Disbro's Estate

16 Pa. D. & C. 165, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 24
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Susquehanna County
DecidedNovember 20, 1930
DocketNo. 17
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Pa. D. & C. 165 (Disbro's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Susquehanna County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Disbro's Estate, 16 Pa. D. & C. 165, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 24 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.,

Nellie Birchard, administratrix of this estate, having filed her account as such on August 22, 1929, Effie Ingraham, a party in interest, filed her petition for review of the same, alleging for the [166]*166purposes thereof that the administratrix had personally converted assets of the estate to her own use and failed to account for the same. Upon answer being filed, we appointed an auditor to take evidence and report concerning the same; and on March 3, 1930, referred the same to Gerritt E. Gardner as such auditor, previously appointed on exceptions to the account, that he might make a report. Said auditor filed his report and the same was confirmed nisi on September 2, 1930, to which exceptions were filed on October 27, 1930, two in number, but in substance both relating to the finding of the auditor that the accountant had omitted from her administration account the sum of $431, represented by a savings account, No. 5039, in the First National Bank of Montrose, Pennsylvania.

The evidence relied upon by the learned auditor for the surcharge was, inter alia, the endorsement in the savings account book No. 5039, as follows:

“The sums deposited in this book belong to E. J. Disbro and Mrs. Nellie Birchard (September 3, 1927) jointly. It being understood each may withdraw on his or her individual order during their joint lives, and that any balance upon the death of either shall belong to the survivor.”

Concerning this deposit, some oral testimony was taken by the auditor. First we note that of Mrs. Nellie Birchard, the adverse claimant thereto by right of survivorship, contending that the same in the lifetime of Mr. Disbro was held by both as an “estate by entirety.” She, although otherwise incompetent to testify to matters or conversations in the lifetime of the decedent, was made competent by being called for cross-examination by the other party to the controversy.

Her testimony is that all of sueh deposit was made by Mr. Disbro, the decedent; none by her.

It also appears from the evidence that the funds represented by the J. J. Murray note of $400 and one against the Township of Franklin for a like amount were of the same deposit drawn out by the decedent personally in his lifetime and loaned by him to the debtors named. While the auditor’s findings, not excepted to, were that these securities were the property of Mrs. Birchard by gift from the decedent, this evidence as to the source of the funds constituting the loans has some bearing upon the character of the savings account from which they were drawn, as affecting the balance of $431 remaining on deposit at the death of Mr. Disbro, the decedent.

There is no direct evidence to show in whose handwriting the endorsement upon the bank book was made, or whether by the authority or direction of the decedent, or whether he was present when it was made. This is important to consider, as indicated by the language of Mr. Justice Frazer in Mardis, Admin’x, v. Steen, 293 Pa. 13, 17, in which case a very similar endorsement was made as in the case at bar, but by “an oificer of the bank without evidence that the notations were made pursuant to directions given by the defendant” depositor, whose sole funds constituted the deposit there in question.

To effect a gift inter vivos of such an account, there must either be (a) an actual delivery of the subject matter of the gift, or (b) where manual delivery is not practicable, a transfer may be made by assignment or other writing or token which will evidence a present intention to pass right of possession to the donee: Mardis, Admin’x, v. Steen, 293 Pa. 13.

And where one deposits his own money in a savings fund in the joint names of himself and another, under a stipulation that either may withdraw the funds or the survivor may draw it, and the owner dies, the survivor of the two cannot, in the absence of any other evidence, establish title to the funds as a gift inter vivos: Flanagan v. Nash, 185 Pa. 41; Grady v. Sheehan, 256 [167]*167Pa. 377; or, somewhat differently expressed, to establish such a gift “two essential elements must combine: An intention to make a gift then and there, and such actual or constructive delivery at the same time to the donee a3 divests the donor of all dominion over the subject and invests the donee therewith:” Tearpoak v. Tearpoak, 85 Pa. Superior Ct. 470.

And we may add that, while actual delivery is not always necessary, “the property may be given to one in trust for the donee, or the donor may make himself a trustee in the donee’s behalf,” nevertheless, what is absolutely essential is that “in each case the title must pass from the donor:” Henderson, J., in Waltman v. The Germantown Trust Co., 92 Pa. Superior Ct. 480, 484. In that case the owner of a savings account endorsed that in the event of his death he authorized the trust company to pay over to his wife the balance of money standing in his account. It was held testamentary in its character and not a gift, and revoked as such by a subsequent will of the husband, and his estate was held entitled to recover the same from the depository.

The language of Mr. Justice Green in Flanagan v. Nash, 185 Pa. 41, 45, that “the statement in the bank books that either might draw, or the survivor might draw, does not at all establish a title as owner in the defendant. It is a mere right to draw the money that is conferred, there is nothing to show that if the defendant drew the money he could keep it as his own, and without such words no title by way of a gift could pass;” applies with equal force against the alleged donee at bar, so far as the present endorsement quoted is considered.

The testamentary character of a similar endorsement or direction as to the disposition of the balance of a savings account was given effect in Grady v. Sheehan, 256 Pa. 377, 381, and in analogous cases followed in the lower courts, such as Housekeeper’s Estate, 10 D. & C. 494, and Geisinger’s Will, 5 D. & C. 493. What could be more testamentary in language than the concluding words of the present endorsement: “and that any. balance upon the death of either shall belong to the survivor.”

In phraseology, the language of the endorsement at bar is substantially the same as in Mardis, Admin’x, v. Steen, 293 Pa. 13, and Reap v. Wyoming Valley Trust Co., 300 Pa. 156, in both of which the funds were decreed to the survivor claimant; but the former was in the opinion distinguished from Flanagan v. Nash, 185 Pa. 41, already cited in this opinion, by drawing attention to the fact that in the latter case the “memoranda were made by an officer of the bcmk without evidence that the notations were made pursuant to direction given by the decedent” (the italics are ours), and such absence of direction was considered as the missing “other evidence” required to give it effect as a gift inter vivos, and for that reason the court denied the survivor’s title to the money remaining on deposit. The same principle applies at bar against Mrs. Birchard’s claim to hold the $431 in controversy here.

The distinguishing features here from those in Bailey’s Estate, 86 Pa. Superior Ct. 322, and Reap v. Wyoming Valley Trust Co., 300 Pa. 156, because of entirely sufficient “other evidence” there presented, are too obvious to require extended discussion here.

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Related

Reap v. Wyoming Valley Trust Co.
150 A. 465 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1930)
Mardis, Administratrix v. Steen
141 A. 629 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)
Tearpoak v. Tearpoak
85 Pa. Super. 470 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Waltman v. Germantown Trust Co.
92 Pa. Super. 480 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1927)
Bailey's Estate
86 Pa. Super. 322 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1925)
Flanagan v. Nash
39 A. 818 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1898)
Smith's Estate
85 A. 76 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1912)
Sullivan v. Hess
88 A. 544 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1913)
Reading Trust Co. v. Thompson
98 A. 953 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1916)
Grady v. Sheehan
100 A. 950 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
16 Pa. D. & C. 165, 1930 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/disbros-estate-paorphctsusque-1930.