Brose Estate

206 A.2d 301, 416 Pa. 386, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 697
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 6, 1965
DocketAppeals, 258 and 263
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 206 A.2d 301 (Brose Estate) 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
Brose Estate, 206 A.2d 301, 416 Pa. 386, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 697 (Pa. 1965).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Bell,

Both parties to a contest in the Orphans’ Court have appealed from its final Decree which dismissed their respective exceptions to an adjudication. The Orphans’ Court decreed (1) that ten entireties accounts should be divided equally between decedent’s wife and decedent’s executor, and (2) that decedent’s wife was entitled solely and absolutely to an alleged tentative trust savings account.

From the facts, most of which were stipulated and others appear in the record, we make the following summary.

Nicholas Brose, * a physician, died testate July 10, 1963, in Allegheny County. On June 27, 1944, he had married a nurse an anaesthetist named Irma E. Brose. ** During their married life together and until May 7, 1963, both continued to practice their respective professions. Money derived from their joint earnings was deposited in ten savings accounts and in one checking account in eight different banks and in one savings and loan association.

*389 “Entireties” Accounts

The parties stipulated that 10 of the aforesaid 11 accounts were “entireties” accounts and totaled $131, 621.10. * More accurately, each account was evidenced by an executed contract of deposit. Some of the contracts are well drawn and are entitled “Nicholas or Irma,” or “Nicholas and Irma,” thus clearly creating a tenancy by the entireties. On the other hand, some of the contracts are inartistically drawn and do not accurately reflect the husband-wife relationship. Some of these list the names of “Nicholas” and “Irma” but do not connect them either with a conjunction or a disjunction ; others denominate the relationship as a “joint tenancy”; and yet another merely says, “Payable to either or to the survivor.”

Moreover, most of the contracts recite, “All deposits made therein shall be owned by us as tenants by the entireties with the right of survivorship. . . .” Several others were opened as “A joint account of husband and wife,” and were made “payable to either of us or the survivor.”

Despite these actual and technical differences, each of the bank accounts and each of the ten contracts above mentioned clearly created (as we shall see) a tenancy by the entireties.

What followed the opening of the aforesaid accounts was very unusual. On May 7, 1963, Irma left the common domicile (concealing her whereabouts from Nicholas) and withdrew $33,000 from their $38,-387.05 checking account at the Mellon National Bank and Trust Company. This was withdrawn without Nicholas’s knowledge or consent. When Nicholas discovered this, he withdrew, without Irma’s knowledge *390 or consent, the entire balance in three other accounts, and almost all of the balance of the checking account in the Mellon Bank. Irma then withdrew 75 percent of one “entireties” account, all of two more “entire-ties” accounts, as well as the entire balance of another, account held by “Irma in trust for Nicholas.”

Each withdrawal was appropriated to the with-drawer’s exclusive use; after Irma’s first withdrawal, each was made with the knowledge by the other spouse of preceding withdrawals but without the consent of the other spouse. Subsequent to Nicholas’s death, * Irma withdrew all of the remaining balances in the entireties accounts, except the balance in a savings account in the Mellon Bank which had been claimed by the executor and was therefore withheld by that bank ** pending. Judicial determination.

A deposit in a banking account or in a checking account or in a.savings account, *** which is opened or registered in the name of a husband and wife, or of a husband or wife, or of two persons who are husband and wife although not so denominated, creates a tenancy by the entireties, irrespective of whether the money deposited is payable to husband and wife or to husband or wife, or is denominated a joint account or a joint tenancy. Stemniski v. Stemniski, 403 Pa. 38, 41, 169 A. 2d 51; Alcorn v. Alcorn, 364 Pa. 375, 378-379, 72 A. 2d 96; Madden v. Gosztonyi Savings and Trust Co., 331 Pa. 476, 200 A. 624; Wilbur Trust Co. v. Knadler, 322 Pa. 17, 21, 185 A. 319; Berhalter v. *391 Berhalter, 315 Pa. 225, 227, 173 A. 172. Cf. also, Pregrad v. Pregrad, 367 Pa. 177, 179, 80 A. 2d 58.

Moreover, the law is well settled that an estate by the entireties cannot be terminated at the option of one of the co-tenants but can always be terminated or destroyed by mutual agreement: Reifschneider v. Reifschneider, 413 Pa. 342, 344, 196 A. 2d 324; Stemniski v. Stemniski, 403 Pa., supra; Interboro Bank and Trust Co. Appeal, 359 Pa. 315, 318, 59 A. 2d 101.

Withdrawing by one tenant and appropriating the money or property to the with drawers own exclusive use without the consent or subsequent approval of the other tenant, terminates the tenancy at the option of the co-tenant, but not the co-tenant’s right to an accounting and to one-half thereof.

In Berhalter v. Berhalter, 315 Pa., supra, the Court aptly said (pages 227-228) : “. . . Even though there had been no such agreement [expressly creating an estate by the entireties], a deposit of money in the names of husband and wife, or, of husband or wife, using both names, creates an estate by entireties: * Sloan’s Est., 254 Pa. 346; Blick v. Cockins, 252 Pa. 56; Klenke’s Est., No. 1, 210 Pa. 572 . . . with the right of survivorship. At common law, the heirs of the survivor take to the exclusion of the heirs of the first deceased. The theory of joint estates of this character is that each of the tenants holds the entire estate by the half and by the whole. On the death of one, the other does not acquire a new interest by descent. The interest of the surviving tenant in the whole is not increased by the extinguishment of the interest of the other by death, but rather is freed of the restraints imposed upon it by the presence of an interest of like degree and kind which existed while both lived: Cf. Haggerty’s Est., 311 Pa. 503. The whole estate *392 continues in the survivor as it would continue in a corporation after the death of one of the corpora-tors. One of the parties cannot destroy the incidents of the entirety by any act of his or hers: Beihl v. Martin, 236 Pa. 519. It is the contention of appellant that when the parties expressed in the agreement that ‘either of them’ could withdraw all or any part of the fund, one of the elements essential to an estate by entirety was lacking, . . .

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Bluebook (online)
206 A.2d 301, 416 Pa. 386, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brose-estate-pa-1965.