In Re Estate of Fritz

20 P.2d 361, 130 Cal. App. 725, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1036
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 31, 1933
DocketDocket No. 8862.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 20 P.2d 361 (In Re Estate of Fritz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal 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 Fritz, 20 P.2d 361, 130 Cal. App. 725, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1036 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

DOOLING, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by C. Alvin Muller, as executor of the will of Lisetta E. Fritz, deceased, from an order of the superior court sustaining two certain objections to the account of appellant as such executor and directing him to restate his account. At the date of the testatrix’s death two joint bank accounts stood in the names of appellant and the testatrix. One in the Central Savings Bank of Oakland in the sum of $3,757.56 and the other in the Bank of California in San Francisco in the sum of $1428. In his account the appellant failed to include either amount, claiming that upon the testatrix’s death both vested in him as surviving joint tenant. Since the objections to the failure to include these amounts were as to each based *727 upon a different ground we pass to a consideration of each separately.

As to the Central Savings Bank account, the court found that, appellant had procured the testatrix to sign a purported joint tenancy agreement by fraud shortly before her death, and ordered appellant to account for the amount of such account. In this behalf the court found that for a long time prior to the execution of the puported joint tenancy agreement the testatrix had owned a bank account in the Central Savings Bank; that on May 12, 1931, decedent requested Anna Dorothee Stiegeler to telephone appellant and ask him to make arrangements with said bank so that money could be withdrawn from said account to pay the hospital bills and expenses of the testatrix; that pursuant to such request Mrs. Stiegeler so telephoned to appellant and on the following day appellant and Mrs. Stiegeler met in the hospital room where the testatrix then was; that at said time Mrs. Stiegeler in appellant’s presence told the testatrix that appellant had with him a card to be signed which would permit appellant to withdraw moneys from her account to pay hospital bills and expenses; that neither Mrs. Stiegeler nor the testatrix read such card or knew its contents; that appellant did not deny Mrs. Stiegeler’s statement to the testatrix nor explain to her that the card was not a mere authorization to withdraw moneys from her account, although in fact it was an agreement to create a joint tenancy in such account with appellant; and that said act of appellant in not disclosing to the testatrix the effect of said card and in permitting her to sign it, believing that it was a mere authorization to draw money, constituted actual fraud.

Without detailing the testimony it will suffice to say that everything so found is supported by competent evidence and while a conflict exists in the testimony we are bound on appeal by the resolution of that conflict in favor of the respondent.

Appellant complains of the introduction of the evidence of Mrs. Stiegeler’s statement to the testatrix that appellant had brought a card for her to sign to enable him to withdraw money from the account and his silence in the face of such statement. In this behalf he cites cases from other jurisdictions holding that the failure to deny a statement made by a third person cannot constitute an admission in the absence *728 of a duty to speak. Conceding these authorities their full weight such a duty was cast upon appellant. The court found that the testatrix requested Mrs. Stiegeler to telephone to appellant and ask him to arrange to withdraw money from her account and that Mrs. Stiegeler did so. Under such circumstances when Mrs. Stiegeler told the testatrix in appellant’s presence that he had brought a card for her to sign to enable him to withdraw money he was under a clear duty to explain to her that the card was not a mere authorization, but was in fact an agreement for a joint tenancy. Indeed, had nothing been said about the purpose or nature of the card the mere presentation of a card purporting to create a joint tenancy in response to a request from the testatrix to arrange to withdraw money from her account would have constituted a fraud upon her without more.

Appellant complains of the reception of certain evidence in the nature of admissions made by him after the testatrix’s death. While appellant denied having made the admissions, this did not render evidence of them inadmissible. We find no error in connection with the trial court’s order sustaining the objection to the failure to account for the money in the account in the Central Savings Bank of Oakland.

The joint tenancy account in the Bank of California was created from funds theretofore belonging solely to the testatrix on January 9, 1928. At that time the testatrix and appellant both signed the following form of agreement upon a card furnished by the bank and retained by it:

“This Time Account and all money now or hereafter credited thereon are the joint property (with right of survivorship) of Lisetta E. Fritz and C. Alvin Muller and payable on check of either and in case of death to the survivor."

In the will admitted to probate the testatrix inserted the following provision:

“My money standing in my name and the name of C. Alvin Muller is all my own but as Mr. C. Alvin Muller is my executor, I added his name to my Bank Book in the Bank of California on California St. near Sansome St. for his convenience so that he can pay all honest debts of my funeral, etc. Then he may keep the balance for his services.”

*729 The trial court found in this connection:

“It was the purpose and intent of said decedent, as set forth in said quoted provision of said will, to compensate said executor for his services as such executor by permitting him to retain the balance of said savings account, and said compensation was to be in lieu of the statutory compensation to which an executor is entitled under the law. . . .
“The said bank account above referred to in the amount of $1428, notwithstanding the fact that it stood in the joint names of C. Alvin Muller and said decedent, was and is the property of said decedent, and C. Alvin Muller has no interest therein.”

The court accordingly ordered that the statutory commission of the executor be disallowed unless he should file a written stipulation waiving all claim to the sum of $593, the balance in such account, and account for said $593 as a part of the assets of the estate, in which event he may claim his statutory fee.

Appellant attacks the finding that the amount in this bank account was and is the property of the decedent as unsupported by any evidence. There is abundance of authority that where a person deposits money belonging to himself in a joint account in the name of himself and another and signs a written agreement with that other constituting himself and the other joint tenants therein, in the absence of fraud, undue influence or mistake a joint tenancy with right of survivorship is created and that no evidence outside the writing itself is admissible to explain or vary its effect. (Kennedy v. McMurray, 169 Cal. 287 [146 Pac. 647, Ann. Cas. 1916D, 515]; Conneally v. San Francisco Sav. & L. Soc., 70 Cal. App. 180 [232 Pac. 755]; Estate of Gurnsey, 177 Cal. 211 [170 Pac. 402]; Estate of Nelson, 104 Cal. App. 613, 619 [286 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
20 P.2d 361, 130 Cal. App. 725, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-fritz-calctapp-1933.