Golding v. Powell

383 S.W.2d 735, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 645
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 9, 1964
DocketNo. 50585
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 383 S.W.2d 735 (Golding v. Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Golding v. Powell, 383 S.W.2d 735, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 645 (Mo. 1964).

Opinion

STOCKARD, Commissioner.

This is an appeal by Willie Lee Golding from the judgment of the trial court denying her claim that she was the owner of a bank account and of an account in each of two savings and loan associations. The sum of the three accounts exceeds $17,000.

R. Hadley Patterson was the sole owner of the three accounts. He was in a rest home and physically incapable of taking care of his business affairs. Willie Lee Golding, appellant herein, looked after all his business interests, paid his bills by using his money, and took care of him generally. About three months prior to the death of Hadley, he and appellant executed and signed printed deposit agreements purporting to transfer each account from the sole ownership of Hadley to a joint ownership, with right of survival, of Hadley and appellant. All the money in each joint account came from the accounts previously owned alone by Hadley, or from money that belonged to him.

After the death of Hadley, appellant claimed that she was the sole owner of the three accounts. The trial court ruled in her [736]*736favor, relying primarily on Commerce Trust Co. v. Watts, 360 Mo. 971, 231 S.W.2d 817. On appeal to this court that judgment was reversed. In re Patterson’s Estate, Mo., 348 S.W.2d 6. This court held that at the time the three agreements for joint accounts were executed and the accounts opened, appellant’s relationship to Hadley was that of trust and confidence, that the transfer of the accounts as the result of acts by appellant from the sole ownership of Hadley to a joint ownership was in the nature of a gift to appellant, and that pursuant to the rule announced in In re Kaimann’s Estate, 360 Mo. S44, 229 S.W.2d 527, the gift was "presumptively void” and appellant had the burden to rebut this presumption by showing the absolute fairness and validity of the gift, which included the intent on the part •of Hadley to make a gift, and that the transaction was entirely free from the taint of undue influence. The cause was remanded so that appellant could be afforded the opportunity to develop the facts. The parties stipulated that all the evidence at the first trial, subject to the objections made, should be considered on the second trial together with the additional evidence offered on retrial.

In the memorandum of the trial court it was stated that on the previous appeal we held that “the execution of the joint signature cards to the money in controversy amounted to a gift to Mrs. Golding, and that there is a legal presumption that such gift is invalid as being prompted by undue influence when received by one who occupies such a position of trust and confidence.” (Emphasis added). The trial court then held that “the additional evidence does not overcome this presumption and therefore the judgment must be for the defendant.” It was further stated in the memorandum that “the evidence clearly showed that the execution of the joint signature card ‘was undoubtedly done under a mistaken apprehension of the legal effect thereof,’ * * * (and] the question could and should have been decided on the basis of mutual mistake rather than a presumption of invalidity, * * We think this interpretation of our previous ruling is too restricted. As previously noted, we held that there was a presumption of invalidity, but we did not hold that the presumption was limited to undue influence. On the contrary, we held that because of the presumption the burden was on the appellant to show the absolute fairness of the transaction, the validity of the gift (which would include the issue of intent), and that it was free from the taint of undue influence. However, on this appeal we are concerned with whether the trial court reached the correct result in view of all the evidence, regardless of the reason given. This determination requires a detailed statement of the evidence.

Hadley was the son of Roscoe Patterson and Ada Patterson. He was a semi-invalid as a boy and never progressed beyond a few months in high school. As an adult he was not able to work. In 1944, when about thirty-seven years of age, he had an attack of some kind, perhaps meningitis, and thereafter was not able to walk without assistance. When his father was living, Hadley was dependent upon him, and after his father’s death in 1953 he was dependent upon his mother. When his mother became an invalid, his first cousin (on his father’s side), Kirby Patterson, took over the responsibility of looking after him and his mother, and he handled their property and financial affairs. At the time of the death of Hadley’s father there were two savings and loan accounts, each carried as joint accounts in the name of Roscoe C. Patterson and Ada Patterson. Thereafter, they were changed, at the suggestion of Kirby, to joint accounts in the name of Ada Patterson and R. Hadley Patterson. In 1956 a joint bank account at the Union National Bank was opened in the name of Ada Patterson and R. Hadley Patterson. In October 1957, Kirby accepted employment with the Department of Justice in Washington, D. C., and appellant, also a first cousin of Hadley (on his mother’s side), took over the responsibility of looking after him. Mrs. Patterson died in the early part of [737]*737November, 1957, and shortly thereafter, at the request of appellant, Kirby delivered to appellant the passbooks to the three accounts, all being in the name of Hadley and his mother but the sole property of Hadley because his mother was then deceased.

On December 10, 1957, the account in the Union National Bank and the account in Guaranty Federal Savings and Loan Association were changed to what purported to be joint accounts in the name of Hadley and appellant. In each case appellant presented to the bank or savings and loan association a regular printed form, each being signed by Hadley and by appellant, purporting to be an agreement that the accounts be held by Hadley and appellant as joint tenants with right of survivorship. What was said by appellant in arranging for the joint account at the Union National Bank is not disclosed in the record. However, the teller at the 'savings and loan association testified that appellant came to the office and “explained that R. Hadley Patterson was unable to come to make the withdrawals that he needed for medical expenses, and that she would like to take care of it for him.” Appellant asked the teller “how our record would need to be — how we could arrange it, so that she could take care of this for him,” and the teller told her “the account would have to be transferred, and have her name on it before we could make any withdrawals to her.” The teller further testified that the appellant “took this book back and obtained the signaure of R. Hadley Patterson, and that authorized us to journal this account to the present account, in the name of R. Had-ley Patterson and Mrs. Harold F. Golding.” On the “joint ownership signature card” the teller typed the following: “Patterson is [in?] rest home, and Mrs. Golding taking care of his business.”

The account in the Safety Federal Savings and Loan Association was changed to a joint account in the name of Hadley and appellant on January 28, 1958. The assistant-treasurer testified that when appellant came to the office the first time- “she said she would like to take care of some business for Mr.

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Related

In Re Patterson's Estate
383 S.W.2d 735 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
383 S.W.2d 735, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golding-v-powell-mo-1964.