195 N.E. 888 | Ohio | 1935
Lead Opinion
There are but two questions in this case, as we view it:
First, did Tego acquire a vested interest in the moneys on deposit with the building and loan company, by virtue of the joint and survivorship contract?
Second, if he did acquire a vested interest therein, does the law or the public policy of the state of Ohio divest him of such interest?
The rights of Tego are largely determined by Section 9648, General Code:
"To receive money on deposits, and all persons, firms, corporations and courts, their agents, officers and appointees may make such deposits and stock deposits, but such corporation shall not pay interest thereon exceeding the legal rate. When such deposits or stocks deposits are made to the joint account of two or more persons, whether adults or minors, with a *437 joint order to the corporation that such deposits or any part thereof are to be payable on the order of any one or more of such depositors, and to continue to be so payable notwithstanding the death or incapacity of one or more of the persons making them, such account shall be payable to any one or more of such survivors or survivor or order notwithstanding such death or incapacity. No recovery shall be had against such corporation for amounts so paid and charged to such account."
Apostol and Tego complied with this section by executing the contract provided for therein and delivering it to the West Side Building and Loan Company. This was a contract inter vivos between the two, carrying a present, vested interest to Tego; and had Section 10503-17, General Code, been in effect at that time, which it was not, it could in no wise have affected his rights.
Counsel seem to attach a great deal of importance to the word "order" as used in Section 9648, General Code. We see nothing in this set-up that ascribes to this word any unusual or peculiar meaning. By the execution of this joint and survivorship contract, each authorized the West Side Building and Loan Company to pay any and all credits at that time or thereafter on the account to either, both before, after and notwithstanding the death or other incapacity of either of them.
This court inferentially construed this section in the case of the Cleveland Trust Co. v. Scobie, Admr.,
There is a written contract in this case and it is presumed to state the intent of the parties thereto, so long as it is clear and unambiguous. We fail to find any ambiguity therein. The contract is clear, its words are plain, and it will not admit of parol testimony to vary its terms.
There is some testimony in the record to the effect that Apostol stated to an officer of the building and loan company that he wanted Tego to have the account in case anything happened to himself. He could have made this expression by way of last will and testament, but he did not see fit to do so. He gave Tego a present, vested interest; and while he attempted, through his friend Jim Nicoloff Pascoff to nullify this contract, it never was accomplished.
The building and loan company must rely upon the contract between Apostol and Tego for its acquittance. Any attempted nullification of the contract by Apostol should be accompanied with the same solemnities as witnessed the creation of the contract. For the building and loan company to recognize anything less would be subjecting it to danger. Apostol gave to Tego by this contract a right in the account as absolute as that of himself. Nothing more could have been done to invest Tego with a complete title.
We have heretofore stated that there is no statutory law in Ohio that deprives Tego of his right to this account. Counsel insist that Tego's right should be denied him because to allow it would be in contravention of sound public policy and place a premium on murder. We are not subscribing to the righteousness of Tego's legal status; but this is a court of law and not a theological institution. We have no power to attaint Tego in any way, shape or form. Property cannot be taken from an individual who is legally entitled to it because he violates a public policy. Property rights are too sacred to be subjected to a *439 danger of that character. We experience no satisfaction in holding that Tego is entitled to this account; but that is the law and we must so find.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is hereby affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., JONES, MATTHIAS, DAY and ZIMMERMAN, JJ., concur.
Concurrence Opinion
It is with reluctance that I am constrained to concur in the majority opinion. If this were a case where Tego's right to the money was through inheritance, or by will, I should feel strongly urged to deny him that right on the ground "that no one shall be permitted to take advantage of his own wrong, or to found any claim upon his own iniquity, or to acquire property by his own crime." 9 Ruling Case Law, 49. But Tego had a present joint interest in the deposit equal to Apostol's — a property right in the whole deposit prior to Apostol's death. Cleveland Trust Co. v. Scobie, Admr.,
How can we logically take his own property away from him?
Dissenting Opinion
Apostol Milvanos and his nephew entered into a written contract of deposit with the West Side Building and Loan Company, Dayton, Ohio, creating a joint survivorship account. There was immediately credited to the account about $10,000 which represented the life savings of the uncle. No claim is made that the deposit was special; in fact it is undisputed that it was general in nature and therefore created the relation of debtor and creditor between the bank and the depositors. The nephew was an accomplice in the murder of his uncle and was convicted as being the moral author of that crime. Afterwards *440 Nick Oleff was appointed administrator of the decedent's estate, and the building and loan company then paid the full amount of the deposit to such administrator as assets of the estate upon bond being given the company to save it harmless from loss. A petition was thereupon filed in the Probate Court of Montgomery county by the administrator to determine heirship, and Dale Hodapp, as resident guardian of the nephew, filed a cross-petition setting up that the account was what is known as a joint survivorship account and that under the contract of deposit the nephew as survivor was entitled to the whole amount, and concluding with a prayer that the fund be declared to be his property and "for all other relief in law or equity" to which he might be entitled. Helen Milvanos filed an answer alleging she was the widow of the uncle and that the nephew and a conspirator had killed the uncle. Upon trial evidence was adduced to show that the uncle was murdered by one Diskos and the latter was instigated to commit the crime by the persuasion and importunity of the nephew. The Probate Court found that the money was assets of the decedent's estate and should be distributed according to the laws of Greece. Other facts appear in the majority opinion.
There is no statute in Ohio that is controlling, as Section 10503-17, General Code, became effective subsequent to the death of plaintiff in error's decedent.
A searching investigation has failed to reveal any case covering the precise point under consideration except In reSantourian's Estate,
In my judgment the instant case is controlled by the principle announced in Filmore v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
The rule seems to be universally recognized that the murderer of the insured cannot take as beneficiary under a policy on the life of the insured. Smith v. *442 Todd,
The next step is to inquire why this principle applies in the instant case and in doing so it is necessary to analyze analogous cases.
There is a distinction that should constantly be borne in mind. A marked difference exists between cases arising out of public acts of the Legislature on the one hand and those arising out of private grants, and contracts between individuals, on the other. Under the former class would come all cases involving heirship dependent upon the statutes of descent and distribution. Under the latter would come cases involving wills, conveyances by deed, contracts of insurance and the like. Cases involving joint tenancies and tenancies by the entirety are more difficult of classification but would seem to stand on a footing somewhat different from either of the two classes mentioned.
The distinction referred to is made plain inMcAllister v. Fair,
"There is a manifest difference, however, between privategrants, conveyances and contracts of individuals and a publicact of the legislature. It might be that a person would not be permitted to avail himself of the benefits of an insurance policy the maturity of which had been accelerated by his felonious act. Many considerations of an equitable nature might affect the *443 operation or enforcement of a grant or contract of a private person which would have no application or bearing on a statute enacted by the legislature. So far as the descent of property is concerned, the courts are practically unanimous in holding that all the power and responsibility rest with the legislature. They have spoken with one voice in opposition to the exclusion of an heir from taking an estate on account of crime, where the statute in plain terms designates him as one entitled to inherit." (Italics ours.)
In view of what is later said herein it should be borne in mind that McAllister v. Fair was decided in 1906 and therefore nothing is found in the report of it regarding the trend of modern authority in applying the principle of the constructive trust.
The joint survivorship account lacks the elements of a joint tenancy at common law. While a joint tenancy in real estate is not recognized in Ohio, the parallel remains. Joint tenants are seized "by the half or moiety, and by all" and one joint tenant cannot do any act that will injure or defeat the estate of the other. 2 Blackstone Commentaries, 182. Where a survivor of two joint tenants dies, the former, being seized of all, has a vested interest in the whole, both before and after survivorship. In the joint survivorship account involved either one might withdraw the whole of the deposit at any time while both were alive provided the other had not previously done so and was not then demanding withdrawal; there is no vested interest in the sense that there is in a joint tenancy. Each co-depositor had contractual relations with the banking institution and, the deposit being general, neither depositor had a right to any specific money.
In Equitable Life Assur. Co. v. Weightman,
Neither co-depositor in the instant case had a right in the account that the other could not deprive him of by withdrawal during the lifetime of both.
Where a husband and wife are seized of property as tenants by the entirety and husband murders his wife, it has been held that the legal title to the estate remains in him as the survivor but he becomes a constructive trustee for the benefit of his wife's heirs. Bryant v. Bryant,
It is held in many jurisdictions that an heir who murders his ancestor cannot be deprived of his inheritance for the reason that it is beyond the power of the courts to read something into the statutes of descent and distribution. There is a decision to this effect in Ohio. Deem v. Millikin, 6 Cow. C., 357, 3 Cow. D., 491; affirmed without opinion in
This wholesome doctrine is imbedded in our jurisprudence and has been frequently applied. It is thus stated inMoore v. Crawford,
There should be no hesitation in applying this principle to achieve the ends of justice where it is necessary to do so. It seems, however, that neither the right to inherit nor the right to retain title to tangible property is involved in the record presented. At best the nephew gained a mere right of action by the murder of his uncle. If the constructive trust theory were applied the nephew would hold his right of action in trust for the distributees of the deceased. But it is not necessary to apply that doctrine. The question is: Is the nephew to prevail on the cross-petition? The amount of the deposit is in the hands of the administrator of his deceased uncle.
Another interesting line of cases arises where the legatee or devisee murders the testator. In such cases the rule is laid down that the legatee or devisee cannot take upon the theory that, though the will is valid, the legacy or devise fails.Riggs v. Palmer, supra; In re Wilkins' Estate,
The courts do not make the vesting of the interest the test. A devise of realty nominally vests in the devisee when the will takes effect, but the courts will *446 not allow the devisee who murders the testator to retain title. This result is accomplished by holding the devise invalid. On the other hand the heir who murders the ancestor is allowed to take by many courts. The latter cases are, however, grounded upon the inability of the court to insert in the statute of descent what is not there.
The difference between rights under a contract and those arising wholly by statute is of interest and value; but it may be said that Section 9648, General Code, fixes a right similar to that of an heir under the statute of descent. A careful reading of that section, however, will make plain the dissimilarity. Its provisions merely authorize the account and prescribe that it "shall be payable to any one or more of such survivors or survivor or order notwithstanding such death or incapacity." As was asserted in Cleveland Trust Co. v. Scobie,Admr.,
To permit the nephew's guardian to recover would be *447 to allow him to gain something he did not have before his uncle's death. Before the act of homicide the nephew had a relative right to the deposit. If he did not withdraw it before the uncle did, he had no right therein. And if both appeared at the bank window and demanded the whole deposit at the same time and persisted in the demand the only recourse would be to divide it. The nephew killed his uncle and made it impossible for the uncle to withdraw the deposit and the nephew now claims his right to withdraw it was made exclusive and absolute in him by his uncle's murder. In order to prevail and obtain the money the nephew through his guardian brings suit by his cross-petition and to give relief the court must by decree sanction the wrongful act and base its judgment thereon. If the nephew is allowed to retain his so called "vested right" he will have nothing he can possess. It is only by the court's aid that he can enjoy the profits of his wrongful deed.
It is a natural revulsion that arises on being compelled by judicial decree to assure to a murderer the fruits of his crime and give him sanctuary from civil accountability for his deed. It is always hard to be forced to sacrifice the right for the sake of a syllogism. We are not required to do so in the instant case. Reason and authority sustain the conclusion that the murderer cannot recover the amount of the deposit.
It would seem therefore that the judgment in the trial court was warranted and the judgment of the Court of Appeals should be reversed and the judgments of the Probate Court and Common Pleas Court be affirmed. *448