Cullmann v. Jedd

169 Mich. App. 778
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 6, 1988
DocketDocket No. 99512
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 Mich. App. 778 (Cullmann v. Jedd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cullmann v. Jedd, 169 Mich. App. 778 (Mich. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Respondent, Margaret Jedd, appeals as of right from a March 10, 1987, order of the Wayne County Probate Court directing her to [780]*780turn over to the estate of Julianna Cullmann the proceeds of certain bank accounts previously held jointly by Jedd and Cullmann. We reverse.

The record reveals that Jedd and Cullmann were neighbors and close friends since 1948. Jedd stated that Cullmann was treated like a member of her family and that she thought of Cullmann as being "like a mother” to her. The two women were often together, and Cullmann spent holidays with Jedd and her family. For several years, Cullmann baby-sat for Jedd’s daughter. Jedd sometimes ran errands for Cullmann, and when the latter was sick Jedd would take her to the hospital.

In 1981, Cullmann funded two joint bank accounts with Jedd.1 The signature cards for the accounts were signed by both Cullmann and Jedd, one specifying that the funds in the account were the property of the signatories as joint tenants and would be paid to "any one of the undersigned or to any survivor of them,” and the other stating that the funds were "payable to either with right of survivorship.” Jedd testified that when these accounts were established Cullmann told her that the accounts — one a savings account and the other a money market account — were for Jedd. Jedd also testified that Cullmann owned an individual savings account containing $4,000 and kept $1,000 in cash hidden in her home in a place known to Jedd, apparently accumulated from social security payments and wages earned from baby-sitting and ironing, in order to pay her living expenses.

In May, 1985, Cullmann suffered a heart attack and was hospitalized. While in the hospital she told Jedd to take possession of the bank account [781]*781books. At the end of May, when Cullmann returned home, Jedd returned the books to Cullmann, who said that if she were to become ill in the future Jedd should again take custody of the books. Shortly thereafter, when Cullmann returned to the hospital, Jedd again took custody of the bank account books. On June 12, 1985, Jedd withdrew the money from, and closed, the joint bank accounts, almost one month prior to Cullmann’s death on July 10, 1985.

Ann Wrubel, Cullmann’s niece, testified that when her aunt was in the hospital in 1985 she said that Jedd had access to her bank account and was "taking care of all her business.” Henry Gutenkunst, whose wife was related to Cullmann, testified that three years before her death Cullmann said that she had a $10,000 money savings certificate in a joint account with Jedd which was to be cashed at the time of her death in order to pay her debts and funeral expenses, with the remainder returning to her estate.

On May 7, 1986, petitioner, Theodore Cullmann, the personal representative of Cullmann’s estate, filed a petition requesting the probate court to declare the proceeds of the joint bank accounts to be assets of Cullmann’s estate. He alleged that Jedd exerted undue influence in order to convince Cullmann to open the joint accounts and that Cullmann established the accounts merely for her convenience and without the intention of Jedd’s obtaining survivorship rights. After hearing testimony, the probate court issued a written opinion on December 18, 1986, and an order on March 10, 1987, directing Jedd to turn over to Cullmann’s estate the proceeds of the joint bank accounts. On appeal, Jedd argues, among other things, that the probate court erred in ordering her to turn over [782]*782the proceeds of the accounts to Cullmann’s estate. We agree.

The probate court, in concluding that the funds withdrawn by Jedd were being held by her under a constructive trust and had to be turned over to Cullmann’s estate, reasoned — citing solely Allstaedt v Ochs, 302 Mich 232; 4 NW2d 530 (1942)— that since the funds had been withdrawn during Cullmann’s lifetime, Jedd’s ability to receive them as a joint owner by way of a right of survivorship was not in issue: "Mrs. Jedd,” the court observed, "did not wait to be a survivor. She withdrew the funds before Mrs. Cullmann [sic] death.” Thus, the probate court declined to assess Jedd’s entitlement to the bank accounts as a surviving joint owner, framing the issue as "whether or not Mrs. Cullmann intended [to make] a present gift of the joint bank accounts at the time they were established.” Having determined "the fact that Mrs. Cullmann retained the [bank account books] in her possession and that she gave them to Mrs. Jedd for safekeeping but then required them from Mrs. Jedd upon her return from the hospital would indicate she did not intend [to make] a present gift,” the probate court declared that Jedd had no right to keep Cullmann’s money.

First, we note that Michigan’s joint ownership statute regarding bank accounts provides that a deposit made in a jointly held bank account with the right of survivorship becomes the property of the joint tenants and may be paid to any one of such individuals during his or her lifetime or to the survivor or survivors of such individuals. MCL 487.703; MSA 23.303; see also Wright v White, 156 Mich App 1, 6-7; 401 NW2d 288 (1986), lv gtd 428 Mich 873 (1987). Moreover, that statute provides that a deposit made in a jointly held bank account with the right of survivorship shall, in the absence [783]*783of fraud or undue influence, be prima facie evidence of the depositor’s intention to vest title to the deposit in a surviving joint owner. MCL 487.703; MSA 23.303. See Jacques v Jacques, 352 Mich 127, 134-138; 89 NW2d 451 (1958); Traverse City State Bank v Marron, 29 Mich App 518; 185 NW2d 558 (1971), remanded on other grounds 385 Mich 753; 187 NW2d 215 (1971).2

Having briefly noted the content of the joint [784]*784tenancy statute regarding bank accounts, we now turn to the only case cited by the probate court in its opinion. In Allstaedt, supra, a father opened two bank accounts to be held jointly by himself and his daughter. At the time the accounts were opened the daughter promised her father that she would not withdraw any money from the accounts without his consent. Two months before the father died, however, the daughter broke her promise and withdrew the funds from the two accounts. The Supreme Court, noting that jointly held bank accounts create by way of statute a rebuttable presumption establishing that title to such accounts is vested in a named joint owner, stated that "the simple question presented here ... is whether or not [the father] made a gift of the two bank accounts to his daughter.” 302 Mich 235. Emphasizing that the daughter herself had admitted that she was not to withdraw money without her father’s consent and that a bank manager testified that the father stated at the time he opened one of the accounts that the joint ownership of the account "was for the purpose of having someone able to take care of emergencies,” id., p 237, the Supreme Court concluded that the father did not intend to make a gift to his daughter of the bank accounts. Therefore, the Supreme Court affirmed the lower court’s decree ordering the daughter to pay to her father’s estate the money, with interest, she had withdrawn from the jointly held accounts prior to her father’s death.

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Related

In Re Cullmann Estate
426 N.W.2d 811 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
169 Mich. App. 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cullmann-v-jedd-michctapp-1988.