Cranford v. Langston

356 S.W.2d 581, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 752
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1962
Docket31016
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 356 S.W.2d 581 (Cranford v. Langston) 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
Cranford v. Langston, 356 S.W.2d 581, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 752 (Mo. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

BRADY, Commissioner.

This case was originally tried in the Probate Court of Mississippi County, and appealed therefrom to the circuit court of that county. A change of venue to the Cape Girardeau Court of Common Pleas brought this appeal within our territorial jurisdiction. The issue is between the respondent, widow of Thomas W. Cranford and ad-ministratrix of his estate, and the appellant, daughter of deceased by a former marriage, as to the ownership of a bank account deposited under the style, “Thomas W. Cran-ford or Evelyn Cranford.” The trial court found for the administratrix.

Thomas W. Cranford was 84 years old when the circumstances pertinent here occurred. He was in bad health, had been in the hospital about nine months prior to the occasion in evidence, and was preparing to enter a hospital in Paducah, Kentucky, where the appellant lived, although he was not in fear of imminent death, and had stated that he would not be in the hospital long. The evidence was that the deceased had sold some property to his son, Ernest Cranford, the appellant’s brother, and had *582 received cash in the amount of $3,000 in the transaction.

The testimony given by Mrs. Moss, assistant cashier of the bank in which this deposit was made, was that when the appellant and Ernest Cranford were talking in her presence about the deposit of this money,

“ * * * Evelyn said that they put the money in her name because that it would be up to her to pay her dad’s bills, she was going to place him in a hospital or a nursing home and it would be up to her to pay the bills and to put the money in the account jointly in her dad’s name and her name so that she would be able to pay the bills for his medical expense and I gave her the signature card, set it up that way, Thomas W. Crandall or Evelyn Lang-ston and I asked her at the time if her dad was capable of signing his name. She said he was, she took the signature card — they took the signature card, left and got it signed and brought it back to the bank and I gave them a check book and that was the end of the transaction.”

This witness also testified that the appellant told the witness she wanted the account set up as a joint checking account so either could use it.

The respondent read into evidence certain interrogatories which the appellant answered, including the following:

“In answer to Interrogatory No. 4, the amount of funds in my possession, subject to certain checks issued but which have not cleared the bank, is the sum of $1982.60. I have paid out the following:
“To Whom Paid Date Amount Purpose
Lourdes Hospital Sep. 25th $171.15 Hospital bill of my father.
Dr. S. L. French Sep. 25th 15.00 Dr. bill of my father.
Dr. L. Myre Sep. 25th 15.00 Dr. bill of my father.
McMikle Funeral Home Ernest Cranford for East Prairie Lumber Co. Sep. 26th 496.17 Funeral bill of my father. Oct. 7th 6.68 Account of my father.
Dr. Robert Frazier Oct. 7th 68.00 Dr. bill of my father.
St. Mary’s Hospital Oct. 7th 93.30 Hospital bill of my father.
Bell’s Monument Co. Mr. John Fletcher Oct. 7th 115.00 Monument for my father. Oct. 17th 10.00 Attorney fee for father.
Delta Hardware Oct. 17th .80 Acct. of my father.”

The checks or photostats thereof were not offered in evidence but, referring again to the testimony of Mrs. Moss, it was shown that the check to Lourdes Hospital was signed by the appellant, so was the check to Dr. Myre, Mr. Fletcher, the one to St. Mary’s Hospital, Dr. Frazier, Delta Hardware, the check to Bell’s Monument Co. and the check to the funeral home. There was no testimony as to who signed the check to Dr. French, except the answer to the interrogatory as above set out wherein the appellant stated she had paid out this sum, nor does any check for $15 other than that to Dr. Myre appear on the bank’s ledger sheet or the statement of account, both of which are in evidence here. However, a check for $21.50 does appear thereon, as does a deposit of $6.50, and subtracting these two sums leaves $15.00. It also appeared that these checks were all cleared by the bank after the death of appellant’s father on September 25th. Their total is $991.10, and subtracting that sum from $3,000.00 leaves a balance of $2,008.90. This is the balance in the account as shown *583 on the original ledger sheet and on the statement of account, yet the appellant states she claims only $1,982.60. Since her intent to claim all that is in the account is clear, we must assume that the $26.30 difference is covered in a check referred to in evidence — although the amount thereof is not given — which Mr. Cranford wrote on this account prior to his death, but which has not cleared the bank.

Except for certain interrogatories in which the appellant stated her claim that this money was a gift, the appellant’s evidence was the testimony of Ernest Cran-ford. He testified that after the deed transferring certain property to him had been signed by the deceased and the respondent, and their signatures notarized, Ernest took the notary back to her office and upon his return found his wife and the respondent and the appellant with his father. Ernest’s testimony was that in the presence of those named above the deceased told him to “Take this money to the bank and put it in the bank in my name and Evelyn’s name * * * and get this business over”; that he took the money to the bank where it was counted by the witness Madge Moss, assistant cashier of the First Bank of East Prairie, who gave Ernest a card, respondent’s Exhibit 2, and told him, “Your father will have to sign this.” His further testimony was that he took the card to his father who signed it in the presence of the respondent; that on this occasion the respondent stated, “I don’t want any part of that. That belongs to Cranford and his kids. I don’t want anything to do with that”; and that when his father signed the card, he told Ernest with respect to the money, “I want Evelyn to have this money because she did more than ery other child I’ve got has done for me.” His testimony as to the conversation at the bank was opposed to that given by Mrs. Moss and was that when he took the card back to the bank the appellant asked him, “Why don’t you leave this money here in your name?” and that he replied, “That ain’t what Dad said, he said to put it in your name because he wanted you to have it”; that the appellant said, “No, put it in your name” and that he replied, “I’m not going to do it, that’s the way he told me to do it, put it in your name because I don’t want anything to do with it”; and that appellant replied, “All right”, whereupon he saw the appellant sign the card.

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Bluebook (online)
356 S.W.2d 581, 1962 Mo. App. LEXIS 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cranford-v-langston-moctapp-1962.