Gray v. TD Bank, N.A.

2012 ME 83, 45 A.3d 735, 2012 WL 2384099, 2012 Me. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 26, 2012
DocketWal-11-117
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 2012 ME 83 (Gray v. TD Bank, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. TD Bank, N.A., 2012 ME 83, 45 A.3d 735, 2012 WL 2384099, 2012 Me. LEXIS 84 (Me. 2012).

Opinion

LEVY, J.

[¶ 1] Robert L. Gray appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court (Waldo County, Hjelm, J.) granting TD Bank, N.A.’s motion to dismiss his complaint asserting claims for breach of contract, negligence, and punitive damages. We affirm the dismissal of Gray’s contract and punitive damages claims, but we vacate the judgment with respect to the negligence claim.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶2] This case arose from events that resulted in a Probate Court judgment against Gray, which we affirmed in relevant part in Estate of Miller, 2008 ME 176, 960 A.2d 1140. Unless otherwise noted, the following facts are taken from Gray’s complaint. See Gorham v. Androscoggin Cnty., 2011 ME 63, ¶2, 21 A.3d 115; Bonney v. Stephens Mem’l Hosp., 2011 ME 46, ¶ 16,17 A.3d 123.

[¶ 3] Gray’s mother, Thelma M. Miller, opened a checking account at Peoples Heritage Bank sometime before September 1994. TD Bank, N.A., is the successor to Peoples Heritage Bank (collectively, “the Bank”). When Miller opened the account, she signed a signature card. The front of the card is undated, and the Bank did not retain a copy of the back of the card. Until October 1994, Miller received statements for the account addressed solely to her at her Searsport residence. Gray lived with Miller during this time. Beginning in November 1994, account statements were addressed to “Thelma M. Miller or Robert L. Gray” at the home they shared. Gray alleges that Miller executed an account maintenance form to add Gray as a joint owner of the account with right of survivorship. By 1994, the Bank used such forms rather than signature cards to open accounts or change their ownership, and it then recorded the information from the forms electronically.

[¶ 4] After Miller died in March 2004, the Bank informed Gray that he was a joint holder of the account and entitled to the funds therein. He met with a Bank employee at the Searsport branch on June 22. After reviewing the account’s electronic record, which listed both Gray’s and Miller’s names, and upon presentation of Miller’s death certificate, the employee had Gray sign an account maintenance form removing Miller’s name from the account. In October 2004, Gray withdrew all of the funds in the account, totaling nearly $111,000, and deposited them in an account at another bank.

[¶ 5] Gray’s sister, Roselyn Bean, served as personal representative of their mother’s estate. Bean brought an action against Gray on behalf of the Estate in Waldo County Probate Court in 2005, alleging, among other claims, that the funds Gray had withdrawn from the checking account belonged to the Estate. As part of the pretrial process, Gray requested that the Bank produce all records related to the account from July 1, 1994 through July 1, 1995. The Bank replied that it did not have any records for this period. Later, in response to a pretrial subpoena requesting all ownership documents for the account, the Bank produced a copy of the front of the signature card and the account maintenance form that Gray had signed in 2004 to remove Miller’s name from the account after her death.

[¶ 6] The Probate Court held a trial over four days between April and July 2007. A Bank representative testified that the monthly account statements, which were addressed to “Thelma M. Miller or Robert L. Gray,” as well as other available *738 bank records, indicated that the checking account was held jointly by Gray with the right of survivorship. 1 However, she added that she “would definitely conclude that something is missing.” She also testified that ownership changes would be reflected in a document kept with the original signature card, but that the Bank’s records for the account did not include such a document. Miller, 2008 ME 176, ¶ 13, 960 A.2d 1140. As between account statements and the signature card, “she was clear that the signature card rather than the bank statement is the controlling document for determining account ownership.” Id. ¶ 15.

[¶ 7] Based on the signature card, the Probate Court determined that Miller was the sole owner of the checking account and that the funds Gray had withdrawn were the property of the Estate. Id. ¶ 17. On appeal, we affirmed this portion of the judgment, holding that the Probate Court’s finding on the ownership of the account was not clearly erroneous, explaining:

Robert Gray testified that he had never seen a document making him a joint owner of the checking account, and he considered the money in the account to belong to his mother. He said that he had never spoken to her about the addition of his name to the statement, about the account’s ownership, or about its disposition after her death. Gray said that he had never made any transactions in the account while Miller was alive.
... Although the bank representative’s testimony was somewhat contradictory regarding the evidence of sole ownership established by the signature card versus the inference of joint ownership suggested by the bank statement, her testimony nonetheless provided evi-dentiary support for the court’s factual finding that the signature card proved Thelma Miller’s sole ownership of the checking account.

Id. ¶¶ 16-17. Following our decision, Gray subpoenaed the Bank, again requesting all documents related to the ownership of the checking account, including printouts of electronic records. The Bank responded in January 2009 that it had not located any additional documents.

[¶ 8] Gray sued the Bank in March 2010, seeking compensatory and punitive damages for (1) breach of contract for failing to retain or produce in the Probate proceeding the records that would show Gray’s joint ownership of the account, (2) negligence for failing to retain or produce those records, and (3) punitive damages based on the “deliberate conduct of the Bank in disposing of records showing that Mr. Gray was a joint owner of the checking account with right of survivorship at the time of the death of Mrs. Miller.” The Bank filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), asserting that the applicable statute of limitations and the doctrine of collateral estoppel barred the complaint. The Superior Court granted the motion based on the doctrine of collateral estoppel in a thorough decision that reasoned:

The final judgment entered against Gray in the Probate Court action establishes the specific factual point that he did not acquire an ownership interest in the checking account. Although there is not a complete identity of other issues *739 underlying the two court actions (for example, the claims at bar are based on allegations against the Bank that were not included in the estate’s Probate Court claim against Gray), that precise issue of ownership is common to both proceedings. That issue was actually adjudicated adversely to Gray in the prior case, thereby establishing this aspect of the collateral estoppel analysis.

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Bluebook (online)
2012 ME 83, 45 A.3d 735, 2012 WL 2384099, 2012 Me. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-td-bank-na-me-2012.