Edwards v. Ledford

441 P.2d 834, 201 Kan. 518, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 393
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 8, 1968
Docket45,073
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 441 P.2d 834 (Edwards v. Ledford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Ledford, 441 P.2d 834, 201 Kan. 518, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 393 (kan 1968).

Opinion

*519 The opinion of the court was delivered by

O’Connor, J.:

This appeal arises out of proceedings instituted by plaintiffs (appellants) to determine the ownership of two bank savings accounts, neither of which was evidenced by any signed, written instrument.

The issue presented is whether or not the accounts constitute a part of the assets of the estate of David A. Edwards, also known as D. A. Edwards, deceased, or whether the defendants (appellees) are entitled to the balance in the accounts as surviving joint tenants.

The first account was established September 19, 1961, when D. A. Edwards and Millie E. Ledford, his daughter, went to the Citizens National Bank at Eureka, Kansas. While Mrs. Ledford waited in the lobby, Mr. Edwards advised the president of the bank, H. C. Hobbs, of his desire to establish a joint account with Mrs. Ledford whereby any money in the account would belong to his daughter if anything happened to him. Mr. Hobbs explained to Mr. Edwards that such a joint account would permit Mrs. Ledford to make withdrawals therefrom at any time after it was created. Mrs. Ledford was then called into Mr. Hobbs’ office where Mr. Hobbs again explained to both Mr. Edwards and Mrs. Ledford that establishment of the joint account would make it possible for either of the two to withdraw the entire balance at any time during their lifetimes, and that the money remaining in the account would be the sole property of the survivor upon either’s death. In response to Mrs. Ledford’s inquiry of her father if this was his wish, Mr. Edwards replied, ‘Tes, that is the way I want it.” Mr. Edwards then gave Mr. Hobbs some oil-run checks in the aggregate of $10,121.04, which had theretofore been Mr. Edwards’ sole property, and Mr. Hobbs prepared a deposit slip for that amount, showing the names of the depositors to be “D. A. Edwards or Millie E. Ledford,” and a passbook reciting “In Account with D. A. Edwards or Millie E. Ledford.” No signature card was used.

Thereafter, Mrs. Ledford, having access to the passbook, withdrew interest payments from the account on three different occasions, leaving an account balance each time of $10,000, and deposited the monies to Mr. Edwards’ individual account in the Eureka Federal Savings & Loan Association.

Following the death of her father on May 9, 1965, Mrs. Ledford withdrew the money, together with the accrued interest, from the joint account on January 20,1966.

*520 The second account was created March 28, 1962, at the First National Bank, Hamilton, Kansas, as the result of D. A. Edwards’ telling his son, T. C. Edwards, and Mrs. Ledford that he wished to open an account with T. C. in the same way he had with Mrs. Ledford. On that day, upon instructions of D. A. Edwards personally, or of Mrs. Ledford acting for and on his behalf, a joint account in the names of D. A. or T. C. Edwards was established. As in the establishing of the first account, $10,000 in oil-run checks belonging solely to D. A. Edwards were delivered to Walker Ellis, president of the bank, who made out a deposit slip, naming as depositors “D. A. or T. C. Edwards,” and issued a passbook reciting “In Account with D. A. Edwards or T. C. Edwards.” Mr. Ellis explained to Mrs. Ledford and D. A. Edwards that T. C. would have the right to draw on the account at any time after its creation, and the money remaining in the account would be the sole property of the survivor upon the death of either of them. Again, no signature card was used.

T. C. lived with his father and had access to the passbook, which, like the book for the first account, was kept in a lockbox in the home of D. A. Edwards. Both Mrs. Ledford and T. C. had access to the key to the box.

Interest on the second account was withdrawn on July 5, 1963, and January 8, 1965, leaving a balance in the first instance of $10,000, and in the second, $10,249.98. Both withdrawals were paid to D. A. Edwards. Following D. A. Edwards’ death, the money in the account, together with accrued interest, was withdrawn by T. C. Edwards on July 23,1965.

Subsequently, two separate actions, which were consolidated for trial, were brought by Olen Edwards individually, and as co-administrator of the D. A. Edwards estate, and Mae Shull, both of whom are also children of the decedent, to have the accounts determined to be a part of the assets of said estate, on the ground-that the money in the accounts was the sole and separate property of D. A. Edwards. The actions were defended on the ground that the accounts were joint tenancy accounts and the surviving joint tenants were entitled to the money remaining in each account.

The district court made findings of fact substantially the same as the facts above set out, and concluded that the establishment of the account in the Citizens National Bank of Eureka in the names of “D. A. Edwards or Millie E. Ledford” created in them a joint *521 tenancy with the right of survivorship; that upon the death of D. A. Edwards, Mrs. Ledford was and now is the owner of the entire fund remaining in the account; that the account established in the First National Bank of Hamilton in the names of “D. A. or T. C. Edwards” created in them a joint tenancy with the right of survivorship; and that upon the death of D. A. Edwards, T. C. Edwards was and now is the owner of the entire fund remaining in the account.

From the judgment entered in favor of the defendants, plaintiffs have appealed.

Shortly before the actions were filed, T. C. Edwards was adjudged incompetent, and guardians of his person and conservators of his estate were appointed to act for and on his behalf. T. C. died on February 21, 1967, during the pendency of this appeal, and the administrator of his estate has been substituted as a party defendant.

We deem the testimony of Mr. Hobbs and Mr. Ellis, presidents of the respective banks, relevant to the question before us. Mr. Hobbs testified he intended to create a joint tenancy account because that was what D. A. Edwards wanted. He merely followed the customary practice of the bank at that time in setting up such accounts. Normally, the bank used signature cards, but none was signed in this case. At all times thereafter the bank considered the Edwards-Ledford account as a joint tenancy account. Similarly, Mr. Ellis testified he intended to create a joint tenancy account when he was told to open a “joint account.” At that time it was the customary practice of the bank to create such accounts by joining the names with the word “or.” Signature cards were not required. Subsequent to the time the D. A. Edwards-T. C. Edwards account was established the bank acquired and now uses a stamp with the words “as joint tenants with right of survivorship and not as tenants in common,” and had Mr. Ellis had such a stamp at the time the account was set up, he would have used it. Mr. Ellis always considered the account as a true joint tenancy account.

At the time the accounts in question were in existence, D. A. Edwards maintained a checking account in which the balance ranged from $11,000 to more than $50,000. Although not involved in these actions, D. A. Edwards had Millie Ledford deposit $10,000 of his money in the First National Bank of Madison, and he obtained a certificate of deposit payable to “D. A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
441 P.2d 834, 201 Kan. 518, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-ledford-kan-1968.