Kaufman v. Edwards

113 A. 598, 92 N.J. Eq. 554, 1921 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 64
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 28, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 113 A. 598 (Kaufman v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaufman v. Edwards, 113 A. 598, 92 N.J. Eq. 554, 1921 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 64 (N.J. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Buchanan, V. C.

These two eases require the determination of the ownership of a certain bank credit of upwards of $5,700, standing in the name of “Mary Kaufman or Mary R. Kaufman, payable to either or the survivor.”

Mary R. Kaufman married subsequent to the opening of the account and is now Mary R. Edwards. Mary Kaufman is dead —dying domiciled in Pennsylvania—and Edward C. Stokes is special administrator for the collection of assets of her estate in New Jersey.

In the bill filed by William C. Kaufman against his sister; Mrs. Edwards claim was made by him to one-fourth of the d:e-[556]*556posit, under an alleged trust for Mrs. Kaufman to Mrs. Edwards for the benefit of four children. The bill subsequently filed by Mr. Stokes, as special administrator, against Mrs. Edwards joined the other three children as defendants (as well as the bank), and they filed answers setting up' the same claim as made by .William in his bill. The two causes were then consolidated and the whole matter came on for hearing at one time.

Cases involving the ownership) of so-called “joint” bank accounts of this kind—that is, where the pass-book or deposit-book shows the account as of the bank “in account with A or B or the survivor,” or to similar effect—have frequently come before the courts of this state and other states. In almost every instance, however, these cases have been cases where the moneys deposited in the account have all been deposited by one of tire two persons interested, and that person (who may be, and frequently is, termed the “donor”) has died, and the other of the two persons, or “donee,” has claimed the account as against the executors or adtministrators of the “donor.” The present case is therefore unique, in that moneys were deposited in the account by both parties, and of tire amount on deposit in the account at the “donor’s” death (exclusive of interest), the major part thereof had been deposited therein by the “donee.”

In cases of this kind—as, indeed, in all cases of attempted transfer of bank credits—there are two 'matters which are the subject of inquiry—one being the intent of the “donor” and the other being the act by which such intent has been sought to be effectuated.

As to intent, the inquiry is, Was there at the time of the act an intent to make a then presently operating transfer of the “donor’s” right against the bank or other depositary? (In many of the cases this intent is called a “donative purpose,” but it is of course obvious that the inquiry is equally pertinent and necessary where there may have been consideration for the transfer as where the case is one of pure gift.)

As to the acty the inquiry is as to whether the method employed for the attempted transfer is legally sufficient to accomplish such transfer, assuming the existence of the requisite intent.

[557]*557In these cases of accounts to the credit of A or B, payable to either or the survivor, the act of alleged attempted transfer is the making of the contract between the depositor and the bank —the transferee may or may not be also a party to this contract. That contract—at any rate where the transferee is not an actual party to it—in its expressed terms is a contract whereby A loans money to the bank and the bank promises to pay to either A or

B, according to their respective demand or order, or to the survivor of them. This provision as to payment by the bank is both an obligation and a right. The bank is bound to make such payments, and, on the other hand, moneys paid by it to B or on B’s order will discharge it pro tanto of liability to A. But, clearly, there is nothing expressed or implied in that contract which necessarily accomplishes a transfer of ownership in the chose in action. On its face it may deal only with transfer of possession instead of ownership. A may go to B, a merchant, purchase and pay for an article, with an agreement as part of the contract of purchase and sale, that B shall keep the article to be delivered to C upon his calling for it. C may be a mere agent of A to receive possession for A of the article which A has purchased for himself and therefore owns, or A may have purchased tire article for C, either as a gift or pursuant to contract between A and C, and in that case the delivery to C would be a transfer of ownership as well as possession. s

Assuming, therefore, for the moment, that the means employed by Mrs. Kaufman, in the present ease—i. e., the making of this contract of “joint account” with the bank—was sufficient to accomplish a transfer of the chose in action or some interest •therein, as effectively as a formal written instrument of assignment, the necessity of ascertaining heir intent: is plain. Did she intend it to operate merely in the nature of a power of attorney to Mrs. Edwards, or did she intend thereby then presently to transfer to Mrs. Edwards tire actual ownership of some interest in that chose in action (whether or not the actual enjoyment thereof by Mrs. Edwards should be immediate or deferred) , and if the latter, what interest therein did she intend to convey ?.

[558]*558Dealing, first, with the sufficiency of the alleged act of transfer, I conclude that the means employed by Mrs. Kaufman was sufficient to effectuate her purpose and intent, if she had the purpose of transferring an interest in the account.

This conclusion is based upon both reason and authority. The act of making such a contract with the bank is as much a completed act as the execution of a formal instrument .of direct assignment or assignment in trust, or as a manual delivery.

That it is in itself ambiguous cannot matter1—for the mere act alone of manual tradition is equally ambiguous as to whether it constitutes transfer of mere possession or of ownership—yet no one would contend that the manual delivery was an insufficient act to effectuate transfer of ownership' if the requisite intent be present. Nor can the fact that the contract leaves Mrs. Kaufman with' the power, or some power, of disposition of the debt due from the bank be of any controlling materiality. If A, being in partnership with B, takes some of his own money to the bank and opens an account in the name of “A and B, partners” (assuming, of course, the requisite intent), no one will contend that the “money in bank”—i. e., the chose in action, of the bank’s indebtedness—is not partnership property—that the act was not sufficient to accomplish a transfer merely because the transaction leaves A with a right to draw on the account.

That the conclusion yeaehed is not 'only logical but settled law in this state is clear from a consideration of the adjudicated cases. Such is the decision in Dunn v. Houghton, 51 Atl. Rep. 71, and in Schippers v. Kempkes, 67 Atl. Rep. 1042; affirmed, 72 N. J. Eq. 948. Both of these cases are, I take it, expressly approved on this point in the recent opinion in New Jersey Title, &c., Co. v. Archibald, 108 Atl. Rep. 434. In the last-mentioned case, at the timie the account was opened by the “donor,” the “donee” was also present and both signed a written statement, delivered to the bank, “that this account and all moneys to be credited to it belongs to us as joint tenants and will be the absolute property of the survivor of us; either and the survivor to draw.” It is held that there was a then present gift and delivery; the objections based on the right of the [559]

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Bluebook (online)
113 A. 598, 92 N.J. Eq. 554, 1921 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaufman-v-edwards-njch-1921.