Beaucar v. Bristol Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n

268 A.2d 679, 6 Conn. Cir. Ct. 148, 8 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 216, 1969 Conn. Cir. LEXIS 162
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1969
DocketFile No. CV 17-6710-5542; File No. CV 17-6710-5592
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 268 A.2d 679 (Beaucar v. Bristol Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaucar v. Bristol Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n, 268 A.2d 679, 6 Conn. Cir. Ct. 148, 8 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 216, 1969 Conn. Cir. LEXIS 162 (Colo. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

Kosicki, J.

These two causes of action were brought on separate complaints presenting the same issues of law and alleging some basically identical facts. They were tried together by agreement of the parties and order of the court. From a judgment for the defendant in each ease the plaintiff has appealed. The appeals have been combined, and therefore only one opinion of this court will suffice for the disposition of both cases. Practice Book § 606; Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc. § 124.

Upon adequate and sufficient evidence, the court found the following facts, which are not subject to any corrections which would materially affect the judgment reached. Armand Beauear is the duly appointed executor of the estate of Hubert A. Pons. In January, 1966, Pons was the duly appointed conservator of his wife, Mary A. Pons, who was incompetent and confined to a convalescent home. Prior to January, 1966, and continuing to the date of his death, Hubert A. Pons was the joint owner of a bank account in the Bristol Federal Savings and Loan Association, passbook No. S5103, and of another such account in the Bristol Savings Bank, passbook No. 61484. Both accounts were in survivorship with his wife, Mary A. Pons. On January 27,1966, Hubert A. Pons was admitted to the Bristol Hospital on an emergency basis. He was then eighty-four years of [150]*150age and suffering from pneumonia, diabetes mellitus, cerebral arteriosclerosis, hardening of the arteries and poor eyesight. He remained there until February 11, 1966. Thereafter, he was transferred to the Farmington Convalescent Home, where he remained until the day of his death. On January 31, 1966, Hubert A. Pons, while a patient in the hospital, signed in duplicate a power of attorney prepared by his attorney, Louis Hanrahan. The only persons present in his hospital room at the time of execution of the document, in duplicate, were his nephews, Armand Beauear, who as executor is the plaintiff and who signed as a witness, and Raymond Beauear, who took Pons’s acknowledgment. A niece, Dorothy F. Beauear, sister of Armand, was named as the attorney in fact in this document. Neither of the nephews had inquired of Pons’s attending physician or the nurses at the hospital as to Pons’s competency to execute a power of attorney.

The trial court could credit the expert testimony of Dr. Nicholas J. Seguljie, who had attended Hubert A. Pons as his personal physician for several years and treated him during his confinement at the Bristol Hospital, that on January 31,1966, Pons was confused, incompetent, unable to manage his own affairs and not in his right mind to make a decision.

Armand Beauear delivered the executed powers of attorney to his sister, Dorothy F. Beauear, approximately one week after they were signed. Dorothy F. Beauear placed the powers of attorney in a metal box which she kept in her home. Shortly before November 3,1966, Dorothy F. Beauear caused photostat copies of the powers of attorney to be made at her place of employment. On the evening of November 3, 1966, Dorothy F. Beauear, accompanied by Raymond Beauear, presented Bristol Savings Bank passbook No. 61484 to a teller together with a copy of the power of attorney and requested [151]*151the withdrawal of the sum of $7101.49 from this account. She did not sign a written withdrawal slip as required by bank rules. Bristol Savings Bank passbook No. 61484 indicated a joint account in sur-vivorship in the names of Hubert A. Pons and his wife, Mary A. Pons. The teller of the Bristol Savings Bank, after conferring with her supervisor, told Dorothy F. Beauear that a Probate Court certificate of the appointment of Hubert A. Pons as conservator of the estate of Mary A. Pons was necessary before any withdrawal could be made. Dorothy F. Beauear left the bank and never returned to request a withdrawal.

After leaving the Bristol Savings Bank, Dorothy F. Beauear, accompanied by Raymond Beauear, proceeded to the Bristol Federal Savings and Loan Association, where she presented Bristol Federal Savings and Loan Association passbook No. S5103 to a teller together with a copy of the power of attorney and requested the withdrawal of the sum of $5508.07 from the account. She did not sign a written withdrawal slip as required by bank rules. Bristol Federal Savings and Loan Association passbook No. S5103 indicated a joint account in survivor-ship in the names of Hubert A. Pons and his wife, Mary A. Pons. The teller of the Bristol Federal Savings and Loan Association, after conferring with a bank officer, told Dorothy F. Beauear that no withdrawal could be made until legal advice could be secured by the bank. Dorothy F. Beauear left the bank and made no further effort to withdraw these funds.

Hubert A. Pons died on November 18, 1966. The defendant banks were first notified of the plaintiff’s claims through letters signed by his attorney on September 13, 1967. Pons left a will in which Armand Beauear, Raymond Beauear and Dorothy F. Beauear were named as beneficiaries.

[152]*152The trial court concluded from the foregoing facts, which were sustained by the evidence, that (1) On January 31, 1966, Hubert A. Pons was confused, incompetent, unable to manage his affairs and not in his right mind to make a decision, and, accordingly, no authority or agency was granted on that date to Dorothy F. Beaucar; (2) on November 3, 1966, fifteen days before the death of Hubert A. Pons, Dorothy P. Beaucar had no authority to withdraw any moneys from the defendant banks; (3) the plaintiff had failed to sustain his burden of proving by a fair preponderance of evidence that Dorothy P. Beaucar had authority to make withdrawals from the defendant banks on November 3,1966, as claimed in the complaints; and (4) the defendants sustained their burden of proof with regard to the special defense of the ineompetency of Hubert A. Pons on J anuary 31,1966.

In his assignments of error, the plaintiff claims that the court erred in its failure to correct the finding as requested by him, in reaching the conclusions stated, and in rendering judgment for the defendant in each case when the conclusions arrived at by the court do not support it. The first assignment, claiming errors apparent on the face of the record, we disregard. The plaintiff has failed to follow the procedure set out in Practice Book § 959. Furthermore, the assignment avers a question of law which can only be determined on the facts as found after trial and cannot be decided by a mere examination of the pleadings and the actions taken or the rulings made by the trial court in advance of trial. See, e.g., State v. Sul, 146 Conn. 78, 83.

In considering whether the court erred in failing to correct the finding in accordance with the plaintiff’s motion to correct, we cannot overlook the irregular procedure followed by the plaintiff. As [153]*153pointed out by the defendants, the plaintiff had filed no transcript of evidence with his original motion to correct, as required by our rules. Practice Book $ 981. After the motion was denied, the plaintiff filed his assignment of errors but did not file, at the same time, a transcript of such evidence as was relevant and material to the issues on appeal. Practice Book §§ 960, 963. The deficiencies in procedure, however, were partially cured by a later filing of the evidence, by a second motion to correct, which was denied, and by an order of the court extending the time, for each of the parties, for the filing of briefs on appeal. We, therefore, consider the appeal on the merits.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 A.2d 679, 6 Conn. Cir. Ct. 148, 8 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 216, 1969 Conn. Cir. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaucar-v-bristol-federal-savings-loan-assn-connappct-1969.