Chandler v. Hardgrove

2 A.2d 661, 124 N.J. Eq. 516
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 5, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 A.2d 661 (Chandler v. Hardgrove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandler v. Hardgrove, 2 A.2d 661, 124 N.J. Eq. 516 (N.J. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

On November 24th, 1937, complainant's decedent, Hattie E. Hardgrove, a widow seventy-seven years of age, withdrew from the Irvington National Bank the sum of $9,500, which she then had on deposit in a savings account in her name, and redeposited it in the same bank in a joint savings account in the name of Hattie E. Hardgrove and Frank E. Hardgrove, under the following joint account agreement, which was signed by both:

"JOINT ACCOUNT AGREEMENT SINGLE SIGNATURE
This account and all moneys to be credited to it belong to us as joint-tenants and during our joint-lives may be drawn upon by either alone.

Upon the death of either we authorize and direct the Bank to pay the entire balance to the survivor, which shall be in complete discharge of the obligations of the Bank to all parties concerned.

The rights of the legal representative of the decedent, if any, shall be enforced only against the survivor.

We each do hereby appoint the other attorney irrevocable, with power to deposit in said joint-account moneys of the other, and for that purpose to endorse any check, draft, note or other negotiable instrument in the name of the other.

(Signed) HATTIE E. HARDGROVE (Signed) FRANK E. HARDGROVE.

Witness — (Signed) F. SWARTOUT, JR."

There were thereafter two withdrawals from that account, one of $150 and the other of $400, both on the signature of Frank E. Hardgrove. The $150 first withdrawn was for the use of Hattie E. Hardgrove, to whom it was delivered immediately after withdrawal, and the $400 was for the use of Frank E. Hardgrove, who retained it. Hattie E. Hardgrove died on January 18th, 1938, at which time there remained a balance of $9,000 in said account, and which was subsequently withdrawn by Frank E. Hardgrove. Aside from the moneys in this account, the only property owned by Mrs. Hardgrove at the time of her death was a house and lot at *Page 518 517 Nye avenue, Irvington, New Jersey, valued at about $5,000, which had been her home for many years, and household furnishings worth about $100. Life insurance, amounting to $284.75, was collected by the complainant administrator after Mrs. Hardgrove's death.

By this bill, complainant seeks to set aside the transfer by decedent to the defendant Frank E. Hardgrove of a joint interest in the bank account, and a decree for an accounting of the moneys remaining in said account at the date of Mrs. Hardgrove's death, on the ground that no gift in praesenti was intended by decedent; that if a gift to take effect at the donor's death was intended it was testamentary in character and void because not in conformity with statutory requirements; or, that if a gift inpraesenti was intended, it was improvident, made without independent advice, and void because of a confidential relationship existing between donor and donee.

At the conclusion of the final hearing I found that at the time of the transfer of the joint interest in this bank account the decedent was in complete possession of her faculties; that she intended to make a gift in praesenti of a joint interest in that account; that she made the transfer with the full knowledge of the nature of the transaction; that it was not the result of fraud or undue influence; that the transfer was a natural and proper thing for the decedent to do under the circumstances, and that unless the gift was improvident and subject to the application of the rule of independent advice, which points were reserved, the bill would be dismissed.

Oral argument was had at the conclusion of the final hearing and since then exhaustive briefs have been filed by counsel. After a careful reading of the transcript of testimony and consideration of all the evidence and briefs of counsel, I have reached the conclusion that the gift was not improvident, that the rule of independent advice has no application, and that, therefore, the bill must be dismissed.

For a thorough understanding of the reasons for my conclusions, a more complete statement of the facts disclosed by the evidence is perhaps appropriate. *Page 519

The decedent was childless. The defendant Frank E. Hardgrove is the son of the decedent's sister, Emma Chandler, and decedent's husband's brother, Robert Hardgrove, both of whom died when this defendant was eleven years of age. Besides the defendant Frank E. Hardgrove, his parents left surviving them three other children, two sons and a daughter, all of whom, except the defendant, are now dead. The decedent and her husband, Jonah Hardgrove, who predeceased her, took these four orphaned children into their own home and reared them as their own. All remained in decedent's home until their majority, marriage or death. The defendant Frank E. Hardgrove remained with his uncle and aunt until he married in 1920, when he established a home of his own. In 1921 he was, as he expressed it, "out of work and up against it," and his aunt and uncle asked him and his wife to come to their home and live with them until he obtained work and got on his feet again. When he got work and was able to re-establish a home of his own he did so, and then left the home of his aunt and uncle. At their request, he again returned to their home in 1931 for the same reason which prompted his first return. After remaining there for some time he again re-established himself and with his family moved into his own home, where he remained until the death of his uncle, the decedent's husband, Jonah Hardgrove, early in 1937, when his aunt, the decedent, again requested him to return and make his home with her because she was alone. Accordingly he and his family moved in with the decedent, and after they had been there about six weeks it was arranged that he and his family were to occupy the second floor of decedent's home and she the first floor, which arrangement was carried out. Defendant and his family resided there until after his aunt's death. During this period, although he was steadily employed as an automobile mechanic, he took care of the lawn, attended to the heater, ran errands for his aunt, did odd jobs about the house, and, in general, he and his wife took care of the decedent according to her requirements. He never transacted any business for the decedent, except to occasionally do some marketing for her and to go *Page 520 to the bank for her on two or three occasions. The decedent treated the defendant more as a son than a nephew, and, as one of complainant's witnesses testified, he was "the apple of her eye." However, it is clear from the evidence that hers was the dominant mind and that she attended to her own business affairs, such as she had, without consulting with or asking advice of the defendant. She was at all times until her death, mentally alert, and her only physical ailment was bronchitis, from which she had been a periodic sufferer for some years, the attacks of this malady usually occurring in the fall or winter. Her heart had become weakened from successive attacks and her death resulted from this condition. However, her physician testified that she was mentally competent to the end, and except for a short period, was physically able to do her own housework, get her own meals,c. Attempts by complainant's witnesses to show that she was mentally incompetent and physically unable to take care of herself and her household, and that she was subject to the influence and domination of the defendant, failed.

The decedent depended upon the defendant only to perform those tasks ordinarily performed by the male member of a household. She was in no other sense dependent upon him.

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Bluebook (online)
2 A.2d 661, 124 N.J. Eq. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-hardgrove-njsuperctappdiv-1938.