88 Me. 146 | Me. | 1895
On April 27th, 1892, Mrs. Esther S. Reed, having at that time a deposit in the Norway Savings Bank of $1901.23, standing in her own name, surrendered her pass-book and had the whole of her deposit transferred to two new accounts. By her direction the sum of $950.62 was entered upon the books of the bank and upon a pass-book as follows : "Norway Savings Bank in account with Esther S. Reed and Harry Q. Millett or their survivor in joint tenancy.” And the sum of $950.61 was entered by her direction upon the books of the.bank and upon a pass-book as follows: "Norway Savings Bank in account with Esther S. Reed and Myra J. Millett, or their survivor in joint tenancy.”
Both of the pass-books were delivered to Mrs. Reed and were always afterwards retained by her; they were found after her
Mrs. Reed died October 26th, 1892, leaving a will dated August 13th, 1883, nearly nine years before the time of making the deposits above referred to, in which she made a bequest of $1000 in favor of Harry Q. Millett and of $500 in favor of Myra J. Millett. Myra J. Millett is an adopted daughter of Mrs. Reed and Harry Q. Millett is the son of Mrs. Millett. Mrs. Reed never drew any portion of the principal or interest of the deposits, and the accounts were in no way changed except that the semi-annual interest was placed to their credit.
Evidence was introduced of statements and declarations made by Mrs. Reed, tending to show an intention on her part that these deposits should take the place of the pecuniary provisions of her will in favor of Mrs. Millett and her son, and that she intended to change her will by striking out the bequests in their favor. She died without having made any change in her will.
Both of these-deposits being now claimed by the executor of Mrs. Reed’s will as belonging to her estate, and by Mrs. Millett and Harry Q. Millett respectively, the Norway Savings Bank has brought these two bills of interpleader to have the title to the same determined. The cases come to the law court upon report, the facts being the same in each.
That the acts of Mrs. Reed were not sufficient to constitute a gift of each of these deposits, must be and is conceded. To constitute a valid gift inter vivos the giver must part with all present and future dominion over the property given. He cannot give it and at the same time retain the ownership of it. There must be a delivery to the donee or to some one for the donee. And the gift must be absolute and irrevocable without any reference to its taking effect at some future period. Dole v. Lincoln, 31 Maine, 428; Carleton v. Lovejoy, 54 Maine, 446; Robinson v. Ring, 72 Maine, 140; Northrop v. Hale, 73 Maine, 66.
Here there was no delivery, either actual or constructive»
For the same reasons, as well as for others, these were not gifts causa mortis.
But it is claimed that these acts of Mrs. Reed were sufficient to create voluntary trusts in favor of Myra J. and Harry Q. Millett.
The only important difference between a gift and a voluntary trust is, that in the one case the whole title, legal as well as equitable, the thing itself, passes to the donee, while in the other, the actual, beneficial or equitable title passes to the cestui que trust, while the' legal title is transferred to a third person or is retained by the person creating it, to hold for the purposes of the trust. But a gift of the equitable or beneficial title must be as complete and effectual in the case of a trust, as is the gift of the thing itself in a gift inter vivos. "It is just as essential, to establish the trust sought to be set up here, to prove some act on the part of the donor that shall operate to pass the equitable title to the donee, as it is to prove delivery in a gift inter vivos.” Bath Savings Institution v. Hathorn, 88 Maine, ante, p. 122.
The creation of a trust is but the gift of the equitable interest. But on account of the difference in the form and purposes of the two transactions, it necessarily follows that different acts are essential in the two cases. While delivery and a surrender of all present and future dominion over the property given is absolutely necessary in a gift, these would be inconsistent with the very purposes of a trust, where a person creates himself as the trustee; possession and control in such a caso remain in him who has the legal title, subject .to the direction of courts of equity.
While courts of equity will enforce a perfect and completed trust, although purely voluntary, it is certainly true that equity will lend no assistance towards perfecting a voluntary contract or agreement for the creation of a trust, nor regard it as binding so long as it remains executory. In order for such a trust to be valid and enforceable, it must always appear from the written or oral declaration, from the nature of the transaction, the relation of the parties and the purposes of the gift, that the fiduciary relation is completely established. Nor will the court enforce as a trust a transaction which was intended as a gift but is imperfect for that purpose, "for then every imperfect instrument Avould be made effectual by being converted into a perfect trust.” If such a trust is otherwise sufficiently created, its validity is not affected by the fact that the donor reserved the right to modify the purposes or revoke the trust, nor that he reserved the income of the trust fund during life.
The foregoing is the general doctrine in relation to voluntary trusts as laid down by many authorities. Martin v. Funk, 75 N. Y. 134; Young v. Young, 80 N. Y. 422; Beaver v. Beaver, supra; Stone v. Hackett, 12 Gray, 227; Davis v. Ney, 125 Mass. 590; Gerrish v. New Bedford Institution for Savings, 128 Mass. 159; Sherman v. New Bedford Savings Bank, 138 Mass. 581; Pope v. Burlington Savings Bank, 56 Vt. 284;
Applying these general principles to the facts in the cases under consideration, it becomes necessary to determine whether Mrs. Reed by any unequivocal. language or act showed her intention to create an executed voluntary trust with respect to these deposits, in favor of the persons named, so that whatever legal rights she retained were to be thereafterwards held by her as trustee for the donees.
We do not think that any acts or language of hers can admit of such interpretation. She never made a declaration of trust, formal or otherwise. She never notified the persons named as joint tenants of the transaction at the savings bank; and while this may not be necessary if the creation of the trust is clearly established, it is a circumstance of greater or less weight, according to the facts of each case, upon the question of intention. It seems to us that she purposely retained possession of the passbooks and withheld all knowledge of the transaction from the persons named in the entries upon the books, in order that she might retain the control of the deposits for her own purposes if necessary. We cannot see that she ever by act or word constituted herself a trustee of these sums of money for others.
In the recent case decided by this court of Bath Savings Inst’n v. Hathorn, supra, p. 122, in which a voluntary trust was sustained, the deposit was made "in trust for Alice B. Files.” The court held that the words "in trust for” were sufficient to create a prima facie trust and that the declaration, acts and conduct of the donor were consistent with the presumption arising from the entry.
In Barker v. Frye, 75 Maine, 29, a deposit was made in a savings bank in the name of the donee, subject to the order- of the donor during her lifetime. Subsequently the donor notified the treasurer of the bank that she desired to make such a change as would give the donee the full and absolute control over the deposit from that time and that her right to control the same should cease, and at her request the original entry, "subject to
This court has held that where A deposited money in a savings bank in the name of B, without a declaration of trust at the time or subsequently, and retained the deposit book until his death, it was not sufficient to constitute either a gift or a trust. Robinson v. Ring, 72 Maine, 140.
That where A deposited in a savings bank money in the name of B, but without the knowledge of B, with the entry on the books of the bank and on the pass-book, subject to A, and A received the dividends and such portion of the principal as she required for her own use and held the pass-book always in her possession, that these facts did not constitute either a gift or a trust in favor of B, and that if there was any trust, B was the trustee for the depositor. See also Parcher v. Savings Institution, 78 Maine, 470; Curtis v. Portland Savings Bank, 77 Maine, 151; and Drew v. Hagerty, 81 Maine, 231.
It is, of course, true that the transaction at the savings bank in April, 1892, had some significance, and that by the change that Mrs. Reed had made at that time she intended to do something for the benefit of the persons, whose names by her direction, were respectively entered upon the books as joint tenants with her. But we think it is clear from the nature of the transaction, that she did not intend by this tranfer of • her deposit to the new accounts, to make at that time fully executed gifts of either the legal or equitable title to the new deposits, or to part with all control over the same, except such as she might retain as trustee for the benefit of others; but rather that her intention was to make a testamentary disposition of these deposits, so that the persons named should each take, in case he or she survived her, what might be left of each sum after her death. Such an attempted disposition is inoperative because contrary to the statute of wills. Augusta Savings Bank v. Fogg, 82
In Sherman v. New Bedford Savings Bank, supra, A made a deposit with the following condition annexed: "Interest to be paid on order of A. Principal to be drawn by B after decease of A.” It was held that this was not a perfect gift, that the intention of the donor was that the gift should not take k fleet until after his death and was therefore void. In this case the intention of the depositor was similar in effect. It cannot be claimed that the persons named as joint tenants could draw any portions of the funds until after the death of Mrs. Réed; until that time she intended to retain possession and control, not merely as trustee. It was only after her death that the survivor should have the benefit of the money deposited ; until that time the attempted gift was not to take effect. There is a well-recognized distinction, and one upon which may depend the validity of the transaction, between a fully executed gift or trust in which the donor reserves the right to the income or even to such part of the principal of the fund as may be needed, as in Davis v. Ney, and Stone v. Hackett, supra, and an unexecuted trust which is not to take effect until the death of the donor.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that there was no perfected gift of either the legal or equitable title to the sums deposited by Mrs. Reed in the Norway Savings Bank, and that these deposits consequently belong to her estate.
We think however, in view of all the circumstances, that the taxable costs of each of the parties should be paid out of the estate.
Decree accordingly.