143 N.Y.S. 373 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
Lead Opinion
This action was originally brought by Joseph Gruilfoyle against the Cohoes Savings Institution, to recover the sum of $3,000 which was on deposit in that institution in the name of Mary Norton Gruilfoyle. The defendant, as executrix of the last will and testament of Mary Norton Gruilfoyle, was impleaded. Joseph Gruilfoyle thereafter died and the plaintiff is substituted as his representative.
At the trial Joseph Gruilfoyle was allowed to give evidence of personal transactions with his wife, Mary Norton Gruilfoyle, which evidence before the decision of the action was properly stricken out by the trial judge. Apart from the evidence stricken out, however, these facts appear without contradiction. The moneys represented by this deposit were originally deposited by Joseph Gruilfoyle and his wife Mary in this same institution in an account which read: Payable to “Mary Gruilfoyle or Joseph Gruilfoyle. Pay to either or the survivor of either.” Four days before the death of Mary Gruilfoyle, in the absence of Joseph Gruilfoyle, she went to the bank, drew the money and deposited it to an account in her own name. The next day she made a will purporting to dispose of the same. Under this will the defendant executrix claims title to the property.
In Kelly v. Beers (194 N. Y. 49) one Kate V. Beers deposited in a savings bank moneys in an account which read as fol
■ All'concurred, except Woodward, J., dissenting in opinion; Howard, J., not sitting.
Dissenting Opinion
Joseph Guilfoyle, in his lifetime, brought an action against the Cohoes Savings Institution to recover the sum-of $3,000 which had been on deposit in that institution, represented by book No. 29,396. This account appears to have been opened on the 4th day of April, 1905, and was, by its terms, payable to “ Mary Guilfoyle or Joseph Guilfoyle. Pay to either or the survivor of either.” It was closed on the 12th day of May, 1909, and- on the same day a new account was opened by the same institution, represented by book No. 35,185, payable to Mary Norton Guilfoyle, and showing a balance of practically $3,000. There is no dispute that this new account was created out of the funds in the old account, represented by book No. 29,396, and the Cohoes Savings Institution, does not question that it is the custodian of this fund, and, by an inter-pleader, it is now holding the same subject to the final judgment in this action.
On the 15th day of May, 1909, and three days after the transfer of the account above noted, Mary Norton Guilfoyle executed her last will and testament, and on the following day died. Margaret Dunnigan was, by the provisions of that will, made executrix of the same, and upon its probate she was given letters testamentary and entered upon the discharge of her duties, demanding the amount of the deposit in the Cohoes Savings Institution in her representative capacity. With two claimants demanding the money the Cohoes Savings Institution interpleaded, and, as stated above, now holds the fund for the successful party in the present action, Margaret Dunnigan, as executrix, being substituted as defendant. The trial has resulted in a • judgment in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals to this court.
Obviously, upon the facts as above set forth — and they are not disputed — the Cohoes Savings Institution was fully justified in turning over the fund represented by book No. 29,396 upon the presentation of the book by Mary Guilfoyle or Joseph Guilfoyle, for it was directed in the book itself that the bank should “pay to either or the survivor of either,” and the presumption is, of course, that if Mary Guilfoyle presented the book
Upon the trial, after a number of objections had been urged against the admission of the testimony of the plaintiff, on the ground that he was disqualified under the provisions of section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure, it was agreed that the evidence should be heard under a general objection to its competency, and that the court should in its final determination pass upon the question of its competency. Under this arrangement the plaintiff was permitted to testify that the account was opened by himself; that he told one of the officers of the Cohoes Savings Institution that he wanted to have the fund fixed so that it would go to his widow in the event of her surviving him; that he was the owner of all of the fund; that his wife had no money of her own, and no way of making any money during the time that they lived together, covering a period of about twenty-one years, and generally that he, as the sole owner of the fund, had merely provided for her survivor-ship; that he had the bank book, kept it locked in his trunk, and that he kept the key either in his pocket or in a pitcher in his room, and that he missed the key before the death of his wife and complained about the loss; that after his wife’s death the key was returned to him by the defendant or his wife’s sister, and that he then opened his trunk and for the first time discovered the loss of the bank book. The court first submitted three questions to the jury as to the ownership of the fund, and then made findings of fact and conclusions of law inconsistent with the verdict of the jury, and struck out the material portions of the plaintiff’s testimony under the reservation agreed to upon the trial, and the principal question involved on this appeal is as to the correctness of this final ruling upon the question of the competency of the plaintiff as a witness in this action.
The record is rather confusing, but it does not appear to be
The case would be weak even with the plaintiff’s testimony, for the bank officials testify to a state of facts directly contrary to that asserted by the plaintiff in reference to the original account, and the court would have been justified in holding that the deposit was made by Mary Guilfoyle, which would raise the presumption that she had possession of the bank book all of the time between the original deposit and the closing of the account, and which would clearly justify her in drawing the fund and opening another account. With the plaintiff’s testimony stricken from the record, as I believe it should be, there is no foundation for the plaintiff’s contention, and there is no ground on which the judgment may properly be disturbed.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment reversed on law and facts and judgment directed awarding the moneys in dispute to the plaintiff, with costs in this court and in the court below. The finding of fact of which this court disapproves being the finding that Mary Norton Guilfoyle was at the time of her death the owner of the moneys in question, and this court finds that at all times after the original deposit Joseph Guilfoyle and Mary Guilfoyle were joint owners with the right of survivorship of the deposit in question.