Jones, Admr. v. Neu

150 N.E.2d 858, 106 Ohio App. 161, 78 Ohio Law. Abs. 245, 6 Ohio Op. 2d 428, 1958 Ohio App. LEXIS 791
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1958
Docket24404
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 150 N.E.2d 858 (Jones, Admr. v. Neu) 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
Jones, Admr. v. Neu, 150 N.E.2d 858, 106 Ohio App. 161, 78 Ohio Law. Abs. 245, 6 Ohio Op. 2d 428, 1958 Ohio App. LEXIS 791 (Ohio Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

OPINION

By SKEEL, PJ.

This appeal comes to this court on questions of law from a judgment or final order entered by the Probate Court of Cuyahoga County dismissing the administrator’s complaint filed against Lester O. Neu for concealment of assets of the Estate of Anna M. Neu.

The deceased, Anna M. Neu, died April 26, 1957. She was eighty years of age at the time of her death. The decedent opened a savings account in the Society for Savings Bank on August 24, 1922. On August 3, 1945, she signed a printed form, prepared by the bank, providing that Lester Osborn Neu was authorized to withdraw from the account “such sums as he may call for.” On March 1, 1957, the decedent was taken to a nursing home for care where she stayed until her death. On April 4, 1957, Lester O. Neu withdrew two separate amounts from this account. The first amount withdrawn was $400.00, followed later that day by a withdrawal of the remaining balance of $9,061.09, which he transferred to his personal savings account at the Society for Savings. The account to which he transferred the money was the account his mother started for him on the same day the account here being considered was begun.

It is the claim of the administrator that the money withdrawn by Lester O. Neu was the property of the deceased when withdrawn and also her property at the time of her death. This action seeks an order for the return of the money to the estate and is brought under the provisions of §2109.50 R. C. From the dismissal of the administrator’s complaint, the following errors are presented in this appeal:

1. Said Court erred in overruling complainant’s motion for new trial and in entering judgment dismissing the complaint against defendant Lester O. Neu.

2. The Court’s written findings of fact are manifestly against the weight of, are not sustained by any, and are contrary to the evidence.

*247 3. The Court’s written conclusions of law are erroneous and are contrary to law.

4. The judgment is contrary to law.

5. The judgment of the Court is manifestly against the weight of, is not sustained by any, and is contrary to the evidence.

6. The Court erred in refusing to admit evidence offered by the appellant to the refusal of which the appellant duly objected.

7. The Court erred in the admission of evidence offered by the, appellee Lester O. Neu, to which the appellant objected.

8. Other errors of law appearing during the progress of the trial and apparent on the face of the record.

There are undisputed facts which need to be stated before considering the contradictory evidence presented by the parties in giving consideration to the errors presented.

Two savings accounts were opened at the Society for Savings Bank of Cleveland, Ohio, by the decedent on August 24, 1922. The first was opened in her own name (Anna M. Neu) by a deposit of $350.00, the account being No. 508731. She was then about forty-four years of age. At the same time, she also opened a savings account (No. 508732) in the name of and for her son, Lester O. Neu, who was then twelve years of age. Both accounts remained active or current until April 4, 1957, when Lester O. Neu closed out his mother’s account by first taking our four hundred dollars which he received in cash, and then later, on the same day, by transferring the balance of his mother’s account (No. 508731), to-wit, the sum of $9061.09 to his own account (No. 508732). Thus, for thirty-five years, each carried a separate bank account in the same bank in their individual names. On the day the son’s account was opened a notation was made thereon that “Anna M. Neu may draw for him ” This, of course, was necessary because of his age. A trusteeship, however, was not provided. There is no evidence that this power was ever withdrawn and, therefore, continued until the day of the mother’s death.

On August 3, 1945, the following authority providing that Lester O. Neu could draw from the account of his mother, Anna M. Neu, was executed:

“Cleveland, Ohio
August 3, 1945.
“The Society for Savings in the City of Cleveland, is hereby notified that Lester Osborn Neu (signature) is authorized to withdraw hereafter from my account No. 508731 with said Society, such sums as he may call for.
“Revocable only by notice in writing, signed by me, and accompanied by the passbook.
(s) Anna M. Neu.”

On the date this authority was signed, $2962.50 was on deposit in the account and a notation was put on the passbook “Lester O. Neu may draw for her 8/3/45.” On this date (August 3, 1945), a deposit of $1789.68 was made. Also on that day Lester O. Neu had a balance in his own account of $1337.04.

*248 There were two others bank accounts disclosed by Lester O. Neu in his testimony. They were deposited in a branch of the Cleveland Trust Company located at Clark Avenue and West 25th Street, one account being in the name of Anna M. Neu and the other in the name of Lester O. Neu. Each held the power to draw from the account of the other. These accounts were closed by Lester O. Neu on April 25, 1957, one day before the death of Mrs. Neu. He testified that there was about $5,000 in his account at the Cleveland Trust Company and about $1,000, plus interest, in Mrs. Neu’s account at that time. The date that these accounts were opened is not disclosed in the record.

The deceased owned the house where she and her son, Lester O. Neu, lived. The daughter, Mrs. Edna Arnold, prior to her marriage, also lived there. Mrs. Neu’s brother was a permanent board-paying resident at this address. The son, Lester O. Neu, who lived in his mother’s home all his life, never paid a stipulated price for his room and board. He testified as follows:

“Q. Did you pay any board at your house, there?
“A. No, not directly, just what ever I — when I cashed my checks, such as a payroll check, I paid the utility bills all in one trip and the rest of the money went in to my mother year after year.”

The defendant testified that his mother was employed at the City Hospital until 1936 and that her brother, who lived with them, paid from $6.00 to $10.00 per week as the years progressed and that his mother had no independent income after leaving her employment at City Hospital.

The decedent’s bank account grew from occasional deposits of not to exceed $100.00 at any one time until July 14, 1937 when a deposit of $1204.39 brought the balance to $2416.39. It then continued to grow by adding dividends received from the bank and by small deposits until August 3, 1945 when a deposit of $1789.68 brought the balance to $4752.18. In December, 1947, a deposit of $3021.25 increased the account to $7889.81. Only two other deposits of any consequence were made, aside from the yearly bank dividends, after the last date mentioned, i. e., $100.00 on March 2, 1951 and $300.00 on March 4, 1952.

The personal account of Lester O. Neu prior to March 2, 1945, when the balance was $1327.85, is not shown by the record.

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Bluebook (online)
150 N.E.2d 858, 106 Ohio App. 161, 78 Ohio Law. Abs. 245, 6 Ohio Op. 2d 428, 1958 Ohio App. LEXIS 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-admr-v-neu-ohioctapp-1958.