Barstow v. Tetlow

97 A. 829, 115 Me. 96, 1916 Me. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 6, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 97 A. 829 (Barstow v. Tetlow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barstow v. Tetlow, 97 A. 829, 115 Me. 96, 1916 Me. LEXIS 19 (Me. 1916).

Opinion

King, J.

February 9, 1909, Amanda M. Kent made a deposit in the Providence Institution for Savings of Providence, Rhode Island in the names of “Amanda M. Kent or Ellen J. Tetlow or the survivor of them.” Mrs. Kent died August 27, 1910, testate. Her will was proved and allowed in the probate court for Kennebec County, Maine, and the executrices therein named, Ellen J. Tetlow and Eva R. Crane, were appointed and qualified. At the time of Mrs. Kent’s death the amount to the credit of said bank deposit was $6,188.90, which Ellen J. Tetlow thereafter drew out of said bank claiming title thereto. Thereupon, on petition of the appellees [98]*98and after hearing, the Judge of probate of said county decreed that the amount of said deposit should be inventoried and accounted for as a part of the estate of Mrs. Kent. From that decree Ellen J. Tetlow appealed, and the case is reported to this court for determination on so much of the evidence as is legally admissible.

The appellant asserts title to the fund in question (i) as the surviving joint tenant and owner of the deposit, claiming that such joint tenancy was created by a gift inter vivos from Mrs. Kent to her; and (2) that, if the evidence is not sufficient to establish such a joint tenancy in the deposit by a gift inter vivos, there was a gift causa mortis of the deposit to her.

The deposit háving been made in Rhode Island and the transactions connected therewith having occurred there, the law of that State undoubtedly governs in the determination of the appellant’s claim of title to the fund as the surviving joint tenant of the deposit.

It is well established by the dscisions of the court of that State that a bank deposit may be so made that two persons shall be joint owners thereof during their joint lives, and the survivor take upon the death of the other. Whitehead v. Smith, 19 R. I., 135; Industrial Trust Co. v. Scanlon, 26 R. I., 228. Where it is claimed that a joint tenancy in a bank deposit is created by a gift inter vivos, the gift must be established by sufficient proof as in the case of any other gift. Trust Co. v. Scanlon, supra. And in the instant case, in order to sustain the appellant’s claim of title to the deposit as the surviving joint tenant of it by a gift inter vivos the evidence must establish an intention on the part of Mrs. Kent to make such a gift and that she carried out that intention by such acts as were necessary to be done on her part to make it complete and effectual.

In behalf of the appellees it is claimed that the joint survivor-ship deposit was made by Mrs. Kent with no intention to make a present gift to Mrs. Tetlow of an interest as joint tenant in the deposit or that any title or beneficial interest in the money should pass to Mrs. Tetlow until Mrs. Kent’s death; but that the deposit was so made as a matter of convenience in order that Mrs. Tetlow, living in Providence, could draw from the deposit such sums as Mrs. Kent, who lived in Maine, should from time to time require, and also with the intent and belief that, if the deposit was so [99]*99made, then, in the event of Mrs. Kent’s death before she had made a satisfactory testamentary disposition of her property, any balance of this deposit would pass to Mrs. Tetlow and not go to the heirs at law of Mrs. Kent.

To constitute a valid gift inter vivos it must be absolute, irrevocable and complete, whether the donor die or not, and the subject of it must be delivered to the donee so that the donor parts with all present and future dominion over it. Sessions v. Mosley, 4 Cush., 87, quoted with approval in Flaherty v. O’Connor, 24 R. I., 587, 590; Grover v. Grover, 24 Pick., 261; Dole v. Lincoln, 31 Maine, 422. If the intention be that the gift is to take effect only at the death of the donor it is ineffectual, because that would be an attempted testamentary disposition of property which can be accomplished only by means of a valid will. Prov. Inst. for Savings v. Carpenter, 18 R. I., 287, citing Savings Bank v. Fogg, 82 Maine, 538. And to establish the gift claimed by the appellant the evidence must show that Mrs. Kent intended to give Mrs. Tetlow a then absolute and irrevocable joint tenancy and ownership in the deposit, thereby divesting herself of all present and future dominion and control of the interest and right so given, and that she made a delivery of the subject matter of the gift — the joint tenancy in the deposit.

Under a joint survivorship deposit either party has authority so far as the bank is concerned to draw any part or the whole of the deposit on presentation of the deposit book. And in some cases the suggestion has been made that inasmuch as the alleged donor of such a deposit has the power to defeat the gift by drawing the deposit the control of the deposit is thereby retained by the donor and the gift is not absolute. Referring to that argument against the vesting of an interest in joint tenancy in such a deposit, the Rhode Island court in Industrial Trust Co. v. Scanlon, supra, said: “To this it may be replied that the donee has the same power, if he has possession of the book. Both parties cannot hold the book at the same time, and the mere fact that one has possession of it ought not to be conclusive against the rights of the other.”

In the case at bar the deposit book representing the joint survivorship account was handed by Mrs. Kent to Mrs. Tetlow at [100]*100the time the deposit was made and thereafter she retained possession of it. We are therefore of the opinion that the evidence in this case is reasonably sufficient under the law of Rhode Island to establish a complete gift inter vivos to Mrs. Tetlow of a joint tenancy in the deposit if Mrs. Kent then intended to make such a gift in presenti. And this is the controlling question: Did Mrs. Kent intend by making the joint survivorship deposit to divest herself of the beneficial ownership of the fund during her life and to deprive herself of her right to dispose of it by will ?

There is no material conflict of admissible evidence. It consists mainly of the acts and statements of Mrs. Kent at the time the deposit was made, and of her previous and subsequent conduct, as tending to disclose her intent in opening the bank account in question. It seems proper to make here some reference to that practically undisputed evidence.

Mrs. Kent and her husband formerly lived in Rhode Island. Their only child, a girl, died at the age of about 6 years. Mrs. Tetlow, the appellant, a niece of Mrs. Kent, lived and had her home with them from the time she was about fifteen years old until her marriage to Mr. Tetlow in 1880, when she settled in Providence. For some years prior to Mr. Kent’s death in 1907 the Kents lived in Fayette, Maine, on a farm, and Mrs. Kent’s residence there continued until her death. Both Mr. and Mrs. Kent had money on deposit in the Providence Institution for Savings. The relations between the Kents and Mrs. Tetlow were always intimate. They were accustomed to send to her orders on the bank for money which she drew and sent to them. They advised with her about their business affairs. She visited them and they visited her. In short the relations existing between them were like those between parents and daughter. Mr. Kent died testate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 A. 829, 115 Me. 96, 1916 Me. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barstow-v-tetlow-me-1916.