Balfour v. Seitz

140 A.2d 441, 392 Pa. 300, 1958 Pa. LEXIS 454
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 21, 1958
DocketAppeal, 16
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 140 A.2d 441 (Balfour v. Seitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balfour v. Seitz, 140 A.2d 441, 392 Pa. 300, 1958 Pa. LEXIS 454 (Pa. 1958).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Benjamin R. Jones,

This appeal presents an oft litigated issue: Whether under the circumstances a gift inter vivos of a bank account has been established.

John L. Balfour, a resident of Butler County,: .died intestate, August 12, 1955.

*302 Sometime prior to 1930 decedent opened in Ms own name a savings account in tbe Mars National Bank of Mars, Pa. Approximately twenty to twenty-two years later — between October 1950 and September 26, 1952 — tbe name of Letitia Seitz, one of decedent’s nine cliildren, was added to this account which was then styled “John L. Balfour or 1 Letitia Seitz.” 2 Neither a signature card, withdrawal agreement, nor a survival agreement was ever signed by the parties. The bank did not require any written agreement in connection with its savings accounts.

In 1953 six withdrawals, totalling $325, were made from tMs account — all by decedent alone. Only one deposit — $500 in 1954 — was made in the account; the identity of the person making this deposit was not established. For approximately ten years prior to his death Balfour had lived with one of Ms sons and there is no evidence that he had ever lived with Letitia Seitz or that she had performed any unusual or particular services for him. Subsequent to decedent’s death the passbook for the account was found among his papers, the account then having a balance of $1918.46.

Balfour’s administrator, claiming the money belonged to the estate, petitioned the Orphans’ Court of Butler County for a declaratory judgment. Letitia Seitz, although she did not so aver in her answer to the petition for declaratory judgment, claimed the account as gift inter vivos to her on the basis of an alleged, but unproved, oral agreement between herself and decedent.

After a hearing, the Court below concluded as a matter of law that decedent had created a joint tenancy with the right of survivorship in the savings account, *303 that be had made a gift inter vivos of the account to Letitia Seitz and that upon decedent’s death the funds represented by the account belonged to Letitia Seitz. From the decree dismissing the petition for a declaratory judgment this appeal was taken.

The factual record in the Court below was: (1) approximately three to five years prior to decedent’s death a savings account in the name of “John L. Balfour” was changed to read “John L. Balfour or Letitia Seitz”; (2) according to a former bank teller Letitia Seitz’s name was added to the account at the instruction of and in the presence of both decedent and Letitia Seitz; (3) at that time the teller explained to both parties that after either party died the account would belong to the survivor; (4) neither decedent nor Letitia Seitz made any recalled response to the teller’s explanation; (5) no evidence was produced that Letitia Seitz ever deposited any of her own money in the account; (6) all the withdrawals from the account were made by decedent alone; (7) the bank hook was in decedent’s possession at the time of his death; (8) under the bank’s regulations (set forth in the passbook) no money could he deposited in or withdrawn from the account without the presentation of the passbook.

In Marietta Estate, 390 Pa. 255, 258, 135 A. 2d 372, Mr. Justice Bell, speaking for this Court, recently said: “Cases involving joint bank accounts, joint savings accounts . . . have proved vexing. Certain pertinent principles of law are now well settled by recent decisions of this Court, although their application to the different factual situations which so frequently arise is often difficult.”

These well established principles of law, as pertinent herein, are: (1) the mere fact that money is deposited to the account of the owner “and” another or the owner “or” another does not, standing alone, prove *304 a: gift‘inter .vivos; 3 (2) the burden is on .tbe claimant to:establish a gift inter-.vivos 4 -“ by clear and convincing evidence'”; 5 : (3) to constitute a gift inter vivos there must be shown “such an.actual.or constructive delivery to the donee (a) as to divest .the donor of .all dominion and control,-.or (b.) if a-joint tenancy is created, as to invest in the donee so .much .dominion and control of *305 tbe subject matter of tbe gift as is consonant, to a.joint ownership of interest therein”. 6

Weighed in the light of these' principles claimant’s evidence, both in quantity and quality, falls' far short of the quantum of proof required to establish a' gift inter vivos. All that' claimant has shown is'the mere fact that her name-was added-to the account — -“John L. Balfour or Letitia Seitz” — and at that time the bank teller gave his opinion to both decedent and Letitia Seitz as to the legal effect'of the change in nomenclature of the account without evoking any recalled response from either- decedent or claimant.' 7 ' Claimant failed to prove either donative intent and/or delivery.

Isherwood, Exr. v. Springs-First National Bank, 365 Pa. 225, 74 A. 2d 89, directly rules the'instant case. In the Ishenoood case the decedent' opened a savings account in the joint names of herself and her daughter, the passbook reading- “Mrs. Jehnie Isherwood or Ruth Dowler”. Decedent retained possession *306 of tbe passbook until ber death. 8 There was no evidence of any signature card or that such had been executed. 9 The bank’s ledger sheet for this account had the following inscription: “payable to either or the survivor as joint tenants and not as tenants in common”. There was oral testimony by the bank cashier that decedent wanted the account fixed so that in case of her death it would go to the daughter and that decedent understood that either one of them could draw it. 10 Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) Jones stated: “The evidence relied upon by the claimant in her effort to support the jury’s implied finding that the bank account in suit was a joint estate -with the right of survivorship fails to meet the legal requirements in the circumstances.” (p. 229). In that case it was further stated, at p. 231: “. . . the claimant failed to produce evidence of the probative character required to sustain her burden of proving that the decedent affirmatively expressed or evidenced an intention to give her daughter at the time of the opening of the account ... a presently vested interest therein or that she executed any such intention by an equivalence of delivery. Indisputably, there was no actual delivery of the passbook; Mrs. Isherwood retained possession thereof throughout her lifetime: . . .

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Bluebook (online)
140 A.2d 441, 392 Pa. 300, 1958 Pa. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balfour-v-seitz-pa-1958.