Estate of Brownfield v. Bank of America, NA

170 Wash. App. 553, 2012 WL 3860627
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 6, 2012
DocketNo. 29846-9-III
StatusPublished

This text of 170 Wash. App. 553 (Estate of Brownfield v. Bank of America, NA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Brownfield v. Bank of America, NA, 170 Wash. App. 553, 2012 WL 3860627 (Wash. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinions

Siddoway, A.C.J.

¶1 This case calls upon us to decide whether a bank is required by the Financial Institution Individual Account Deposit Act, chapter 30.22 RCW, to disburse funds from a decedent’s account in accordance with the most recent written contract of deposit it can locate in its files when its own electronic records and other evidence suggest that a different deposit contract was later signed but was misfiled or misplaced. We hold that a party relying on a contract of deposit must prove that its terms were memorialized by a writing meeting the requirements of the act. If the required writing cannot be found, secondary evidence is admissible to establish that it was nonetheless prepared and signed.

[556]*556¶2 We reject the position of the estate of Vance Brownfield (Estate) that the bank in this case was bound by the most recent contract of deposit it was able to locate in its files. Because there was conflicting evidence as to whether a superseding writing was prepared, signed, and lost, however, summary judgment was inappropriate. We reverse the order dismissing the Estate’s claims and remand for trial.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 Vance Brownfield died on December 31, 2008. At the time of his death he maintained accounts at five different banks and credit unions, holding deposits, collectively, of almost $800,000.00. The terms of several of the accounts had been changed by Mr. Brownfield in the year before his death to identify two of his and his late wife’s nieces as payable on death (POD) beneficiaries. In this action, the personal representative of Mr. Brownfield’s estate challenges Bank of America’s disbursement of $200,973.27 from two accounts to Karen Rhodes, Mr. Brownfield’s niece, after determining that the bank was unable to locate signed deposit agreements reflecting POD terms for the accounts as required by RCW 30.22.060.

¶4 This appeal follows the trial court’s dismissal of the Estate’s claims on summary judgment. The evidence submitted by the parties in connection with their cross motions for summary judgment established that Mr. Brownfield’s wife passed away in December 2006. He and his wife had no children. In June 2008, he named one of his late wife’s nieces, Suzanne Valach, as a POD beneficiary on an account he maintained with Banner Bank. In September 2008, he telephoned his own niece, Ms. Rhodes (his sister’s daughter) and asked her to come to Spokane to take him to do some banking; he told Ms. Rhodes to bring her driver’s license and Social Security card. On September 25, Ms. Rhodes traveled to Spokane from Chewelah, where she lived, to [557]*557meet with her uncle as requested. She was driven to Spokane by a friend. When the three met, Mr. Brownfield asked Ms. Rhodes’ friend to drive him to Numérica Credit Union and Bank of America for the purpose of making changes to some of his accounts.

¶5 The three traveled first to the credit union. Ms. Rhodes’ friend waited in the car while Mr. Brownfield and Ms. Rhodes went into the credit union to conduct his business. There, Mr. Brownfield and Ms. Rhodes met with William Carson, a service representative who knew Mr. Brownfield well. Mr. Carson later recalled Mr. Brownfield coming into the bank with Ms. Rhodes on September 25 for the purpose of naming her a POD beneficiary on one of his two credit union accounts. Mr. Carson testified by affidavit that “[i]t was very clear to me that Vance Brownfield knew and understood precisely what he wanted to accomplish by setting up an account with a payable on death designation.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 286. The court was presented with proper documentation signed at Numérica on September 25 changing one of Mr. Brownfield’s accounts to a POD account benefiting Ms. Rhodes.

¶6 Ms. Rhodes’ friend then drove Mr. Brownfield and Ms. Rhodes to Bank of America. Ms. Rhodes again went into the bank with her uncle and was present when Mr. Brownfield asked a bank teller, later identified as Beth Theodorson, to change his accounts to POD accounts with Ms. Rhodes as beneficiary. Ms. Rhodes told Ms. Theodorson that she believed her uncle intended to name her as beneficiary to only two of his accounts at the bank (he had a total of five), which her uncle confirmed, providing Ms. Theodorson with checkbooks for the two accounts he wished to modify. Ms. Theodorson made copies'of Ms. Rhodes’ driver’s license and Social Security card. The court was presented with the bank’s records establishing that on September 25, Ms. Theodorson entered the intended changes into the bank’s computerized records, transforming the two accounts at issue to POD accounts and identifying Ms. Rhodes as the beneficiary.

[558]*558¶7 Ms. Rhodes could not recall whether Mr. Brownfield signed anything at the bank, and Ms. Theodorson had no specific recollection of her dealings with the two. But Ms. Theodorson testified by affidavit as to her certainty that she would have obtained signed contracts of deposit, referred to by the bank as its “signature cards” for the accounts, as follows:

5. If a... customer wanted to designate a person as a payable on death beneficiary on an existing account they would have to sign a Change Authorization form as well as a new signature card verifying their election to designate the person as a payable on death beneficiary. The first step is to make sure the necessary forms are filled out and signed.
6. After the customer signs the Change Authorization form and a new signature card, the information is then inputted into the bank’s computer system.
7. I would not input a change into the Bank’s computer system unless the customer had actually signed the Change Authorization form and the new signature card.
11. I do not remember Vance Brownfield or Karen Rhodes. However, I would not have inputted the information adding Karen L. Rhodes’ name to the accounts . . . and designating her relationship as a beneficiary to the respective accounts into Bank of America’s computer system unless the account owner Vance Brownfield signed the Change Authorization form and a new signature card making such designation.

CP at 276-77 (emphasis added). Following Mr. Brownfield’s visit to the bank on September 25, all statements for the two bank accounts at issue reflected that they were POD accounts, with Ms. Rhodes as beneficiary.

¶8 After Mr. Brownfield’s death, Banner Bank disbursed $97,912.76 to Suzanne Valach from the account on which she had been designated Mr. Brownfield’s POD beneficiary. Numérica disbursed $68,382.04 to Ms. Rhodes from the account on which she had been designated beneficiary. Bank of America disbursed $200,973.27 to Ms. Rhodes from [559]*559the two accounts for which its computer records showed her as POD beneficiary.

¶9 The personal representative of Mr. Brownfield’s estate thereafter learned that Bank of America’s most recent signature cards for the two accounts whose funds it disbursed to Ms. Rhodes showed single ownership by Mr. Brownfield as of February 19, 2008. The cards were not marked “superseded” as was the bank’s practice when account terms were modified by a new signature card. The bank was unable to locate any signature card reflecting a change made to either account on September 25.

¶10 The personal representative commenced this action against the bank and Ms.

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170 Wash. App. 553, 2012 WL 3860627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-brownfield-v-bank-of-america-na-washctapp-2012.