Erhardt v. Leonard

657 P.2d 494, 104 Idaho 195
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1983
Docket13820
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 657 P.2d 494 (Erhardt v. Leonard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erhardt v. Leonard, 657 P.2d 494, 104 Idaho 195 (Idaho Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

657 P.2d 494 (1983)
104 Idaho 195

Leta V. ERHARDT, Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
George Robert LEONARD, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 13820.

Court of Appeals of Idaho.

January 19, 1983.

*496 Lloyd J. Webb, of Webb, Burton, Carlson, Pedersen & Paine, Twin Falls, for defendant-appellant.

John Hohnhorst, of Hepworth, Nungester & Felton, Twin Falls, for plaintiff-respondent.

WALTERS, Chief Judge.

George Leonard appeals from a judgment awarded against him for compensatory and punitive damages. The judgment resulted from a claim that he wrongfully had converted to his own use money on deposit in a joint savings account in a local bank, which account appeared in his name and the name of his grandmother, Leta V. Erhardt.

We are presented with several issues on this appeal. Did the grandson have a right of ownership in the joint account that entitled him to withdraw the funds at his convenience and without the permission of his grandmother? After he withdrew the funds, was the grandmother entitled to reimbursement in full from the grandson or did the withdrawal terminate her right to the funds? Did the grandson's behavior warrant a judgment of punitive damages against him? Did the trial court err in making certain evidentiary rulings at trial? Should attorney fees be awarded on appeal to either party?

The essential facts in this case are not disputed. As noted in the grandson's opening brief on appeal, the substantive issues are ownership of the joint account and the grandson's right, or lack of right, to expend the funds from the account.

The account was opened by the grandmother in 1967, in her name and the name of her grandson, George, who was then fifteen years old. He was the only lineal grandson of the grandmother's first husband. She was very close to the grandson and thought highly of him. He lived with his parents in a house directly across the country road from where the grandmother lived, and he visited her nearly every day. At trial, the grandson testified that when his grandmother requested him to sign the signature card for the joint savings account, she told him the account was for his benefit.

After signing the signature card, the grandson returned home and informed his father, Merl Leonard, about the joint savings account. The following day, Merl questioned the grandmother about what she had done. She stated that she was sure she wanted to have the grandson's name on the account; but she never mentioned that she had intended to make a gift of the funds in the account to the grandson.

In 1968, the grandmother established a trust to hold title to a forty-acre farm for the benefit of the grandson, the sole beneficiary of the trust. Although close in time to the opening of the joint savings account, no direct evidence was presented at trial concerning any relationship between the creation of the trust and the opening of the joint account.

Initially the joint account was funded with a deposit by the grandmother of $5,000. In July, 1971, she deposited another $5,000 in the account. At the time of the second deposit, the grandmother did not discuss her actions with either Merl or the grandson, nor did she mention any intent to make a gift of the funds. No other deposits were made to the joint savings account, other than interest credited by the bank.

In 1972, the grandmother broke her hip, after which she was limited in her activities. She appointed her son, Merl, as her attorney-in-fact, to handle her financial affairs. Thereafter, Merl obtained possession of the passbook to the joint savings account. He gave the passbook to the grandson without *497 the grandmother's knowledge or consent.

In 1973, the grandmother requested and received the return of the forty acres she had deeded in trust. This was apparently due to discontent in the family caused by the favoritism shown to the grandson.

The ownership of the bank changed hands in 1974, and both the grandmother and the grandson were requested to sign a new signature card on the joint savings account. They complied. All bank statements for the joint account were sent to the grandmother's address. No request was ever made to have correspondence from the bank mailed to the grandson. At all times from the opening of the account, the grandmother reported the interest to the account as her income for tax purposes.

In January, 1976, the grandson withdrew the entire balance of $13,677.57 from the joint savings account. He never received permission to do so from his grandmother, nor did he tell her of the withdrawal. He testified he understood that the money had been given to him.

The grandmother requested her son Carl Leonard, Merl's brother, to check on the status of the joint savings account in September, 1978. Carl discovered that the grandson had withdrawn all the funds. The grandmother became upset at this news, and after discussing the matter with her son Merl, terminated Merl's power of attorney. She then appointed her son Carl as her attorney-in-fact, and asked him to recover the funds taken from the joint savings account by the grandson.

A letter was sent to the grandson on September 29, 1978, demanding return of the entire sum of $13,677.57 plus interest from the date of the withdrawal. In the letter, the grandmother emphatically stated that she had never had any intent to give the funds to the grandson.

After the grandson received the letter, he disregarded the grandmother's demand and used the money as a down payment on a house in Twin Falls, Idaho. The grandmother then commenced this suit to recover the funds.

Following trial to the court, the district judge determined that all of the funds in the joint savings account had been deposited by the grandmother, that no clear and convincing evidence existed to show any intent by her to make a gift of the funds in the account to the grandson, and that the grandson had wrongfully withdrawn the money from the account and was liable for repayment. General damages in the amount of $18,410 were awarded to the grandmother for the principal amount of the funds taken together with interest. In addition to this liability, the judge awarded punitive damages of $6,133.33 against the grandson due to his withdrawal of the funds, his silent retention of those funds, and his use of the funds after receiving the letter demanding return of the funds.

The first issues we will address concern the ownership of the funds in the joint account, and the effect on that ownership made by the grandson's withdrawal of the funds. The grandson contends that he had a right to withdraw the funds in the account because he was a joint tenant, that there was nothing improper about his withdrawal of the funds, and that the withdrawal terminated all ownership rights the grandmother had in the funds. We disagree.

A joint savings account is a contractual agreement between a financial institution and the named depositors. In re Chase's Estate, 82 Idaho 1, 348 P.2d 473 (1960). Account contracts, such as the joint savings account in this case, define the power of withdrawal held by each party to the account, as a means of protecting the financial institution. See I.C. § 15-6-102. But the actual ownership of the funds in the account is not affected by the account contract. Idaho First National Bank v. First National Bank of Caldwell, 81 Idaho 285, 294, 340 P.2d 1094

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Bluebook (online)
657 P.2d 494, 104 Idaho 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erhardt-v-leonard-idahoctapp-1983.