Cournoyer v. . Monadnock Savings Bank

102 A.2d 910, 98 N.H. 385, 1953 N.H. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 21, 1953
Docket4236
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 102 A.2d 910 (Cournoyer v. . Monadnock Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cournoyer v. . Monadnock Savings Bank, 102 A.2d 910, 98 N.H. 385, 1953 N.H. LEXIS 87 (N.H. 1953).

Opinions

Goodnow, J.

Both the plaintiff and the defendant administrator of the estate of Louis Cournoyer, claim the proceeds of the two accounts in controversy. The transfer of all questions of law raised by the pleadings and the agreed statement of facts raises the question of whether the evidence is conclusive upon the issue of title as to either or both of the bank deposits.

On August 27, 1935, Louis Cournoyer, a resident of Jaffrey, was the sole owner and holder of deposit book number 3584 in the defendant bank. On that day, while in Canada, he had his nephew Napoleon Cournoyer, the plaintiff in this action, sign a withdrawal signature card. This card bears the handwritten number 3584 in the upper left corner and below it the signature of Napoleon Cournoyer on the first line. The card contains nothing about joint tenancy or payment of any account “to either or the survivor”; in fact, neither the word “bank,” the name of a bank nor any reference to any bank account appears on the card other than the number referred to. It does provide spaces in which the plaintiff noted his residence, the place and date of his birth, the names of his parents and wife and his occupation. On the bottom line opposite the printed words “Deposited by” appears the signature of Louis Cournoyer. After its completion, this card was taken by Louis Cournoyer to the bank and at his request, the name of Napoleon Cournoyer was entered on book number 3584 and the words “joint account, either or the survivor in the whole” were added to the book “so that either Louis Cournoyer or Napoleon Cournoyer could withdraw funds from” that account. Thirteen years later, on September 16, 1948, Louis Cournoyer, who was also the sole owner and holder of deposit book number 9624 in the same bank, had the bank enter the name of Napoleon Cournoyer on that book and add the same notation as to joint account for the same purpose. Napoleon Cournoyer did not sign [387]*387any withdrawal signature card in connection with book number 9624 and there is no evidence that he ever knew that his name had been added thereto but the card record of the bank to which the name of Napoleon Cournoyer was added has a notation “see 3584 for signature.” During the lifetime of Louis Cournoyer, both books remained in his possession and Napoleon Cournoyer never had physical possession of either of them. The money for these deposits was furnished entirely by Louis Cournoyer and had not been withdrawn at the time of his decease. Napoleon never made any deposits in or withdrawals from either account. One of the by-laws of the bank provided that moneys “may be paid ... to depositors ... on presenting the original deposit book.”

The plaintiff claims no rights under Laws of 1953, c. 162, and admits that as to account number 9624, the facts are such that the decisions of this court in Nashua Trust Co. v. Mosgofian, 97 N. H. 17 and Packard v. Foster, 95 N. H. 47, are controlling unless those cases are to be overruled. No reason for such action is advanced which has not previously been considered and we are of the opinion that they should not be overruled. The decision as to that account must be in favor of the administrator of the estate of Louis Cournoyer.

As to account number 3584, the facts differ from those in Nashua Trust Co. v. Mosgofian, supra, in one respect. The person whose name was added to the account, Napoleon Cournoyer, signed a withdrawal signature card and the bank, upon the later delivery of that card to it by the original depositor, Louis Cournoyer, and at his request, added Napoleon’s name to the account and labeled it “joint account, either or the survivor in the whole.” In discussing this account it is asserted on behalf of Napoleon that the card which he signed constituted an agreement by him with the bank and that ho knew of the terms under which his uncle later established this account and assented thereto, although these facts do not appear in the record. It is claimed by Napoleon that on the basis of these additional facts it must be concluded that a contract was made between himself, Louis and the bank under which “a joint account with right of survivor-ship was established.

That a joint tenancy in a bank account can be created in this state is not open to question. Dover &c. Bank v. Tobin, 86 N. H. 209; Burns v. Nolette, 83 N. H. 489. When such a tenancy exists, either by gift or by contract, the rights of the survivor do not [388]*388spring into being because of the death of the other tenant but arise by virtue of the rights created and existing during the lifetime of the payees, in the same manner as a joint tenant in real estate takes as survivor by virtue of the conveyance creating the estate which was made and existed during the lives of the grantees. As in the case of real estate, a valid joint tenancy in a bank account is created when the property acquires not only the characteristic of survivorship which is distinctive of such a tenancy but is held by the named payees with equal rights to the enjoyment and alienation of their interests in it during their lives. See Mulvanity v. Nute, 95 N. H. 526. When the name of another is added to a bank account and it is made payable to either payee or the survivor at the request of the original depositor, a joint tenancy by gift may be established by the later delivery of the book to the person whose name has been added, that act of delivery with the requisite intent constituting a sufficient transfer to that person of those present rights required for the creation of a joint tenancy. Burns v. Nolette, supra, 494. In the case at bar, whether a contract was made under which Napoleon Cournoyer secured a right of withdrawal which was enforceable during the lifetime of Louis is determinative of his present claim to the account as surviving joint tenant.

Considering the situation as it existed during Louis’ lifetime, the plaintiff contends that it is a required conclusion that Napoleon, by signing the card, promised the bank to be bound by its by-laws; that Louis made a similar promise to the bank; that the bank promised both Louis and Napoleon that it would pay the account to either of them during their lives and to the survivor upon presentation of the deposit book and that the mutual exchange of these promises, each of which was consideration for the others, constituted a contract of joint tenancy. This position overlooks the importance which attaches to the possession of the deposit book in cases of this nature. The bank did not simply agree that it would pay the account to Louis or Napoleon during their lives but that it would do so only if the one wishing to withdraw presented the original deposit book. Both Louis and Napoleon knew that this condition was a vital part of the bank’s agreement and of their respective rights of withdrawal, if they knew the by-laws to which they are said to have agreed. The money which had been deposited in this account had been Louis’ property. He had possession of the book at the time the claimed agreement [389]*389was made. If it be assumed that no agreement was made as to possession of the book, the plaintiff would have no basis upon which he could have established a right to possession of the book during the lifetime of Louis. New Hampshire Sav. Bank v. McMullen, 88 N. H. 123.

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Related

In Re Wladyslaw Wszolek Estate
295 A.2d 444 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1972)
Krueger v. Williams
359 S.W.2d 48 (Texas Supreme Court, 1962)
Cournoyer v. . Monadnock Savings Bank
102 A.2d 910 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
102 A.2d 910, 98 N.H. 385, 1953 N.H. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cournoyer-v-monadnock-savings-bank-nh-1953.