In Re: Estate of John E. Case, Unpublished Decision (4-3-1998)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 1998
DocketC.A. Case No. 16747. T.C. Case No. 309809.
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re: Estate of John E. Case, Unpublished Decision (4-3-1998) (In Re: Estate of John E. Case, Unpublished Decision (4-3-1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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In Re: Estate of John E. Case, Unpublished Decision (4-3-1998), (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Elizabeth J. Rankey appeals from a judgment of the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, Probate Division, which overruled in part her exceptions to the inventory filed in the estate of John E. Case ("Case").

The facts and procedural history are as follows.

John and Rowena Case moved to Dayton from Arizona in 1993. Rankey, the couple's niece, lived in Dayton and agreed to assist them in their daily activities, including transportation to doctors' appointments and the grocery store and bill paying. The Cases' good friend, William Day, also lived in Dayton and visited the couple numerous times each week. Day served as the couple's personal and financial advisor. The Cases established bank accounts at Bank One.

In January 1994, Mrs. Case was diagnosed with terminal cancer. Day suggested to the Cases that they execute a power of attorney and that they include Rankey's name on one of their bank accounts to simplify the handling of their affairs. On January 24, 1994, the Cases established savings account number 8000134240 at the National Bank of Detroit ("NBD"). The account was titled in the names of "Case, John E. or Rowena B. Case or Rankey, Elizabeth J.," and the signature card was signed by each of the Cases and by Rankey. The signatures acknowledged the receipt of NBD's Terms and Conditions brochure governing the account, which stipulated that all joint accounts provided for survivorship rights unless otherwise requested. Account number 8000134240 was funded by a $20,000 cashier's check from Bank One purchased by the Cases.

Mrs. Case died on February 8, 1994. On February 11, Case executed a power of attorney in favor of Rankey. Rankey continued to assist Case in his financial affairs, including bill paying. In November 1994, she opened a second account at NBD, account number 4200100552, that was both a checking and a savings account. The signature card for the account was signed by Case and by Rankey in her individual capacity; the power of attorney was not employed in the creation of this account. The signatures again acknowledged the receipt of the Terms and Conditions brochure which designated that the account was a joint and survivorship account. On the same day, the funds on deposit in account number 8000134240, totaling $26,897.88, were transferred to the new account, and account number 8000134240 was closed. Rankey deposited additional funds into account number 4200100552 from sources including Case's Bank One accounts and his retirement income.

On February 2, 1995, Rankey established NBD account number 49594369, a certificate of deposit ("CD"), by transferring $35,000 from account number 4200100552. This account was established in the names of "John E. Case or Elizabeth Rankey" and was a joint and survivorship account. The signature card was signed by Rankey, individually and as Case's attorney-in-fact.

Case died testate in March 1995. His will appointed Rankey and Lorelei Clapper to administer his estate. Rankey and Clapper, however, were unable to agree on the inventory of estate assets. Their dispute centered on the treatment of the joint and survivorship accounts. As a result, Harry G. Beyoglides, Jr. was appointed to administer the estate. Beyoglides filed an inventory that included the funds in NBD accounts 4200100552 and 49594369 in Case's estate. The inventory included assets totaling $75,540.48, of which $66,230.07 was attributable to the NBD accounts. Rankey filed exceptions to the inventory contending that the NBD accounts should not have been included because they were joint and survivorship accounts.

The trial court conducted a hearing on April 14, 1997. Day and attorney Daniel H. McKnight, who had drafted Case's power of attorney, testified on Rankey's behalf. Day and McKnight testified that Case had fully understood the power of attorney that he executed in favor of Rankey. Day further testified that he had suggested a joint account in the names of the Cases and Rankey for managing the Cases' affairs and had heard the Cases instruct Rankey to write a $20,000 check from Bank One to open the first joint account. Day could not recall whether he had been present at a conversation between Case and Rankey about opening a CD.

Rankey also testified on her own behalf. She stated that all of the transfers from Bank One accounts to NBD accounts and among the NBD accounts had been made pursuant to Case's instructions and with his approval. She also said that she had withdrawn $3,750 and had given it to her husband as a gift from Case at Case's request "for all he had done for him." Rankey testified that after the first joint and survivorship account had been established, Mrs. Case had said to her, "You win," but that Rankey had not understood what the comment meant. Rankey testified that she had not understood the nature of the survivorship accounts until after Case's death when McKnight had told her that she was entitled to keep the funds in the joint accounts. McKnight corroborated that Rankey had been "shocked" by this information.

Beyoglides did not call any witnesses on behalf of the estate.

The trial court found that the NBD accounts had been properly included in the inventory of estate assets but that the sum of $26,897.88, representing the ending balance of NBD account number 8000134240, ought to be excluded because that account had been "a jointly held rights of survivorship account used to begin NBD savings and checking accounts numbered 4200100552." The trial court implicitly rejected Rankey's claimed right to a survivorship interest in any other monies.

Rankey asserts one assignment of error on appeal.

THE TRIAL COURT'S FINDING THAT $35,000.00 WAS AN ASSET OF THE ESTATE WAS AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE AND CONTRARY TO LAW.

Rankey contends that the trial court erred in including any of the funds in the joint and survivorship accounts in Case's estate.

Rankey relies upon Wright v. Bloom (1994), 69 Ohio St.3d 596, in support of her position that she was entitled to the funds in the joint and survivorship accounts upon Case's death. Wright addressed whether survivorship rights included in a contract for a joint and survivorship account could be defeated by evidence extrinsic to the account contract that the depositor had not intended to create a survivorship interest in the account. The supreme court held that "survivorship rights under a joint and survivorship account * * * to the sums remaining on deposit at the death of the depositor may not be defeated by extrinsic evidence that the decedent did not intend to create in [the] surviving party or parties a present interest in the account." Id. at 603. The court established a rebuttable presumption in favor of the surviving party or parties. Id. at 605. "The opening of a joint and survivorship account in the absence of fraud, duress, undue influence or lack of capacity on the part of the decedent is conclusive evidence of his or her intention to transfer to the surviving party or parties a survivorship interest in the balance remaining in the account at his or her death." Id., paragraph two of the syllabus.

Rankey contends that, pursuant to Wright, she was entitled to the funds in the joint and survivorship accounts. We agree with this position to an extent. Case signed an NBD Signature Card for Personal Accounts for account numbers 8000134240 and 4200100552, indicating that he had received and agreed to the terms and conditions governing the account as set forth in NBD's Terms and Conditions brochure.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re: Estate of John E. Case, Unpublished Decision (4-3-1998), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-john-e-case-unpublished-decision-4-3-1998-ohioctapp-1998.