Conqueror Trust Co. v. Craig

218 S.W. 972, 204 Mo. App. 650, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 69
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 972 (Conqueror Trust Co. v. Craig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conqueror Trust Co. v. Craig, 218 S.W. 972, 204 Mo. App. 650, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 69 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

FARRINGTON, J.

This is a proceeding begun by the Conqueror Trust Company filing a petition requiring certain parties to interplead for a sum of money alleged to have been deposited with it on February 0, 1917, by one John Collins, now deceased; further alleging that the deposit was a certificate of deposit not subject to check, and that it was in the sum of $5002.10, payable to the order of John Collins or Nin Collins on the return of the certificate properly indorsed, one year after date, with interest at the rate of 4% per annum, the certificate being duly signed by the treasurer of the trust company. The petition further alleged that Nin Collins claimed to be the owner ©f the fund, and that L. C. Wormington, Administrator of the estate of John Collins, deceased, was claiming the fund; and further, prayed that it be permitted to pay the money into court and be discharged. An interplea and intervening petition was filed by Clarence Craig, Administrator of the estate of Kate Collins, deceased, in which it was set up that this fund belonged to Kate Collins at the time of her death .and was, therefore, an asset of her estate; further alleging that Craig had been appointed by the probate court of Jasper county as administrator of the estate of Kate Collins; that she died on the 8th day of December, 1915, and that her residence was in Scammon, Cherokee County, Kansas, at the date of her death. Woirminlglton, the Administrator of the estate of John Collins, was appointed by the probate court of Jasper county, and claimed that the fund was the property of John Collins when he died. Nin Collins. claimed the fund by reason of the fact that the certificate was made payable to her father and herself, which, under the Missouri Session Acts, 1915', Sec. 168, page 191, became absolutely hers on the death of her father, and she also claims that the fund was given to her by her father *652 before he died. The court found for the intervening petitioner, Nin Collins, and found against Clarence Craig, Administrator of the estate of Kate Collins, deceased, and against L. O. Wormington, Administrator of the estate of John Collins, deceased. No appeal was taken by the latter administrator. The| question, therefore, at issue is between the administrator of the estate of Kate Collins, deceased, the wife of John Collins, deceased, and Nin Collins, their daughter, the respondent.

It appears from the evidence that this family, consisting of John Collins and his wife Kate Collins, their daughter Mary (now Mrs. Oommiskey), Kate (now Mrs. Ilisle), Frances (now Mirs. Leek), Nora Collins (Nin). Anna Collins and Flora Collins, lived at Seammon, Kansas; the father, John Collins, hieing a miner, also ran a hotel and held some public offices. Three of the daughters married and moved away and three of them remained at home and assisted the mother, Kate Collins, in running! the hotel. The evidence clearly shows that the interpleader, Nin Collins, was the leading’ spirit among the girls and was the active female member of the family in keeping the house going. Her mother, Kate Collins, was in poor health for a number of years before she died.

It is admitted in the case that on December 8, 1915, the date of the death of Kate Collins, there as on deposit in the Conqueror Trust Company at Joplin, Mo., in her name the sum of $4809.72, and that on January 27, 1916, the money which was deposited in the name of Kate Collins was transferred to the name of John Collins, husband of Kate Collins, and a certificate of deposit issued to him for the money together with the accumulated interest thereon. It is agreed that there had ben no ad-administration taken out for the estate of Kate Collins in the State of Kansas or in the State of Missouri, until the appointment of Clarence Craig, and that L. O. Wormington was the only administrator appointed for the estate of John Collins in the State of Missouri. That Nin Collins, Flora Collins and Anna Collins deny that he *653 (Wormington) as legally appointed as administrator of said estate. It is agreed that Flora Collins was duly apointed and qualified as administratrix of the estate of John Collins in Cherokee County, Kansas, the place of his domicile at the time of his death. It is admitted that Kate Collins, at the time of her death, was a resident of Cherokee County, Kansas, and that' at the time of the deaths of John Collins and Kate Collins neither of them had anyi property in the State of Missouri except such interest as they might have in the fund here in litigation.

It was shown by the evidence that the Conqueror Trust Company issued a certificate of deposit, dated Feb. 27, 1913, made payable to Mrs. Kate Collins, for the sum of $2030.10, bearing 4% interest. It was admitted that the name of Kate Collins which apeared on the back of that certificate is the signature of Kate Collins, deceased, and that the certificate was surrendered to the company on February 27, 1914, by John Collins, her husband, on which date a new certificate was issued payable to Mrs. Kate Collins for $4015.10, with interest from date at 4%, and that the name of Kate Collins, indorsed on the back of that certificate, was the signature of Kate Collins, deceased; and that this certificate' certified that the money was deposied by her and payable to herself or order. It is agreed that that certificate was surrendered to the Trust Company on February 26, 1915, and a new certificate issued in lieu thereof for $4809.72, which certificate certified that Kate Collins had deposited this sum, and that in the body of the certificate it read, payable to the order of herself, and it is agreed that it was this certificate which was surrendered by John Collins after the death of Kate Collins, and for which was received the certificate issued to John Collins. It being admitted that Kate Collins died before the last certificate, payable to her order, was due and before it was surrendered to the Trust Company. . A signature card, for the purpose of identifying the signature of Kate Collins, was introduced in evidence;, also one for Nin Collins. It was also agreed that all of the deposits were physically made and *654 the certificates presented when dne for payment by John Collins. The evidence is also convincing that these deposits from time to time by John Collins was money which he had earned and saved. There is a failure of evidence showing that it was the money of Kate Collins, of a separate estate independent of gifts from him, which had been given to him by his wife to deposit for her.

In disposing of the question before us, we hold with the trial court that if the last certificate issued, payable to John Collins and Nin Collins, was a sum of money over which John Collins had the absolute control at the time he caused the certificate to be thus issued, then on his death the fund belonged to Nin Collins. Under the Missouri Session Acts of 1915', Sec. 168, page 191, it would become hers, and in addition to this there was sufficient evidence from which it would be held that he actually delivered the certificate of deposit to Nin Collins or to another of his daughters for Nin Collins prior to his death. B.ut, going this far, fails to determine the issue raised by Craig, the Administrator of Kate Collins, deceased.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 972, 204 Mo. App. 650, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conqueror-trust-co-v-craig-moctapp-1920.