*551 OPINION
for the Court.
This dispute arose when four siblings disagreed over how the estate of their mother should be divided. One sister, Elizabeth Cullen, 1 who was the trustee of the mother’s inter vivos trust, filed a petition for an order to discharge her and to distribute the trust assets. Her brothers, Albert McManus, Jr., and Daniel Mc-Manus, and her sister, Jane Martino, objected. They counterclaimed, alleging that Elizabeth had misappropriated trust funds by failing to include the balance of a bank account in the trust assets. The trial justice granted summary judgment in favor of the siblings. It is from that judgment that Elizabeth now appeals.
This case came before the Supreme Court on April 6, 2011, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not summarily be decided. After hearing the arguments of counsel and reviewing the memoranda of the parties, we are satisfied that cause has not been shown. Accordingly, we shall decide the appeal at this time without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
Facts and Travel
On August 4, 2003, Rose McManus and her daughter Elizabeth opened a bank account at Citizens Bank. Apparently, the pair hoped that the account would make it easier for Elizabeth to care for her mother as she aged. There is no dispute that the money used to open the account belonged to Rose exclusively. There was a signature card, signed by both Rose and Elizabeth, that indicated that the account was “joint,” but, significantly, the card did not include the phrase “right of survivorship.” As soon as they opened the account, Elizabeth and her mother were provided with a form entitled “Disclosure for Personal Accounts.” The disclosure provided information about various types of accounts and listed the possible forms of joint accounts as “Joint Account — With Survivorship (And Not As Tenants In Common)” and “Joint Accounts Opened With Only One Signature.” This latter document explained that, for convenience, one account-holder could establish a joint account with only one signature and have the co-owner sign and return the signature card.
When Rose died on February 21, 2004, she was the survivor and trustee of an inter vivos trust that had been established by her and her late husband. 2 Rose had also executed a will that provided for the distribution of her estate through the trust by means of a “pour-over” provision. The trust agreement said that at Rose’s death, the “balance of the principal of the Surviving Spouse’s trust” was to be divided equally and distributed to each of Rose’s then-living children, who were Albert, Jr., Daniel, and Jane, as well as Elizabeth. With the exception of the Citizens Bank account, the assets of the trust were divided and distributed without incident. At the root of this dispute is whether the Citizens Bank account was opened with a right of survivorship in Elizabeth, which would exclude it from the trust. In the alternative, if there was no right of surviv- *552 orship, then the proceeds of the joint account should have been included in the assets of the trust and distributed evenly among the four siblings, as directed by the trust agreement.
Elizabeth argued that the account had a right of survivorship; her siblings did not agree. To resolve the dispute, Elizabeth filed a petition in the Superior Court seeking an order to discharge her as trustee and deliver the trust assets. 3 The siblings responded to the petition and filed a counterclaim in which they alleged that Elizabeth had misappropriated money that properly belonged in the trust. After hearing arguments on the issue of whether the account gave Elizabeth a right of sur-vivorship, the Superior Court granted summary judgment in favor of respondents. The motion justice reasoned that, although the signature card was stamped “joint,” there was no reference to survivor-ship rights. The trust of Rose McManus, through the trustee, Elizabeth, appealed. 4
Standard of Review
“This Court reviews
de novo a
trial justice’s decision granting summary judgment.”
Lynch v. Spirit Rent-A-Car, Inc.,
Analysis
Elizabeth argues that the presence of the word “joint” on the signature card, when combined with the verbiage of the “Disclosure for Personal Accounts,” which was given to her and her mother when they opened the account, created a right of survivorship for the account. We do not agree. Neither document gives any indication of a right of survivorship, which is necessary to create such an interest. Our. holdings in
Gaspar v. Cordeiro,
In
Robinson,
To try to demonstrate the existence of a genuine issue of material fact, Elizabeth argues that the disclosure that was given to her and her mother when they opened the account must be read as part of the agreement with the bank. Relying on the disclosure, Elizabeth contends that the account descriptions suggest that, because the account was opened with two signatures, it was not a “Joint Account[] Opened With Only One Signature” and therefore must include a right of survivor-ship. The rules in the disclosure, however, apply to the account “depending on the ownership and the beneficiary designation, if any, specified on the account records,” and the account at issue here specifies no beneficiary designation. We addressed similar circumstances in
Gaspar.
In that case, the bank provided a document that included survivorship language, but the document never was signed and was issued two years after the accounts were opened.
Gaspar,
By abandoning the formerly unpredictable and inconsistent approach, we sought to avoid situations whereby “lawyers, trial judges, juries, and appellate judges perform post mortem cerebral autopsies and examinations in order to determine and second-guess what the subjective intent of the deceased joint owner of the account was at the time the account was created.”
Robinson,
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court. We remand the papers in this case to that tribunal.
Notes
. In this opinion, we occasionally use first names to refer to the parties or their mother, Mrs. Rose McManus. This is for purposes of clarity only, and we intend no disrespect. Additionally, Elizabeth Cullen and her sister, Jane Martino, are identified using their current names, rather than their maiden name, McManus.
. Rose’s husband, Albert McManus, Sr., predeceased Rose, leaving Rose as the surviving spouse according to their trust agreement.
. Elizabeth filed her petition under G.L.1956 § 18-6-2(a), which says:
"Whenever a trustee holds any sum of money, or any bond, note, or other obligation for money, or evidence of indebtedness, or any certificate of stock or other chose in action, payable or deliverable to, or the property of, another, and the person entitled to it cannot, for any reason, give proper receipt or discharge for it, and the trustee holding the money or property desires to free himself or herself from further liability for it, the trustee may pay or deliver the money or property into the registry of the superior court, presenting with it his or her petition praying to be discharged, and setting out, under oath, to the best of the knowledge, information, and belief of the affiant, the circumstances under which the trustee holds the money or property, and how the other person or persons is or are entitled to it, and why the trustee or they cannot give proper receipt or discharge for the money or property; and upon the filing of the petition, notice of it shall be given in the manner that the court shall direct."
. The respondent, Albert T. McManus, Jr., died on September 7, 2010, and his wife, Elisabeth Greenfield, was substituted as a respondent in her capacity as executrix of the estate of Albert T. McManus, Jr.
. The signature card contains two notations that the record does not identify: "SMT” and "E/E.” "SMT” is typewritten and appears after "CIRSAV," which petitioner in her deposition said referred to the type of account, which was a "Circle Savings” account. "E/ E” is handwritten and appears in the field marked "Special Instructions/Customer Account Title.” Importantly, no party has alleged that these notations represent or even suggest a right of survivorship.
. In explaining the need to clarify the state of the law, this Court in
Robinson v. Delfino,
