110 Me. 32 | Me. | 1912
The following essential facts appear in the agreed statement upon which the finding of the Justice at nisi prius was based.
Fred E. Savage and Nellie A. Savage were married in March, 1873, and lived together until the death of the husband, on January 26, 1904. Two children were born to them, a son, Fred, born in [877 and still living, and a daughter born in 1874, who married one Lewis and died in 1906, leaving a daughter Marguerite.
December 7, 1910, the widow married the defendant, John H. Berry, executed her will on December 9, 1910, and died testate January 22, 1911, leaving him practically all her estate. He was subsequently appointed administrator with the will annexed. The plaintiff was appointed administrator of the estate of the first husband, Fred E. Savage, on July 10, 1911.
This controversy arises over a savings bank deposit, and the agreed facts as to that are as follows:
April 17, 1893, Nellie A. Savage deposited $150 in the Gardiner Savings Institution in the name of her husband, Fred E. Savage. All, or nearly all, the subsequent deposits were made by her. Withdrawals of $45 and $25 were made by Fred E. on June 28, 1893,
Mr. Savage was for several years prior to the opening of the account with the Gardiner Savings Institution, and most of the time thereafterwards until his death, in the employ of Lawrence Brothers of South Gardiner, as their head sawyer, at wages of three dollars per day, with usually a gift or bonus at the end of the sawing season. During a part of the time, he and bis wife carried on a boarding house for employees of Lawrence Brothers, but had ceased to carry it on before the account in the, Gardiner Savings Institution began. The deposits of said account, prior to his death, consisted of his earnings and their joint savings. At the time of their marriage, neither husband nor wife had any property worth mentioning and neither received any during their married life except from their earnings.
Under these agreed facts, the plaintiff seeks to recover in this action for money had and received the amount of the deposit in the Gardiner Savings Institution at the husband’s death, with interest.
The case was heard by a single justice, who found for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,400.46, with interest from the date of the writ;
The single issue is, was that deposit the property of Fred E-Savage at the time of the decease on January 26, 1904?
We start out with the conceded fact that the money deposited belonged to the husband. It came primarily from his earnings, and was his alone. How was the title to it, or any part of it, taken from him and given to his wife? The burden is on the defendant to show this; and it must be proved by clear and convincing evidence.
“A strong instinctive passion for property often leads a husband or wife into schemes for the absorption and conversion of the other’s possessions, and equity is watchful to defeat all such wrongful appropriations. It requires that the donor’s intention to divest himself or herself of the property, and the execution of that intention by an act of delivery, shall be clearly proved by the donee.” Lane v. Lane, 76 Maine, 521. The same requirement exists in the case at bar which is an action for money had and received and equitable in its nature.
It is not claimed by the defendant that prior to July 1, 1901, the wife had gained any title to the deposit, but the contention is set up that by causing the entry to be changed on the bank ledger and the deposit book by adding the words “Nellie A. Savage and” and “may be drawn by either in any event” followed by the joint possession of the book, the wife was thereby made an owner in joint tenancy in the technical sense, so that at the husband’s death not only the deposits made prior to such change but also all subsequent deposits became hers by right of survivorship.
The learned counsel for defendant admits in his brief that under the facts as agreed there was no gift causa mortis, and that no trust was created, and he “does not claim that what was done amounted to an absolute gift by Mr. Savage in his lifetime to Mrs. Savage of the entire deposit. In that sense but in that sense only there was no gift inter vivos.” His own statement of his position is this: “That a joint tenancy was created in 1901, with a right of survivorship, and that on the death of Mr, Savage his wife surviving, she took the whole deposit; no part of it having been withdrawn after the change in title.”
In the first place, estates in joint tenancy are not favored in law at the present day and cannot be created in this -State without unequivocal and compelling language. Stetson v. Eastman, 84 Maine, 366. Our statute, first enacted in 1821, provides as follows: “Conveyances, not in mortgage, and devises of land to two or more persons, create- estates in common, unless otherwise expressed. Estates vested in survivors upon the principle of joint tenancy shall be so held.” R. S., ch. 75, sec. 10.
In Stetson v. Eastman, supra, it was contended that this section applied to real estate but not to personal property, and this contention was answered by the court in these words: “It seems incredible to us that any such distinction could 'have been contemplated. There is more reason for rejecting the offensive doctrine in its application to chattels or moneyed securities than in its application to landed estates.” While, therefore, joint tenancy in personal property may exist in certain rare cases, it must be created by apt and explicit terms.
Can it be said that the additional efttry made upon these savings bank books created necessarily a joint tenancy?
In the second place, it is laid down by all the authorities that there are four essential characteristics of a joint tenancy; unity of interest, unity of title, unity of time and unity of possession. 23 Cyc., 484; 17 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, p. 649, and cases cited. Unity of title means that the interests must accrue by one and the same conveyance; and unity of time, that the interests must commence at one and the same time. Case v. Owen, 139 Ind., 22, 38 N. E., 395.
This -would seem to contemplate conveyance or devise by A, the sole owner, to B and C, as joint tenants, not a splitting up of A’s ownership so that B becomes a joint tenant with A. But granting for the sake of argument that this -might be done by carefully worded conveyance, it can hardly be said that this naked book entry meets the requirement which is so jealously guarded by the law, and that is the only evidence in the case to disclose the husband’s intention.
Another incongruity arises in regard to the deposits made after July I, 1901, amounting to nearly $500. Were they also transferred, as fast as made? Was it a continuing conveyance in joint tenancy ?
So much for the technical requirements of the estate claimed.
But it must not be forgotten that preliminary to the character of the estate granted is the prerequisite of the gift itself. Whatever the interest conveyed, the transfer itself must first be proved, and this case is barren of facts tending to show that the husband intended to make his wife at that time a gift of the whole, either in joint tenancy, or in tenancy in common, except what is to be inferred from the meagre entry in the book. No officer of the bank testified as to what was said when the addition was made or the reason for making it. No declaration of Savage to any one at any time is offered. Neither the intention to give is proved, nor the consummation of that intention by loss of dominion over the property given. The husband continued to have the same control over the deposit after July 1, 1901, as before. The book being in their joint possession, he could have withdrawn every dollar.
The more natural and reasonable inference to be drawn from the transaction is that the husband intended one of two things, either:
First, to constitute the wife his agent in order that the deposit could be drawn more conveniently; or
Second, to make a gift to take effect at his death, that is, a testamentary disposition which is void under the statute of wills.
The first inference is not far-fetched. The husband was a busy breadwinner.. His work was at South Gardiner at some distance from the bank in which his money was deposited. To avoid the trouble of making out an order to his wife whenever he might wish to withdraw, this change might have been made. One such order had already been given by him, and while there happened to be no
The -following are a few of the vast number of cases where entries similar to the case at bar have been held to have been made for convenience only and no title was transferred: “Julia Cody or daughter Bridget Bolin,” In re Bolin, 136 N. Y., 177, 32 N. E., 626; “August Grote and wife Edvina or either,” Schich v. Grote, 42 N. J. Eq., 352, 7 Atl., 852; “Lawrence McDonald, Sarah McDonald and the survivor, subject to the order of either,” Dougherty v. Moore, 71 Md., 248, 18 Atl., 315; “A or B, either to draw,” Schippen v. Kempkes, N. J. Eq., (1907) 12 L. R. A. N. S., 355; Skillman v. Wiegand, 54 N. J. Eq., 198.
On the other hand, if the -husband by this entry intended to make a gift that should take effect at his decease, such a testamentary disposition would be void under the statute of wills.
This principle is so firmly established that it needs no discussion. Burns v. Burns, 132 Mich., 441, 93 N. W., 1077; Whalen v. Mulholland, 89 Md., 199; Nutt v. Morse, 142 Mass., 1; Drew v. Hagerty, 81 Maine, 231; Norway Bank v. Merriam, 88 Maine, 146; Bath Savings Institution v. Fogg, 101 Maine, 188.
It is therefore the opinion of the court that the defendant has not produced evidence sufficient to divest Fred E. Savage of the title to the deposit in the Gardiner Savings Institution at the time of his decease.
The justice at nisi prius gave judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,400.46 with interest from d-ate of the writ. This sum was evidently made up by adding to the principal, $1,876.98, the dividends thereon declared by the banks. The plaintiff claims that as the wife treated the fund as her own, her estate should be charged at the rate of six per cent, making a total of $2,740.07 with interest from date of the writ. But the plaintiff did not except
Exceptions overruled.