In re Estate of Fox

36 Ohio Law. Abs. 349, 1942 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 275
CourtJackson County Probate Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1942
DocketNo. 3412
StatusPublished

This text of 36 Ohio Law. Abs. 349 (In re Estate of Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Jackson County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Fox, 36 Ohio Law. Abs. 349, 1942 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 275 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

OPINION

By SLAVENS, M. D., J.

On July .23, 1941, E. E. Eubanks was appointed guardian by this Court of the person and estate of Theodore Robert Fox, an elderly farmer eighty years of age and a resident of Jackson County, Ohio. An appeal was perfected to the Court of Common Pleas, Jackson County, Ohio, and on January 6, 1942, the judgment was affirmed and the cause remanded to the Probate Court for further proceedings. During the time the cause was pending on appeal the ward, Theodore Robert Fox, removed or was removed to Vinton County, Ohio, without the knowledge or consent of his guardian, entered the Probate Court of that County with representations that he was a resident of Vinton County, Ohio, consented to the appointment of a guardian, presumably by reason of physical disability, and a Mr. Simon A. Dixon was so appointed. Dixon secured possession of the personal assets of the estate which consisted, in the main, of a deposit in the First National Bank, Jackson, Ohio, in the amount of $3,217.00 and certain United States Treasury Bonds in the amount of $2,250.00. On January 12, 1942, the guardian, E. E. Eubanks, filed a complaint for the concealment of assets against Dixon, a hearing was had in this Court, judgment rendered in favor of the guardian and the assets were delivered to Eubanks, guardian, on April 10, 1942.

On April 16, 1942, an inventory of said estate was filed herein by the guardian and assets were therein listed as follows: Furniture and farming implements, $20.00: “Deposit in First National Bank, Jackson, Ohio, received from S. A. Dixon and The Ohio Casualty Insurance Company, $3,396.63” and designated as “money”; United States Treasury Bonds, $2,250.00: Real Estate of the estimated value of $2,430.00.

On April 20, 1942, Dewey Fox, aged 42 years, a son of Theodore Robert Fox, filed exceptions to the inventory of the guardian, claiming that he owned an undivided one-half interest in and to the sum of $3,398.68, listed as a deposit and designated as “money” in the inventory.

On the same date the guardian filed an application for instructions concerning the payment of certain claims presented to him, the same being the claim of S. A. Dixon for compensation as guardian, expenses, and attorney fees, while acting as guardian appointed by the Probate Court, Vinton County, Ohio, in the amount of $411.08, and the claim of John P. Fox for board and care of Theodore Robert Fox for 178 days at $2.00 per day, under a “contract by S. A. Dixon & Probate Court, of Vinton County, [351]*351Ohio” and being in the amount of $356.00. The three questions were submitted on the same date. At the conclusion of the hearing the guardian was instructed concerning the claim of John P. Pox and discussion of that claim is unnecessary at this time.

The questions concerning the exceptions of Dewey Pox to the inventory of the guardian will be first discussed.

The record reveals that the application for appointment as guardian of Theodore Robert Pox was filed by Dewey Pox (exceptor herein) on April 16, 1941; that the person for whom the appointment was sought was notified by personal service of written notice on April 16, 1941. The evidence introduced at the hearing on the exceptions to the inventory revealed that on the 16th day of April, 1941, Dewey Fox and Robert Pox (Robert Pox being Theodore Robert Pox) had a savings deposit in the First National Bank, Jackson, Ohio. This was a joint and survivorship account and in the usual language, “Dewey Pox or Robert Pox payable to either or the survivor”. This account was opened on March 2, 1936, with a deposit of $3,450.00 and on May 16, 1941, the balance in the account was $3,417.00. The interest had been withdrawn at ■intervals and no new deposits were made during the life of the account. On May 16, 1941, Theodore Robert Pox. withdrew the entire amount, started a new account in the same bank and on the same day in the amount of $3,417.00 but in his name as Robert Pox. There is no dispute that the new deposit represented the funds that were in the joint deposit. It is the fund represented by the new deposit that subsequently came into the possession of Simon A. Dixon, who, thereafter, transferred the same to E. E. Eu-banks, present guardian, and is now represented in his inventory as an asset of the estate. It is fortunate that this item has, through the many hands it has passed, been kept separate and apart from all other funds or assets and the question of co-mingling does not arise and the problem of tracing is not difficult.

The exceptor contends that the initial deposit on March 2, 1936, represented the accumulation of the profits derived from the joint efforts of his father and himself over a long period of years in buying and selling cattle and operating the farm. This is stated in his following testimony:

Q. Tell the Court what that understanding was.
A. We worked together all our life. He always told me if I would stay with him we would be partners together. It just left me and him. We raised cattle and accumulated what we could.
Q. Can you tell the Court about when that was?
A. Well, I couldn’t tell just exactly. It was in all the whole lifetime, that is, we worked together, as much as I could say.
Q. About how old were you when you and your father came to this understanding?
A. We understood all along from the time I was sixteen, seventeen, or until I came twenty-one. I was my own man. He wanted me to stay with him — all the rest was gone. He couldn’t handle his land and such as that, and I stayed with him, and we worked partners together.
Q. When did this relationship cease?
A. Well, on up till, oh, the last few years he wasn’t able to work. He turned it over to me and told me to go ahead and make it the [352]*352best I could. I still went ahead, raised cattle, sold them, and banked on joint accounts.
Q. In what banks did you make your deposits?
A. First National Bank down here, and Oak Hill Savings Bank.

The evidence further discloses that on April 16, 1941, the exceptor and his father had a joint and survivorship account in the Oak Hill Savings Bank in the amount of $1,150.00 and it is contended that it represented an accumulation of their joint earnings; that subsequent to April 16, 1941, Theodore Robert Fox and a daughter, Ruth Moore, withdrew $600.00 of this account leaving therein $550.00 which was subsequently withdrawn by this exceptor.

In a consideration of the ownership of deposits of this nature it is interesting to note that the questions presented for judicial determination have usually been cases where the dispute exists between the survivor and the representatives of the estate of his co-depositor.

Counsel for the exceptor has not favored the Court with any authorities concerning the rights of such co-depositors inter se but independent investigation by the Court reveals that the question has been presented to the Courts in various forms and that the authorities are difficult to reconcile.

The problem is recognized in 5 O. Jur. 94 at page 392 in the following language:

“In the cases of joint accounts two situations must be kept in mind. There is, first, the situation where the money deposited is the property of both depositors.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ferguson v. Deuble
27 Ohio Law. Abs. 533 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Ohio Law. Abs. 349, 1942 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-fox-ohprobctjackson-1942.