144 N.Y.S. 508 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
Lead Opinion
This appeal comes to us from the Third Department, Mr. Justice Lyon of that court having been disqualified from sitting and the remaining justices qualified to hear said appeal being equally divided in the determination thereof.
The action is to recover of the defendant bank the sum of
Both pass books, covering the accounts in the names of the mother and nephew respectively, were retained by plaintiff, she remaining in possession of them, carrying them constantly upon her person. In October, 1908, plaintiff lost both books and has never recovered either. Immediately upon discovering her loss plaintiff notified defendant thereof and demanded the balance of said deposits with accumulated interest. Then for the first defendant learned of the peculiar circumstances of the deposits. The. defendant declined to pay unless plaintiff would give defendant a bond to indemnify it against loss. Plaintiff called several times upon defendant, in company with friends and counsel, and was informed that the bank would not pay unless plaintiff produced a bond indemnifying it against presentation of the books. The defendant has also signified its willingness to pay the amounts of the deposits, with accrued interest, in each case, to the personal representatives, when appointed, of the persons in whose names the deposits were made. However, the evidence seems to indicate that this last offer to pay to personal representatives was not made at the time of the demands made by plaintiff when she made known to the bank the loss of the pass books. The sole condition which then seems to have
I do not think the defendant is in a position to insist upon plaintiff’s producing such bond. It has adopted no rule or by-law authorizing it to impose such a condition upon its payment of deposits when pass books are lost. In the absence of such a provision of its by-laws defendant is not justified in resisting plaintiff’s claim on that ground. (Mierke v. Jefferson Co. Savings Bank, 208 N. Y. 347, 353.)
Nor do I think under the circumstances the plaintiff should be compelled to administer the estates of her deceased mother and nephew in order to obtain the moneys which she thus deposited. So far as the evidence discloses, the facts are not sufficient to confer jurisdiction upon any court to appoint personal representatives of the deceased persons. The mother of plaintiff was never a resident of this country, nor is it shown that either she or the nephew had any property here or elsewhere, and unless plaintiff should concede that the deceased persons had some interest in the funds in question which upon their decease passed to and formed their estates, it is difficult to see how administration could be obtained. (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 2476, 2662; Matter of Jones, 70 Misc. Rep. 154; Matter of McCabe, 84 App. Div. 145; Evans v. Schoonmaker, 2 Dem. 249; Matter of Taylor, 6 id. 158.) Nor do I think the plaintiff open to criticism for declining to concede that the deposits belonged to her mother and nephew respectively for the purpose of laying foundation for the appointment of personal representatives of the deceased persons. From her standpoint neither had any interest in their respective funds unless they survived her. And besides, such a position on her part might involve dangerous complications upon final distribution of the estates, and when she might encounter embarrassment in explaining the true situation to creditors or next of kin of the deceased persons. The defendant professes entire willingness
The moneys were deposited with defendant under some theory on plaintiff’s part that if her mother and nephew should survive her the moneys so deposited would go to each respectively upon plaintiff’s death. It is clear to me that she had no intention to cohvey to either of her said relatives any present title or interest in the moneys so deposited, and that unless they survived her it was her intention that they would have no interest therein. Not alone by her testimony is such intention borne out, but it clearly appears from the manner in which she made the deposits, her withholding the knowledge thereof from her mother and nephew, her occasional withdrawals from one of the accounts and her retention of the pass books.
So far as parting with title to the moneys so placed by her, the case is no different in principle than had she made provisions in her will for her mother and nephew, to become effective upon her decease. Such testamentary provisions would convey no title to the bequests unless the beneficiaries survived the testatrix, and could be revoked by her at any time prior to her death. So with these deposits. They were to become effective only upon the mother and nephew surviving plaintiff. They having died, it seems to me she had a clear right to revoke her action, and indeed the deaths of the mother and nephew prior to that of plaintiff ipso facto worked a revocation of plaintiff’s acts in making the deposits in their respective names so far as any interest which they might have had in case they had survived' her may be concerned.
Moreover, I think plaintiff’s acts fell far short of creating trusts in favor of her mother and nephew, either absolute or tentative. There certainly was no declaration of trust when either deposit was made, nor at any time thereafter. No trust can be implied simply by a deposit by one person in the name of another. As was said by Judge Andrews, in Beaver v. Beaver (117 N. Y. 421, 428): “To constitute a trust there must be either an explicit declaration of trust, or circumstances which show beyond reasonable doubt that a trust was intended to be created.”
Plaintiff, in making the deposits shown in the case at bar with the intention that those whom she deshed to aid should only receive her bounty upon her death, passed no title to said funds. The plaintiff parted with no title to the moneys deposited.
As was said by Judge Werner in Sullivan v. Sullivan (supra): “The defendant acquired no rights inpræsenti; she
I am, therefore, of the opinion that the evidence establishes conclusively that the plaintiff is the only person entitled to the moneys in question. The pass books are lost, and satisfactory proof of such loss has been presented to the bank. It would seem that plaintiff has met every reasonable requirement that defendant could make. Its insistence upon the appointment of legal representatives of the mother and nephew is apparently based upon the erroneous assumption that they were the depositors, within the terms of section 26 of defendant’s by-laws. The plaintiff was the depositor. Defendant has no right to impose as a condition of payment of the moneys in question that personal representatives of the mother and nephew be named, and that payment be made to them.
It, therefore, seems to me that plaintiff is entitled to recover of defendant the balance due her upon said deposits, with accrued interest, and that the judgment of the court below should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event..
All concurred; Kruse, P. J., in a separate memorandum.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Mr. Justice Merrell, except I am inclined to think that a tentative trust was established, but it was revocable by the depositor during her lifetime (Matter of Totten, 179 N. Y. 112, 125; Matter of United States Trust Co., 117 App. Div. 178; affd., 189 N. Y. 500), and she having done so, the trust never became effective. She is, therefore, entitled to recover the moneys.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.