Estate of Orin Perry v. Key Bank Nat'l Ass'n

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 9, 2009
DocketCUMcv-08-565
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Orin Perry v. Key Bank Nat'l Ass'n (Estate of Orin Perry v. Key Bank Nat'l Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Orin Perry v. Key Bank Nat'l Ass'n, (Me. Super. Ct. 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss. CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV-08-565 i 1 / ESTATE OF ORIN PERRY,

Plaintiff DECISION AND ORDER

v.

KEY BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,

Defendant.

BEFORE THE COURT

This matter comes before the court on a motion for summary judgment by the

Plaintiff, the Estate of Orin Perry.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The following facts are undisputed.

Orin Perry ("Perry") was born in 1918. He and his wife, who passed away in

1983, had two sons, Edward and Daniel. Beginning in 1986, Perry gave numerous

monetary gifts to his loved ones and made significant stock purchases.) In the early

1990s, Perry moved in with Therese Wynne ("Wynne"). Wynne may have helped Perry

with his personal and financial papers. Possibly as early as the 1990s, but definitely

before 2003, Perry began exhibiting signs of dementia. Starting in December 2000, there

was a pattern of unusual withdrawals from one of Perry's investment accounts. On April

I The court notes the Plaintiffs objection to Key Bank's Statement of Material Facts ~ 58 and recognizes, for the purposes of this motion, the gifts Perry made from 1986-2002 to his sons in the amounts of $5,000 and $10,000. It is undisputed that Perry purchased $17,465 in stock in 200 I, and $159,065 in stock in 2002. 20, 2001, Perry and Wynne opened a $50,000.00 Certificate of Deposit account

("Account") at Key Bank with Perry's money. The Account was owned by Perry and

Wynne injoint tenancy, earning a per annum interest of2.91 %.2 The Account was

governed by a Deposit Agreement3 and an Account Express Plan ("AEP").4

Key Bank initially used an address listed in both Perry's and Wynne's names for

the Account. The 2002 1099-lnt was addressed to both Perry and Wynne and mailed to

the listed address, but only Perry's social security number was listed on the statement.

The 2003 1099-lnt was again sent to the same address with only Perry's social security

number, but this time was only addressed to Wynne. At some point between January 1,

2003 and August 7, 2003 Perry was removed as an owner of the Account. Wynne died on

July 12,2003. On August 7,2003 Key Bank closed the Account and surrendered the

$52,033.52 balance of the Account to the personal representative of Wynne's estate, with

no notice mailed to Perry. After Wynne's death Perry seemed incapable of taking care of

2 Perry's federal income taxes were prepared by a C.P.A from 2001-2003. His taxes reflect $637 in interest income from Key Bank in 2002, and $254 in interest in 2003. Perry's C.P.A. also served as his investment counselor during the time of the disputed title change of the Account. 3 Section 9 of the Deposit Agreement states: "Subject to the statement review provisions contained in Section 10 below, if the signature cards or resolutions related to your Account are unavailable for any reason, you agree that we can rely upon the titling contained in our most recent Account Statement for purposes of determining the ownership of the Account." Section 10 states: "You should review and balance your Account statements promptly after you receive them .... If you don't receive an Account statement by the date when you usually receive it, call us at once. You must review your statements to make sure that there are no errors in the Account information .... You must notify us as soon as possible after receiving your Account statement if you believe there is an error or irregularity of any kind, including any unauthorized signature, lack of signature or alteration. You agree that fourteen (14) days after we mailed a statement (or otherwise made it available to you) is a reasonable amount of time for you to review your Account statement and report and errors or other irregularities ...." 4 The AEP states that it is the signature card for all accounts under the plan.

2 himself, and moved in with his son Daniel Perry.5 Perry died on November 15, 2008 and

the Estate of Orin Perry ("Plaintiff') was substituted as Plaintiff.

Key Bank procedures require both owners of an account to sign an "Authorization

to Remove Signer from an Individual Account" form ("80-1603X") in order to document

and confirm an owner's intentional relinquishment of the Account. After signing the 80­

1603X, Key Bank procedures then require the new sole owner to execute and deliver to

Key Bank a new Account Express Plan as the sole owner of the Account. After both of

these steps are complete, the Key Bank branch then forwards both the 80-1630X form

and the new Account Express Plan forms to the Key Bank AEP Imaging department.

The Key Bank branch then places message restrictions and account remarks on the

Account stating that the client has been removed from the account. Message restrictions

have a default length of 60 days, at which point they are automatically purged unless a

longer expiration date has been manually set. Similarly, account remarks are also set

with an expiration date, with Key Bank procedures recommending five business days for

the customer record to reflect changes. Employees then manually remove the account

remarks once it is verified that the name has been removed from the Account if they have

not already expired. 6 The procedures concerning the length of time that message

restrictions and account remarks are maintained in the records conforms to the standards

used by other banks in Ohio and Maine, the short times used to minimize the possibility

of fraudulent activity during the five day period it might take for customer records to

5 Daniel Perry told his brother Edward Perry on numerous occasions that he could convince his father to do anything he wanted. In 2006 Perry, through his son Edward acting as his attorney in fact, brought a civil action against Daniel and Daniel's wife alleging a breach of fiduciary duty to Perry by misappropriating his money. The lawsuit against Daniel and Daniel's wife was dismissed by stipulation. 6 The court overrules Plaintiffs objection to DSMF ~ 70 as it serves merely to explain the account remark procedures that both parties refer to at numerous points throughout their briefs.

3 reflect titling changes. After the 80-1603X and new AEP are complete, the signer must

then be removed by completing a TCS2 KeyForms Free Form action item-also known as

the TGS2. 7

Key Bank is unable to locate the original or copy of an 80-1630X form signed by

Perry, or an original or copy of an Account Express Plan signed by Wynne demonstrating

her sole ownership of the account. Key Bank is also unable to locate records of account

remarks or message restrictions, although Key Bank notes that this is not possible due to

the fact that they expire after a set time period as stated above. Although the TGS2 report

was purged twelve to eighteen months after it was made, Key Bank produced a different

report that reflects a TGS2 request sent by a Key Center to the CAM to remove Perry as

an owner on the Account with an effective date of January 23, 2003.

The following facts are disputed.

Key Bank alleges that Sections 9 and 10 of the Deposit Agreement 8 conform to

standards used by other banks in both Ohio and Maine, while the Plaintiff contends that

these provisions do not meet the standard of ordinary care that Key Bank must use when

determining account ownership. DSMF/PSMF ~ 52. Key Bank also contends that Perry

was an owner on the Account only during the period of time that both he and Wynne

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