First National Bank of Hinton v. Tate

178 S.E. 807, 116 W. Va. 138, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 31
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1935
Docket8066
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 178 S.E. 807 (First National Bank of Hinton v. Tate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Hinton v. Tate, 178 S.E. 807, 116 W. Va. 138, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 31 (W. Va. 1935).

Opinion

*139 Kenna, Judge:

The First National Bank of Hinton filed its bill of inter-pleader in the circuit court of Summers County alleging that John B. Tate at the time of his death on March 16, 1926, had on deposit in the savings department of the hank the sum of $8,999.59; that he died without descendants and intestate, leaving surviving him his mother, Ella E. Tate, since deceased, and P. W. Tate, W. H. Tate, E. R. Tate and Thomas J. Tate, brothers, each of whom plaintiff is now advised is entitled to a one-fifth undivided interest in the estate of John B. Tate; that thereafter, the plaintiff honored cheeks of Ella E. Tate in the total of $1,000.00 and that, with that deduction and after adding interest on the fund represented by the deposit in the name of John B. Tate to April 10, 1933, the date upon which the plaintiff qualified as his administrator, his estate represented by the money in the hands of the bank amounted to $10,809.31; that plaintiff is advised that Ella E. Tate died on the 26th day of February, 1933, leaving a will by which P. W. Tate was made the sole beneficiary, ~W. H. Tate, E. R. Tate and Thomas J. Tate receiving nominal bequests of one dollar each, and that the will of Ella E. Tate has been probated in Louisa County, Virginia.

The bill further alleges that P. W. Tate in his own right and as executor of Ella E. Tate, deceased, has sued the plaintiff by. notice of motion in the circuit court of Summers County for the amount of the deposit held by it, the said notice of motion relying upon the passbook of the bank showing the deposit in the name of Ella E. Tate.

The bill of complaint further avers that after the death of John B. Tate, an employee of the plaintiff bank in charge of the transaction was advised that the mother of John B. Tate was entitled to the whole of his estate, and that P. W. Tate upon visiting the bank of plaintiff furthered that false impression, and procured a passbook to be made for the entire deposit to Ella E. Tate, having the transfer of the fund dated back to a time a few days before the death of John B. Tate, and that it was while the plaintiff was under this false impression that the entire amount descended to Ella E. Tate that *140 her checks were honored in the sum of $1,000.00; that immediately upon learning .of that error, which was at the time that the administrator was appointed for the estate of John B. Tate on April 10,1933, plaintiff gave written notice by letter mailed to P. W. Tate of the appointment of an administrator for John B. Tate, and of the transfer of the account to the administrator’s name and of the fact that distribution would be made according to a legal finding as to who the beneficiaries of the estate of John B. Tate in fact were. The letter demanded the return of the passbook held by P. W. Tate as executor of the estate of Ella E. Tate, which was refused.

The bill goes on to allege that W. H. Tate, E. R. Tate and Thomas J. Tate have each notified the plaintiff that they are entitled, respectively, to one-fifth of the fund in its hands as distributees of the estate of John B. Tate, deceased. The bill concludes with the usual averment of the willingness of the stakeholder to distribute the fund in accordance with the decree of the court, and prays that an injunction may-be granted restraining the prosecution of the notice of motion.

P. W. Tate filed a lengthy answer to this bill of complaint, the averments of which we do not think it is necessary to repeat in detail, deeming it sufficient to state that the principal issues raised in the case and to be decided here are (1) the place of residence of John B. Tate at the time of his death, and what law governs the distribution of his estate; (2) whether or not there was laches on the part of W. H. Tate, E. R. Tate and Thomas J. Tate in not having asserted their rights, if any they have, in the estate of John B. Tate at the time of his death in 1926, until the time of this suit.

Answers were also filed by W. H. Tate and E. R. Tate.

Proof was taken on the question of the domicile of John B. Tate at the time of his death and on the question of laches.

The trial court found that P. W. Tate, in his own right and as the executor of Ella E. Tate, was entitled to recover in full the amount in the hands of the bank, basing its decree upon the conclusion that John B. Tate was domiciled in Virginia at the time of his death. W. H. Tate, E. R. Tate and Thomas J. Tate prosecute this appeal, contending that the proof shows *141 that John B. Tate was domiciled in West Virginia at the time of his death.

The proof shows that John B. Tate died in Hinton in March, 1926, unmarried, intestate, owing no debts of consequence, and with about $8,500.00 on deposit in the savings department of the First National Bank of that city. He came to Hinton from Louisa County, Virginia, in 1905, when about fifteen years of age, and in 1906, began working there, apparently for the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company. At the time of his death, he had been a brakeman employed by that company on a freight run between Hinton and Clifton Forge, Virginia, for several years. For a period of five or six years, he had rented a furnished room in the town of Hinton from Mrs. J. C. Durette, which he had paid for by the month and had occupied until the time of his death. When in Clifton Forge, at the other end of his run, he either slept in the caboose of his train or stayed at the Y. M. C. A. During the period that John B. Tate was working out of Hinton for the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company, his mother, Ella E. Tate, and his brother, P. W. Tate, lived on a small farm in Louisa County, Virginia. John B. Tate referred on many occasions to the place in Virginia as his home, but his brother, E. R. Tate, who is interested here in establishing a West Virginia domicile for John B. Tate, testified that in 1919 John had told him that he expected to make his home in Hinton and never expected to return to Virginia to live. On one occasion, he declared that he could not vote in West Virginia. John B. Tate returned to the Virginia place two or three times a year, apparently for short visits. In 1912, he returned to the Virginia place and there remained for three weeks assisting his brother, P. W. Tate, to build a house, the expense of which was divided between them, for the mother and P. W. Tate to live in. In 1918, he was stricken with tuberculosis and remained at the Virginia place from about the first of July until sometime in August, when he went to Colorado for his health and there remained for thirteen months. He resumed his occupation with the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company in the fall of 1919, and returned to Virginia to spend Christmas that year. He paid no taxes in Virginia and was *142 not registered to vote there. He sent money home to his brother, P. W. Tate, to assist in the maintenance of his mother, as did the other brothers residing in West Virginia. He was solicitous about being registered as a qualified voter in Hinton on at least two different occasions and caused inquiry to be made to verify the fact that he was registered. He voted in Hinton on at least two occasions, and possibly three, the last probably being the general election which immediately preceded his death.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.E. 807, 116 W. Va. 138, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-hinton-v-tate-wva-1935.