RATLIFF V. RATLIFF, ADM‘X.
5-3050
Supreme Court of Arkansas
November 11, 1963
372 S. W. 2d 216
There is another and additional reason, sufficient in itself, why there must be an affirmance of this case. Such reason is because the appellants did not request an instructed verdict on the issue of willful and wanton negligence, nor did they otherwise register in the Trial Court their dissatisfaction with thе submission of the issue to the jury: there was neither a motion for new trial nor a motion non obstante veredicto. Rock-Ola Mfg. Corp. v. Farr, 226 Ark. 279, 290 S. W. 2d 2; and Granite Mt. Rest Home v. Schwarz, 236 Ark. 46, 364 S. W. 2d 306.
Affirmed.
Paul Jameson and O. E. Williams, for appellant.
James R. Hale and Glen Wing, for appellee.
Ratliff opened an account in this bank many years ago, at least as far back as 1929. At that time the bank did not use signature cards, relying instead upon its employees’ familiarity with every depositor‘s signature.
On October 21, 1961, Ratliff wеnt to the bank, made a deposit of $970.25, and directed the assistant cashier, Mrs. Broyles, to add the names of Ratliff‘s son and daughter to the account. The bank had on hand two forms of printed signature cards that might have been used. One by its language would have created a joint acсount with survivorship. The other would merely have given the son and daughter the right to check against the account, with any balance in the account at Ratliff‘s death becoming part of his estate.
Mrs. Broyles did not use a signature card at all. There was a ledger sheet for the account, showing the date and amount of each deposit and withdrawal, together with the resulting new balance. Mrs. Broyles wrote above Ratliff‘s name at the top of the ledger sheet, “Mrs. N. Edith Matthews or Herbert L. Ratliff.” She also inserted a typewritten notation, “Names added by Mr. Ratliff 10-21-61.” There is some indication, but no direct proof, that the two new names were also written in the passbook for the account.
Ratliff died in 1962, survived by his widow and the two children (and perhaps by a third heir, the adopted child of a deceased son. See case note, 15 Ark. L. Rev. 194). The estate wаs valued at $13,064.73, the principal assets being a homestead worth $7,500 and this $3,909.01 bank account.
At common law the action taken on October 21 would not, according to the great majority of the courts, have created survivоrship rights in the appellants. The various common law theories are discussed in Professor Brown‘s work on Personal Property, § 65. We are not now concerned with the common law, however, for in Arkansas the field has been covered by statute:
“When a deposit shall have been made by any person in the name of such depositor and another person and in form to be paid to either, or the survivor of them, such deposit thereupon and any additions thereto made by either of such persons, upon the making thereof, shall become the property of such persons as joint tenants, and the same ... shall be held for the exclusive use of the person[s] so named, and may be paid to either during the lifetime of both, or to the survivor after the death of one of them; ...”
Ark. Stat. Ann. § 67-521 (Repl. 1957) .
The statute explicitly and unmistakenly requires that the depоsit be made “in form to be paid to either, or the survivor.” Admittedly that requirement was not
We think the trial court was right in holding that Ratliff did not take the minimum action essential to the creation of a right of survivorship. We need not hold, as the New York courts do under a similar statute, that there must be a strict and literal compliance with the wording of the act. In re Fonda‘s Estate, 206 App. Div. 61, 200 N.Y.S. 881. We do hold that there must be a substantial compliance.
Our earlier cases point to this conclusion. We lay aside the matter of joint accounts between husbands and wives, for such an account is a tenancy by the entirety, with a right of survivorship that is not derived from the statute. Black v. Black, 199 Ark. 609, 135 S. W. 2d 837. In other situations when we have found a right of survivorship the opinion has almost always recited facts showing that the stаtute was complied with, in that the account was payable to either depositor or the survivor. Pye v. Higgason, 210 Ark. 347, 195 S. W. 2d 632; Vincent v. Vincent, 224 Ark. 449, 274 S. W. 2d 772; Tesch v. Miller, 227 Ark. 74, 296 S. W. 2d 392. The facts were not fully stated in Von Tungeen v. Chapman, 233 Ark. 219, 343 S. W. 2d 782. We referred only to the prima facie intent indicated by the signature card, but the record in that case shows that the signature card created an account “in the joint nаmes of the undersigned as joint tenants with the right of survivorship and not as tenants in common.” So there was substantial compliance with the statute.
The appellants insist that Ratliff‘s intention should be of controlling importance. This matter of the depositor‘s intention was thoroughly considered in Park v. McClemens, 231 Ark. 983, 334 S. W. 2d 709. Thе case involved four bank accounts. Three of them were evidenced by signature cards conforming to the statute and creating a prima facie case for a right of survivorship. The proof showed, however, that the depositor, Mrs.
The fourth account in the Park case was like the one now before us, in that it was not in form payable to either depositor or the survivor. With reference to that account we added language which, if it were not for the possibility that it was dictum, would be absolutely controlling in the case at bar: “We point out also that in any event (and regardless of the intention of Mrs. Witten) the Chancellor‘s finding must be affirmed in regard to the $2,159.59 Savings Account No. 4931 in the Texarkana National Bank, because there is no language on the signature card creating a joint account with the right of survivorship.”
Dictum or not, this is a correct interpretation of the statute. A joint account with survivorship is similar to a will in that both are statutory devices by which property may be disposed of at death. In each case certain minimum formal action in the exercise of the statutory privilege has been required by the legislature, doubtless to avoid the dangers of perjury and the uncertainties of parol evidence after death has sealed the lips of the person principally concerned. The chief safeguard with respect to a joint bank account is the requirement that it be in form payable to either depositor or to the survivor. In the case at hand that essential condition to a right of survivorship is absent. Unless we are to strike an important clause from the statute, which we are not at liberty to do, we must conclude that Ratliff failed to take the necessary steps to create a joint account with the right of survivorship.
Affirmed.
ROBINSON and JOHNSON, JJ., dissent.
SAM ROBINSON, Associate Justice (dissenting). The majority concedes that the еvidence in this case proves that in setting up the joint bank account it was the inten-
Here, the evidence is overwhelming that it was the intention of the depositor to make his son and daughter owners of the account as joint tenants. The majority does not contend that the evidence shows otherwise, but say, in effect, that it was admitted that the account was not set up in proper form to constitute a joint tenancy. In my opinion, the record in this case does not show such admission. In fact, appellants stoutly contend that the account as set up by their father is sufficient to constitute a joint tenancy under the provisions of our statute,
What more was necessary? The statute makes no other requirement in order to make an account a joint tenancy. If there is some particular form that a depositor has to fill out to make an account a joint tenancy, thе majority should spell out what that form is. The statute provides for none. This court has held heretofore that the filling out of a form, furnished by the bank for the very purpose of providing for survivorship, was not sufficient to bring the account within the purview of the statute, where there was parolе evidence proving that it was not the intention of the depositor to create a joint tenancy in the account. Park v. McClemens, supra. There, it was held that the intention of the depositor controlled, and not the printed matter on the signature card that was furnished by the bank. To the same effеct is Powell v. Powell, 222 Ark. 918, 263 S. W. 2d 708.
Now this court is holding that there is no right of survivorship when the evidence proves overwhelmingly
It was the intention of the depositor, and as I read the record, it was the understanding of the bank that the account was payable to aрpellants, or their father, or the survivor. Mr. Delford Rieff, president of the bank testified:
“Q. Let‘s go back to my original question then: Just state from the ledger sheet who would have been permitted to make withdrawals on that account on and after October 21, 1961?
A. Mr. Ratliff, Edith Matthews or Herbert Ratliff.”
In these circumstances the account became a joint tenancy. The statute makes it a joint tenancy. The statute uses words of art “joint tenancy“. Such words are to be construed in their technical meaning. It is said in 50 Am. Jur. 265: “Technical words and phrases which have acquired a peculiar and appropriate meaning in law, cannot be presumed to have been used by the legislature in a loose popular sense, but, to the contrary, have been presumed and assumed to have been used according to its legal meaning, and will ordinarily be interpreted, not in its popular, but in its fixed legal sense and with regard to the limitations which the law attaches to them.” Thus, when the legislature provided for a joint tenancy in the account, it automatically provided that one who owns as a joint tenant has the right of survivorship.
In 14 Am. Jur. 79, it is said: “An estate in joint tenancy is one hеld by two or more persons jointly, with equal rights to share in its enjoyment during their lives, and having as its distinguishing feature the right of survivorship...“. In Ferrell v. Holland, 205 Ark. 523, 169 S. W. 2d 643, it was pointed out that there can be a joint tenancy in almost any kind of personal property,
In 50 Am. Jur. 272, it is said: “When the meaning of a law is evident, to go elsewhere in search of conjecture in order to restrict or extend the act would be an attempt to elude it, a method which, if once admitted, would be exceedingly dangerous, since there would be no law, however definite and precise in its language, which might not by interpretation be rendered useless.”
Our statute,
The Missouri case of Princeton State Bank v. Wayman, 271 S. W. 2d 600 (1954), is directly in point with the case at bar. In that case no signature card or other writing was used evidencing the kind of joint account that was established. The Missouri court held that the Missouri statute 362.470, identical with our statute 67-521, providing for joint tenancy, applied because it was shown by the evidence that it was the intention of the depositor that the account be held as a joint tenancy. There, the court said: “It is the intention that controls.” The court further said that there was no statutory presumption, but that the burden was on those seeking to
Since I believe that the intention of the depositor should control, I respectfully dissent.
MR. JUSTICE JOHNSON joins in this dissent.
