Garten v. Daley

91 P.3d 96, 121 Wash. App. 653
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 22, 2004
DocketNo. 51621-3-I
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 91 P.3d 96 (Garten v. Daley) 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
Garten v. Daley, 91 P.3d 96, 121 Wash. App. 653 (Wash. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Schindler, J.

Edwina Garten, the personal representative of the Estate of Rudolph Krappes (the Estate) appeals the trial court’s decision to distribute funds owned by Rudolph Krappes to his niece Sondra Daley from their joint checking account with right of survivorship. The Estate contends that under the banking statute, chapter 30.22 RCW, Estate of Lennon v. Lennon ,1 and Estate of Tosh,2 the [656]*656Estate owns the joint account funds because Daley withdrew them before Krappes died. We agree. The trial court erred when it concluded that the joint account established by Krappes created an ownership interest in Daley and was an inter vivos gift. But because the undisputed evidence establishes that Krappes intended Daley to have the joint account funds after he died, we affirm the trial court’s decision to impose a constructive trust and distribute the joint account funds to her. The Estate also challenges the trial court’s decision to allow testimony under the deadman’s statute and several evidentiary rulings. The trial court’s decision to admit Krappes’ unsigned will was harmless error and we affirm the trial court’s other evidentiary decisions.

Facts

On June 4, 1986, Rudolph Krappes opened a joint bank account with right of survivorship at the Burien branch of First Interstate Bank. The account listed Krappes’ niece Sondra Daley, who lives in Nebraska, as a depositor. Krappes deposited all the funds in the Krappes-Daley account, and used the money to pay his living expenses. Daley made no deposits of her own funds into the account.3

On April 19, 1991, Krappes executed a last will and testament. In the will, he named another niece, Edwina Garten, as personal representative and sole beneficiary of the estate. The primary asset identified in the will is Krappes’ house.4

In June 1994, Krappes purchased a certificate of deposit “in trust for” Daley. In December 1998, Krappes purchased an annuity and designated Daley as the beneficiary.

[657]*657In 2001 Krappes’ spouse Dorothy was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.5 Beginning in March 2001, Dorothy’s niece Wanda Koumaros and Wanda’s sister Rita began helping the Krappes on a daily basis with errands, medical appointments, and other daily needs. Koumaros regularly spent the entire day taking care of the Krappes. In June, Krappes was diagnosed with cancer of the jaw and surgery was scheduled for early July.6 On June 12, Krappes withdrew the funds from the certificate of deposit and deposited them in the Krappes-Daley joint account.

On June 22, Krappes was admitted to the hospital for treatment of cancer of his lower jaw. Thereafter, he was in either the hospital or a residential rehabilitation facility and never returned home.

When Krappes was hospitalized in June, Daley agreed to manage Krappes’ financial affairs and was sent the checkbook for the Krappes-Daley joint account. Daley paid Krappes’ bills from this account. One of Krappes’ neighbors collected the mail and sent it to Daley so that she could pay his bills and manage his financial affairs.

In conversations with Koumaros, Daley learned that Krappes had signed several checks in blank and given them to Koumaros and her sister to pay for any necessities. Koumaros also told Daley that a box of checks for the Krappes-Daley account was missing and could not be located. Daley was concerned about the blank checks signed by Krappes, the missing box of checks, and because she had not met and did not know Koumaros or her sister. Daley spoke to Garten’s brother Frank in late June or early July. She told Frank she was worried about the integrity and safety of the funds in the Krappes-Daley account and that she planned to move the money to a different account. Frank agreed that it was a good idea to move the money out of the account to protect it. Frank told Garten about his [658]*658conversations and Daley’s plan. On July 1, Daley withdrew $95,000 from the joint account and transferred it to an account she had with her mother. Daley left $21,000 in the Krappes-Daley account so that Koumaros and her sister could use the signed blank checks to pay bills if necessary.

On July 5, Krappes told Koumaros he wanted to consolidate all his money in the Krappes-Daley joint account because if anything happened to him, he wanted Daley to get everything.

After Krappes’ surgery in early July, Krappes asked Koumaros several times to help him change his will, make Daley the sole beneficiary, and to change his attorney in fact from Garten to Daley.

On July 26, Dorothy Krappes died.

On August 6, Daley came to Seattle to visit Krappes and meet Koumaros and her sister Rita. On August 7, after meeting with Koumaros and a notary public, Krappes executed a new power of attorney designating Daley as his attorney in fact. On August 8, Daley, as Krappes’ attorney in fact, withdrew $10,000 from Krappes’ and Dorothy’s joint account and gave the money to Koumaros to repay her for her past and expected future caretaking. During her visit, Daley also arranged with Koumaros and her sister to take over all bill paying and financial management for Krappes and looked again for the missing box of checks. Daley returned to Nebraska on August 9.

On August 12, Daley withdrew $18,000 from the Krappes-Daley joint account and deposited these funds in her own account because Koumaros and her sister would no longer write checks on the Krappes-Daley account and the box of checks was still missing. On August 13, Daley withdrew $95,000 from the account with her mother and purchased a cashier’s check in that amount.7

On August 24, Krappes died unexpectedly of a heart attack.

[659]*659On September 13, Daley deposited the $95,000 cashier’s check in a bank account in her name only. From July 1 to August 16, Daley withdrew $113,900 from the Krappes-Daley joint account.8

Krappes’ existing will was admitted to probate, and on September 19, 2001, Garten was named as his personal representative. Garten, as the personal representative of the Estate, asked Daley to return the funds she had removed from the Krappes-Daley joint account and provide the bank records. Daley repaid the money she used to pay Koumaros from Krappes’ and Dorothy’s account but refused to return the money she withdrew from the Krappes-Daley joint account because Krappes intended that money go to her on his death. The Estate filed an action against Daley, claiming it was legally entitled to the funds from the Krappes-Daley joint account and demanding return of the $113,900. The case was tried to the court on August 26 and 27, 2002.

The trial court ruled that when Krappes created the Krappes-Daley joint account, he had made an inter vivos gift of the money in the joint account to Daley, and that Daley was entitled to the money. The court also found that Daley did not intend or attempt to convert the money to her own use, that she was the intended beneficiary of the funds in the joint account, and that if Daley did not receive the funds, the Estate would be unjustly enriched. The court imposed a constructive trust on the funds from the joint account and awarded them to Daley. The Estate appeals.

Legal Title to the Joint Account Funds

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Related

Anthony R Gordon, V City Of Tacoma
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2013
Taufen v. Estate of Kirpes
230 P.3d 199 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2010)
In re the Marriage of Mueller
167 P.3d 568 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2007)
In the Matter of Estate of Krappes
91 P.3d 96 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2004)
Garten v. Daley
120 Wash. App. 1055 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.3d 96, 121 Wash. App. 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garten-v-daley-washctapp-2004.