Eisenhardt v. Lowell

98 P.2d 1001, 105 Colo. 417
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 29, 1940
DocketNo. 14,693.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 98 P.2d 1001 (Eisenhardt v. Lowell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eisenhardt v. Lowell, 98 P.2d 1001, 105 Colo. 417 (Colo. 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Knous

delivered the opinion of the court.

The county court having concluded that the decedent’s widow, as survivor of a joint tenancy with her husband therein, was the sole owner of 200 shares of the common stock of the Great Western Sugar Company, denied the petition of plaintiff in error, as a creditor of the deceased husband’s estate, which otherwise was insolvent, to have one-half of the said stock listed as an asset thereof. Plaintiff in error seeks a reversal of the judgment below upon the ground that no estate in joint tenancy in the said stock ever was created. Although inferentially suggested by arguments of counsel for plaintiff in error, neither the record nor the nature of the proceeding permits inquiry into, or conclusion upon, the question of whether the genesis of the challenged tenure renders it vulnerable to attack as being fraudulent against creditors. We, therefore, confine our discussion and decision to the single issue submitted.

When the joint tenancy, if there was such, had its inception and the survivorship arose, if ever, there was no statute in Colorado directly pertinent to joint tenancies in corporate stocks. Subsequently to the happening of these alleged events the general assembly enacted, and the governor approved, laws relating to joint tenancies in personal property of the type involved in this proceeding (chapter 186, S. L. 1937, chapter 87, S. L. 1939), under the terms of which there could be little room to question the validity of the joint tenancy here asserted. Notwithstanding and without considering *420 the retroactive effect of these statutes to joint tenancies existing at the time of their enactment, it seems certain that in no event can they have application to a situation where, as here, the alleged survivorship already had occurred at the time of their passage. 33 C. J., p. 902. As analogously pertinent, see 14 Am. Jur., p. 85, §13. However, and not withstanding the presumption against joint estates, it is well settled in Colorado that independently of statutory authorization, joint tenancies, with the incident of survivorship, may obtain as to personal property. Miller v. American Bank & Trust Co., 71 Colo. 346, 206 Pac. 796. This is the general rule in practically all jurisdictions. 14 Am. Jur., p. 81, §10; 33 C.J., p. 906, §8.

The certificates in question recite that Harriette H. Lowell (the widow), and Osroe W. Lowell (her deceased husband), “as joint tenants with right* of survivorship and not as tenants in common” are the owners of the stock represented thereby. These quoted words, meeting, as they do, even the strict requirements of our statute relating to the creation of a joint tenancy in real estate (’35 C. S. A., c. 40, §4.), adopted as the technical criterion of sufficiency as relating to both real and personal property in Estate of Kwatkowski, 94 Colo. 222, 29 P. (2d) 639, amply proclaim a joint tenancy and upon their face the certificates must be considered as accomplishing that result. While tacitly recognizing this situation, the plaintiff in error contends that here the evidence discloses certain deficiencies and obstacles which legally preclude the creation or existence of the joint tenancy. The record discloses that in 1928 the Great Western Sugar Company issued two certificates each for 100 shares of its common capital stock to Osroe W. Lowell individually. There is nothing in the record suggesting that this stock was purchased by Mr. Lowell other than with his own funds. Early in the month of December, 1936, at his home, Mr. Lowell, who was in poor health, requested Mr. Ralph E. Smith, saies manager for Earl M. Scanlon & Company, dealers in invest *421 ment securities, with whom he was well acquainted, to effect a transfer of the stock in question to Mr. and Mrs. Lowell as joint tenants. Mr. Lowell then affixed his signature, the genuineness of which is not challenged, to the blank assignments appearing on the reverse of the certificates and delivered them to Mr. Smith, who carried them to his office and there requested another employee of the company to attend to the details of the projected transfer. The latter employee, in the name of Earl M. Scanlon & Company, by appropriate endorsement guaranteed the signature of Mr. Lowell on the assignments and transmitted the certificates to the Great Western Sugar Company with written request for transfer to Mr. and Mrs. Lowell in joint tenancy. The official of the latter company in charge of its stock transfers inserted in the blanks of the printed assignment the names of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell as transferees, the number of shares, the date, added his name and another in the power of attorney clause and following the name of the transferees stamped the words “as joint tenants with right of survivorship and not as tenants in common.” The new certificates then were issued in this form and returned to Scanlon & Company. Thereafter Mr, Smith delivered the new joint tenancy certificates to Mr. Lowell at his home, at which time the latter signed a receipt therefor. Mr. Lowell died in April, 1937, and after his death the joint tenancy certificates were found in his safety deposit box. Mrs. Lowell was not present at the time of the conversation between her husband and Mr. Smith and the record contains no intimation that she knew of the questioned transaction until after his death.

As procedurally precluding the creation of a joint tenancy the plaintiff in error relies upon the circumstances that when Mr. Lowell affixed his signature to the assignments, the blanks therein were not filled in and that neither the clerk guaranteeing his signature thereon nor the agent making the transfer saw him sign or knew that he had, nor had either personal directions *422 from him as to the identity of the transferees or the tenure by which they were to hold. No authorities are cited in support of this theory. If it be considered, as plaintiff in error assumes, that the joint tenancy depended upon the sufficiency of the assignments and the transfer of the original certificates, the contention is without merit. Whatever the infirmities, if any there were, in the complex machinery of accomplishment, the result, as evidenced by the new certificates delivered to Mr. Lowell, was in precise accord with his initially expressed intention and his action in accepting, receipting for and retaining them amounted to a ratification of the acts of the various agents engaged in the process. If, on the other hand, where, as here, there is no evidence of fraud, undue influence or mental deficiency, the unequivocal declarations of the new certificates are taken as prima facie disclosing the apparent intention of Mr. Lowell to create a joint estate and the formalities attendant to the transfer of the old certificates are viewed as being identical, the same result is attained, since no proof was offered rebutting this expressed intent although, no statute precluding, evidence with relation thereto would be admissible. Houle v. McMillan, 83 Colo. 216, 263 Pac. 409.

Plaintiff in error next asserts, and this without reference to intent to create, that the alleged joint tenure must fail because there was no delivery to Mrs. Lowell of the new certificates which, after their issuance and until her husband’s death, appear to have remained in his possession.

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Bluebook (online)
98 P.2d 1001, 105 Colo. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eisenhardt-v-lowell-colo-1940.