Jackson Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Seabaugh

395 S.W.2d 260, 1965 Mo. App. LEXIS 582
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 21, 1965
DocketNo. 31966
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 395 S.W.2d 260 (Jackson Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Seabaugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Seabaugh, 395 S.W.2d 260, 1965 Mo. App. LEXIS 582 (Mo. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

JAMES D. CLEMENS, Special Judge.

This case began as an equitable action in interpleader over a savings and loan account of $3,269.48. Plaintiff paid the money into court and was discharged. A family fight ensued. Appellant and respondent each claimed to be the surviving joint tenant of the deceased co-depositor. Respondent Lucy Seabaugh prevailed and this appeal followed. The issue: Are the parties’ rights to the deposit as between themselves, to be determined by formal requirements governing the method of transferring such accounts ?

The fund now in dispute began when M. W. Seabaugh, now deceased, deposited $1,500 of his own funds with the plaintiff savings and loan association. Soon after, M. W. Seabaugh added more of his funds. There have been no withdrawals, and dividends accumulated. The respondent Lucy Seabaugh was a daughter-in-law, and the appellant Everett L. Seabaugh was one of the children of M. W. Seabaugh. When M. W. Seabaugh opened the account in 1954, at his direction the plaintiff issued its savings certificate No. 3149 to “M. W. Seabaugh or Lucy Seabaugh.” This was without her knowledge. In 1956 the account was changed to read “M. W. Seabaugh or Evert L. Seabaugh.” In 1958 the account was again changed by adding the words “as Joint Tenants with right of survivorship and not as Tenants in Common.” The details of these changes and other pertinent facts will be given later.

Respondent Lucy Seabaugh pleaded that the decedent always intended that on his death the fund would go to her, for distribution by her among his heirs; that the change of the account to Everett L. Sea-baugh was at his insistence by undue influence over his father who then lacked functional mental capacity. She later pleaded that the changes in the account to Everett Seabaugh were ineffective because not made in compliance with § 369.170 V.A.M.S. and § 17 of plaintiff’s by-laws. Appellant Everett Seabaugh denied Lucy Seabaugh’s allegations and pleaded that it was his father’s intention to create a joint account with Everett.

The case came on for trial on the issues raised between Lucy and Everett. He introduced evidence to support his allegations; she offered none. From this we find these further facts: M. W. Seabaugh lived in rotation with his many relatives. On March 22, 1954, without the knowledge of Lucy or other heirs, he opened the savings account with plaintiff. The names “M. W. Seabaugh or Lucy Seabaugh” were entered on plaintiff’s certificate and certificate register book, and also on its ledger sheet and a pass-book. The certificate and pass-book were handed over to Mr. Seabaugh, and the certificate register book and ledger sheet were lodged in the plaintiff’s office. On August 24, 1956, M. [263]*263W. Seabaugh asked plaintiff’s manager in charge of its office, a Mr. Williams, to meet him at a bank near plaintiff’s upstairs office. Mr. Williams was a director of plaintiff association, and its secretary and treasurer. Mr. Seabaugh then handed over his certificate and pass-book and told Mr. Williams he wanted the account changed from Lucy to Everett as his co-depositor. Mr. Williams struck out Lucy’s name on both Mr. Seabaugh’s certificate and pass-book, initialed and dated the changes, and gave both records back to him. Back at plaintiff’s office, similar changes were then made on the plaintiff’s ledger sheet and on its certificate register book. This was in accord with plaintiff’s customary procedure in making changes in existing accounts. In May of 1958 M. W. Seabaugh became dissatisfied with his life with relatives in Missouri and asked Everett if he could move in with him at Everett’s home in Illinois. The request was granted, and Mr. Sea-baugh lived with Everett until his death in 1960. On May 31, 1958, two or three days before leaving Missouri for Everett’s home, M. W. Seabaugh went to plaintiff’s office and asked Mr. Williams to “stamp the account” with a joint-tenant survivor-ship clause. The plaintiff’s ledger sheet and certificate register book, and M. W. Seabaugh’s certificate and pass-book, were then each impressed with a rubber stamp beneath “M. W. Seabaugh or Evert L. Seabaugh,” adding the words “as Joint Tenants with right of Survivorship and not as Tenants in Common.” The certificate and pass-book were then handed back to M. W. Seabaugh. When Mr. Seabaugh arrived at Everett’s home in Illinois a few days later he told Everett and family friends of his dissatisfaction with the care he had received in Missouri. He told them he wanted to spend the rest of his days with Everett and that he wanted Everett to have all he had, and he gave Everett the certificate and pass-book. As said, Lucy Sea-baugh offered no evidence to contradict this evidence, and we find it credible. From all this we conclude that M. W. Seabaugh intended to make Everett a joint-tenant so that upon his death Everett, and not Lucy, would be the sole owner of the account.

The account, as finally carried on plaintiff’s books, was in the statutory form of a joint tenancy between M. W. Seabaugh and Everett L. Seabaugh. § 369.150 V.A. M.S. To the contrary, Lucy never was a joint tenant with M. W. Seabaugh. In the absence of evidence of an intention by M. W. Seabaugh to create a joint tenancy with Lucy, none was created by the mere use of the word “or” linking their names in the original deposit, and M. W. Seabaugh’s right to change the account is not and cannot be challenged. Longacre v. Knowles, Mo., 333 S.W.2d 67, l. c. 70. If the change in the account by M. W. Seabaugh to the final form was effective, a joint account was created, and upon M. W. Seabaugh’s death Everett L. Seabaugh became the sole owner. Jenkins v. Meyer, Mo., 380 S.W.2d 315, l. c. 320.

The trial court based its judgment solely on the ground that there was no valid transfer of ownership of the account in compliance with § 369.170 V.A.M.S., and Section 17 of plaintiff’s by-laws. The bylaw was never introduced in evidence, but it is so similar to the cited statute that this appeal can be decided without resolving Lucy Seabaugh’s contention that the by-law should be considered on this appeal.

The statute on which Lucy bases her claim is § 369.170(1) Y.A.M.S. With our emphasis added, it says: “Accounts shall be transferable only upon the books of the association and upon proper application by the transferee and the acceptance of the transferee as a member upon terms approved- by the board of directors.” The plaintiff’s by-law 17, proffered here but not below, would further require that accounts be transferable upon the books of the association only upon surrender of certificates properly endorsed. Both the statute and by-law go on to provide that the association may treat the account holder of record as the true owner, without being bound by [264]*264mere notice of an adverse claim. A comparable statute, § 362.370 V.A.M.S., applies to bank deposits. Both the statute and bylaw seem to us to be drawn to fit a transaction where a sole depositor assigns his interest in his deposit to a third person, who then takes the place of the original depositor. It is not clear that the statute or by-law were intended to apply to changes in co-depositors.

Bearing in mind our finding that it was M. W. Seabaugh’s intent to create a joint tenancy with Everett, we now further consider his actions tending to formally deprive Lucy of her original inchoate interest in the account and to bestow on Everett the rights of a joint tenant. We consider whether M. W.

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Bluebook (online)
395 S.W.2d 260, 1965 Mo. App. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-savings-loan-assn-v-seabaugh-moctapp-1965.