In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Eysel

7 Mills Surr. 349, 65 Misc. 432, 121 N.Y.S. 1095
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 Mills Surr. 349 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Eysel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Eysel, 7 Mills Surr. 349, 65 Misc. 432, 121 N.Y.S. 1095 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Ketcham, S.

This administratrix was appointed upon her claim that she was the wife of the intestate, and her letters were revoked upon the finding that she was not. Objection is made that she has not charged herself in this account with the Sums on deposit in a bank account hereinafter described, or with the avails of a note made to the intestate and herself.

[350]*350Her claim is that the bank deposit and the note became her own upon the death of the intestate.

The deceased having moneys deposited in his own name surrendered the book in which the deposit was recorded and caused the amount then appearing thereon to his credit to be deposited in the same bank in the names of himself and this administratrix, as folows: “ Ferdinand Engelh. Eysel and Magdalena Eysel.”

The note in question was dated in February, 1908, and was. made to the order of Ferdinand E. Eysel and Magdalena Eysel. The court will find that the consideration for this note proceeded from the intestate.

There was a ceremony of marriage between the deceased and. this administratrix on September 13, 1902. They livéd as husband and wife for the rest of his life, except that he went to-Europe in August, 1908, where she shortly joined him; but in 187'2 the intestate entered into a ceremony of marriage with. Marie Eysel, who still survives.

It appears from the record in evidence of the proceedings for-the revocation of the letters of this administratrix that Marie, when married to the intestate, was the wife of another, then living. From the union of the intestate with Marie there were-begotten five children.

In 1896, the intestate obtained judgment against Marie, annulling his marriage with her, upon the allegation and finding of her former marriage.

A few -months later, in the same year, the intestate sought his* former wife and renewed relations with her under conditions, which would constitute a, contract of marriage if there were no-impediment to marriage on the part of either of them. There* was no such obstacle, for Marie’s former husband had died before the decree of annulment was entered.

It was upon these facts that it was held, in revoking the letters of the present accountant, that the intestate was lawfully [351]*351married to Marie in 1896; that the marriage then entered into» subsisted for the rest of his life and that there was no validity in the marriage which was solemnized between the intestate and the administratrix.

As to whether the acountant, in her apparent marriage and in the association by which it was confirmed, acted in sincerity and good faith, there is no evidence save the ceremony itself; and. from that alone the just conclusion is that she did not make a mock of its solemnities, but did believe that it was a valid and honorable transaction, unincumbered by any prior engagement of the intestate.

It is settled that, where a husband deposits his own moneys, in the names of himself and his wife, or invests his own moneys in a security in the same manner, his act, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, evinces an intention to benefit his wife to the extent of a right of survivorship in the fund so deposited or invested. West v. McCullough, 123 App. Div. 846.

This rule, whenever expressed, has been applied only to parties to an actual and lawful marriage. In a transaction clearly of a nature to bestow the right to the fund upon the woman, if she were the lawful wife, is the same rule less controlling when it appears that there was a de facto marriage, in which the woman, though in law lacking the actual right of wifehood, was in good faith persuaded that her relation was marital -and the man, whether or not he was aware of the flaw in his marriage, maintained every attitude and form of conduct which a lawful spouse would exhibit.

In the ordinary case of deposit by a real husband, the rule does not depend upon the essential fact of marriage; it arises from the impulses which would ordinarily be found to affect two persons who were married.

The original rule is that a deposit made or a security taken in the names of any two persons, whatever their relation, may be made the subject of an intention and arrangement that in. [352]*352case of death the survivor shall be entitled to the fund. This arrangement may be shown by express contract or by circumstances.

Among the circumstances from which the intention may be gathered, the marital relation is influential, not as a condition or prerequisite of any compact, but merely as a fact affording probability that the intention existed. In such case the wife does not take by legal operation dependent upon her right of wifehood, but does take because the depositor, being her husband, and naming his wife in association with him, has given sound evidence of an intention that the person so associated shall have the right of survivorship. The marriage is the basis for the conclusion that the deposit, which between strangers might not have imported a contract for survivorship, takes another meaning when the deposit concerns two persons whose conduct and intentions toward each other are influenced and shaped by their consciousness and recognition of a marriage between them.

The fact of wedlock is, therefore, only important as a reflection and record of their mutual feelings and purposes. Its use is merely evidentiary. It tends to show, and if unqualified by other evidence it does show, that the depositors have thought and acted as two persons ordinarily think and act under the sway of marital obligation when such a deposit is made.

It is made plain in West v. McCullough, supra, that it is the probability of intention which flows from marriage, and not the fact of marriage itself, which gives reason to the rule there reaffirmed. There is no longer survivorship in the wife as to a chose in action payable to husband and wife named together and, unless there is evidence of an intention to benefit her, the surviving wife cannot be entitled to the fund.

The same sources of evidence and the same finding of the intention would be present where the two parties to the deposit, though in law not married, sincerely and reasonably believe [353]*353themselves to be man and wife. Then the man making the deposit would by his act, when read in the light of his love and his duty toward his supposed spouse, give proof that he meant that the fund should be hers upon his death. The evidence of his wish and arrangement as to the bank account would be no less convincing if it should thereafter appear that a former wife, believed to be dead, was still alive, and that the deposit had been made between two persons who were matrimonial strangers.

Is there evidence of the intention where the deposit is made in the names of two persons to a ceremonial marriage, one of whom (the husband) is bound by a former marriage still subsisting, and knows it, and the other of whom (the wife) has neither doubt, nor ground of doubt, that the marriage is valid ?

The woman’s attitude, for every evidential relation to 'the transaction, is the same as if she were a true and honorable wife. The man’s attitude is as if he said: “ My wife, because we are married according to every ordinance of church and State, I make this deposit in the form by which the law regarding like transactions between man and wife will make the money yours if I shall die before you.

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Related

Mitchell v. Frederick
170 A. 733 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)
In re the Supplementary Appraisal of the Estate of Durfee
10 Mills Surr. 173 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1913)
In re Eysel
132 N.Y.S. 1127 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1911)

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7 Mills Surr. 349, 65 Misc. 432, 121 N.Y.S. 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-account-of-eysel-nysurct-1909.