks. We will allude to some of them, not because they make the principles any more obvious, but because they furnish illustrations of the application of those principles to just such contentions as this litigation presents.
It will be observed that the bank is not, by the terms of the deposit, made the trustee, and we have, therefore, no question confronting us as to the power of a corporation to act in that capacity. The contract between Miss O'Neill *215
and the bank is evidenced by the words of the entry and as understood by her according to the testimony in the record, constituted Miss O'Neill the trustee; and if effective at all, operated to divest the title to the money out of her individually, and to vest it in her as trustee for the purposes expressed. According to all the cases, if she intended to accomplish this result, it was perfectly competent to her to do it, and to do in that way; and when done it constituted a complete change in the ownership of the money. Her intention to do precisely what was done is not left in doubt; for the testimony of the bank's teller is clear and emphatic that the entry represents exactly and literally what Miss O'Neill desired to consummate. Such a declaration of trust differs widely from a gift inter vivos and from a donatio mortis causa. These, to be effective at all, require a delivery of the thing itself, and must pass the whole title, so that the donor can have no further dominion or control over it; but a gift in trust withholds the legal title from the donee. The legal title may be transmitted to a third person, or it may be retained by the donor, but in either case the equitable title has gone from him, and unless the declaration of trust contains a power of revocation it leaves him powerless to extinguish the trust. Bath Sav. Ins. v. Hathorn,
In the application of the principles we have just stated, to deposits in Savings Banks there has been some divergence of views, but no dispute as to the principles themselves. There is one line of cases which holds, that to perfect the trust, knowledge of the deposit must be communicated to the beneficiary; whilst the opposite line holds the deposit to be sufficient of itself, as a declaration of trust, to vest the beneficial interest in the cestui que trust, if that was the intention of the depositor. But it can, upon principle, make no possible difference whether the depositor communicates the fact of the deposit to the beneficiary or not (except in so far as the communication may be evidence of the intention with which the deposit was made) for the validity of the trust *216
does not depend on the assent of the cestui que trust, but wholly upon the intention of the depositor and an apt declaration of the trust. The distinction between these two lines of cases is not a difference of principle. The cases of the first group hold that notice of the fact of the deposit to the beneficiary is necessary evidence of the creation of the trust, as contradistinguished from an act necessary to be done to create
the trust; whilst the other cases treat the entry itself, or any other competent evidence of the existence of the intention to establish a trust, as sufficient, even though the beneficiary to be in total ignorance of it. It is, at most, a difference as to the quality of the evidence needed to prove the trust, not a difference as to the method by which such a trust may be created. In Maryland it is not requisite that the cestui que trust
should be notified of the declaration or establishment of the trust. Smith Barber v. Darby,
In Martin v. Funk,
Without multiplying illustrations, or overburdening this opinion with further references, those just given suffice to show that such a deposit as we are now dealing with, constitutes a valid declaration of trust, in the absence of contravening proof; and that when a trust is thus created the rights of the beneficiary become fixed, even though the settlor retains the bank-book in his possession. Nor does the circumstance that the depositor makes himself a beneficiary jointly with another, prevent the trust from attaching to the fund. A trust is not rendered void by the appointment of a beneficiary as trustee. 1Perrv on Trusts, sec. 297; Woods v. Woods, 1 M. Cr. 401;Crockett v. Crockett, 1 Hare, 451; S.C., 2 Phill. 553;Hill on Trustees, 65, note 1; Story v. Palmer,
We have, then, a valid declaration of trust impressed upon the funds in bank, and the bank holding them, not as trustee, butfor the trustee, with knowledge of the conditions of the trust. The trustee was seized of the money for the use of herself and her sister, as joint owners of the equitable interest; and both were authorized to draw the funds upon producing the bank-book. This is not all. The declaration of trust transferred to the trustee the legal title for the benefit of the survivor of the two cestuis que trustent, as to the balance of the fund remaining in bank at the death of either. By the terms of the declaration of trust, upon the death of Miss O'Neill, the balance on deposit became Mrs. Whalen's property, not by a gift and delivery of the bank-book, nor by the right of survivorship as one of two joint owners, nor by a gift of the funds intervivos; but purely and exclusively because the trust, as declared in eighteen hundred and ninety-five, stripped Miss O'Neill of her individual ownership of the money, and vested the money in her in trust, as to this balance, for Mrs. Whalen, if the latter happened to outlive Miss O'Neill. The Statute of Uses, 27 Henry, VIII. ch. 10, has no application to this case, and the title to the funds is unaffected by the operation *219
of that enactment. "When a trust has been created in personalty, and all the purposes of the trust have ceased, or are at an end, the absolute estate is in the person entitled to the last use."Denton v. Denton,
What obligations or liabilities, if any, the bank, as custodian of the fund, assumed by accepting the deposit upon the trusts declared; or how far it would be accountable to the cestui quetrust if it knowingly participated in a dissipation or waste of the trust funds, or an appropriation of them to a purpose foreign to the trust, are questions not now before us, and a discussion of them is not required in disposing of the conflicting claims of the parties to this controversy.
Miss O'Neill had the power to fasten a trust on her own property for the benefit of herself and another, where the rights of creditors were not interfered with; and she could lawfully do this and retain in her own possession the evidence of her having done it. Carson v. Phelps,
Our conclusion, founded on well-recognized legal principles and on carefully considered judicial precedents, is, that Mary Whalen, as cestui que trust is entitled to the fund on deposit in the Metropolitan Savings Bank; and, as the decree appealed from awarded that fund to her, it will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed with costs in this Court and in the Courtbelow to be paid by the executor of Miss O'Neill out of herestate.
(Decided March 16th, 1899). *220