94 A. 657 | Md. | 1915
On the 22nd day of September, 1911, Mrs. Sarah Hunter, a resident of Fredericksburg, Virginia, deposited with the National City Bank of Baltimore the sum of six thousand dollars. The deposit was in the form following:
The National City Bank of Baltimore.
Dr. In Account With Sarah Hunter, or Sara R. Heineman.
1911 — Sept. 22 — Cash $6,000 In Trust for both, joint owners, subject to the order of Sarah Hunter, the balance at death of either to go to the survivor. *233
The sum thus deposited was the individual money of Sarah Hunter. No part of the principal of the sum deposited was withdrawn, but interest on the same was paid to Mrs. Hunter to April 1, 1913. Mrs. Hunter died intestate in April, 1913, and letters of administration upon her estate were granted by the proper court in the State of Virginia to J. Conway Chichester, who notified the bank that he claimed the fund as the property of the estate of Mrs. Hunter, deceased. Sarah R. Heineman also notified the bank that the fund belonged to her. In view of these conflicting claims, the bank filed a bill in the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City against J. Conway Chichester, administrator, and Sarah R. Heineman, in which it prayed that said defendants be required to interplead and adjust their several demands and claims, and expressed its willingness to pay said sum to such defendant as might be adjudged entitled thereto.
On January 3, 1914, the Court decreed that the parties defendant interplead, and further ordered that the plaintiff be at liberty to retain out of said fund the sum of two hundred dollars as a fee to its solicitors, and that in interpleading Sarah R. Heineman should be designated as plaintiff and J. Conway Chichester, administrator, as defendant.
John W. Stone was appointed by the Orphans' Court of Baltimore City administrator of the estate of Mrs. Hunter, and as such administrator, upon his petition, was authorized to intervene and assert whatever rights he might have to the fund. Sarah R. Heineman, designated as plaintiff in the decree of January 3, 1914, asserted her right to said money, and alleged that she is now the absolute owner of the fund, and that no other person or persons had any interest therein; and prayed that a decree be passed declaring the fund to be her property and payable to her. By an order passed July 30, 1914, J. Conway Chichester, administrator, was stricken from the record as a party defendant, and John W. Stone, administrator of Sarah Hunter, was substituted in his stead as a party defendant, with leave to file an answer, which he subsequently did, and in which he set forth the *234 grounds upon which he claimed the money as the property of the estate of Mrs. Hunter.
Quite a large volume of testimony was taken by the parties, and the Court, on January 8, 1915, adjudged and decreed that the fund in dispute belonged to and was the absolute property of Sarah R. Heineman, and ordered and directed that it be paid to her with the accumulated interest, less the deduction, as set forth in the decree of interpleader, and that the costs of the proceedings to the date of the decree be paid out of the fund. From this decree John W. Stone, administrator, has prosecuted this appeal.
An effort was made on behalf of the appellant to show that at the time the deposit was made and for a long time prior thereto Mrs. Hunter was of unsound mind, and was under the control and dominion of the plaintiff, but the evidence wholly fails to support these contentions. On the contrary, the overwhelming weight of the evidence, of intelligent and disinterested witnesses, shows that Mrs. Hunter was of sound mind and capable of attending to, and did in fact attend to, all her business affairs, and it is not shown that the deposit was induced by the undue influence of the plaintiff.
The only real question in the case is, whether, under the facts in evidence, the deposit constituted a valid declaration of trust as to the six thousand dollars. If it did, it is conceded that the money now belongs to the plaintiff and that the decree should be affirmed. The law upon the subject is well settled in this State. It is stated as follows in Milholland v. Whalen,
In Littig v. Mt. Calvary Church,
The circumstances under which the deposit was made leave no room for doubt as to the intention of Mrs. Hunter with respect to the fund. She was the grandmother of Sarah R. Heineman, and the testimony shows that she was devotedly attached to her. Mrs. Heineman was born in the home of her grandparents, was educated by them, and lived with them until her marriage. After her marriage she visited them frequently, and after the death of her grandfather, in 1900, Mrs. Hunter spent much of her time with her in Baltimore and also visited her in New York. Mrs. Heineman exhibited great consideration and affection for her grandmother, and appears to have been uniformly kind and attentive to her. The relations between Mrs. Hunter and her children were not so pleasant, due to causes which it is not necessary to discuss. Some years before the deposit she *237 had made a will in which she left the greater part of her estate to Mrs. Heineman. She destroyed this will before the deposit was made. When urged by Miss Welch, a witness in the case, to make another will, and provide for the younger Mrs. Hunter, a widow and daughter-in-law, who had nursed her and rendered her services, she refused to do so, saying: "They will only break it, because they have been fighting all their lives."
In September, 1911, Mrs. Hunter and Mrs. Heineman were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Mason in Baltimore. Mr. Mason was then the cashier of the National City Bank. The circumstances under which the deposit was made are given as follows in his testimony: "During the evening Mrs. Hunter asked me if she could deposit a sum of money in my bank under certain conditions, and I told her she could, and which I did afterwards, and after it was completed she went on to New York. Mrs. Hunter asked me if she could put money in our bank under the conditions that she could have the control of it during her life, and at her death it would go to Mrs. Heineman, or at Mrs. Heineman's death it would still be hers, but she wanted the control of it while she lived, and I told her she could, and fixed it that way, as I supposed, according to the custom of our bank.
"Q. After having this conversation with her what did you then do?
"A. After I told her she could do it she had a check drawn on some bank in Fredericksburg for six thousand dollars. She never told me how much she wanted to put there; I did not know. She had the check for six thousand dollars drawn and handed it to me that evening. I told her after I went to the office I would have the money deposited and on my return I would give her the pass-book and would have to have her sign a signature card, which I brought home to her and which she signed, and I took the book and signature card back to the bank. That is the only transaction I ever had with her." *238
He delivered the bank book to Mrs. Hunter, and she and Mrs. Heineman signed the signature card. Mrs. Mason testified that after the deposit had been made Mrs. Hunter "was delighted and willing to die then, she said, because she thought she had fixed Mrs. Heineman to some extent the way her grandfather would have loved to have had her fixed, by leaving her this six thousand dollars so no one else could get hold of it but her."
These facts, which are undisputed, bring the case directly within the principles laid down in Milholland v. Whalen andLittig v. Mt. Calvary Church, supra, and establish a valid trust as to the six thousand dollars deposit, with a power of withdrawal or reservation expressly reserved to Mrs. Hunter. Whether or not a trust has been created in any given case is, in the last analysis, a question of intention. No particular words are necessary to create a trust, and trust relations will be implied when it appears that such was the intention. The subject of the deposit being personalty, the trust may be created and proved by parol. The form of the entry, the instructions of Mrs. Hunter, and the parol evidence establish the trust, and effectuates the clear intention of Mrs. Hunter with respect to the disposition of the fund.
Decree affirmed, the costs in this Court to be paid by theappellant. *239