Kelly v. Home Savings Bank of City of Albany

92 N.Y.S. 578
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 8, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 N.Y.S. 578 (Kelly v. Home Savings Bank of City of Albany) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Home Savings Bank of City of Albany, 92 N.Y.S. 578 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

CHASE, J.

This action is brought to recover $2,378.65, being the amount of a deposit with the defendant Home Savings Bank of the City of Albany, standing in the name of “Kate V. Beers or Sarah E. Kelley, her daughter, or the survivor of them.” Kate V. Beers died July 1, 1903, leaving two children, the plaintiff, Sarah E. Kelly, and the defendant Franklin B. Beers. She had an estate, which, including all of the securities at their face value, and the savings and other bank accounts herein mentioned, amounted to about $31,844.44. Of such amount about $8,375 is claimed by the executors to be of doubtful value, and $9,878 is made up of deposits in savings and other banks in Albany, as more specifically mentioned hereafter, leaving the gross value of the estate, exclusive of savings and other bank accounts in Albany and such alleged doubtful securities, about $13,591.44. Kate V. Beers, on July 1, 1895, made her will, and on the 30th day of June, 1900, she made a codicil to such will, and by said codicil she gave to her daughter, Sarah E. Kelly, any, all, and whatever money she should have on deposit at the time of her decease in the Albany Savings Bank. On the 6th day of December, 1900, Kate V. Beers made a new will, in and by which she gave to descendants of the plaintiff some specific articles of personal property and legacies aggregating $4,000, and to the descendants of her son, Franklin B. Beers, some specific articles of personal property and legacies aggregating $3,000. By said will she gave to said Franklin B. Beers certain specified securities aggregating $8,350, and to the plaintiff, her daughter, Sarah E. Kelly, a legacy as follows:

“I give to my daughter Sarah E. Kelley subject to the payment of my funeral expenses therefrom, all and whatever money I shall have on deposit in any of the savings banks or other banks in the city of Albany N. Y., at the time of my death, which amount I intend shall be about seven thousand ($7,000.00) dollars, and in case I shall not have as much as $7,000 on deposit in said banks at the time of my death, then and in that event, I direct my executors hereinafter named to pay to my said daughter Sarah E. Kelley from and out of any other moneys in their hands, before paying any of the hereinafter named legacies, such sum as will, together with the amount of said deposit, equal seven thousand dollars less the amount of my funeral expenses.”

[580]*580Kate V. Beers then had on deposit in savings and other banks in Albany in the form herein stated the sum of $7,409.20. At that time one of her said deposits included in said aggregate amount was a deposit of $3,000 in the National Savings Bank of Albany, which deposit then stood, and since Juné 23, 1893, had stood, in said savings bank in the name of “Mrs. Kate V. Beers, in trust for Sarah E. Kelley, her daughter.” She then had two other accounts in Albany savings banks standing in her individual name, one of which was with the defendant Home Savings Bank. On September 30, 1901, Mrs. Beers and the plaintiff went to the defendant Home Savings Bank, and Mrs. Beers presented to the bank her passbook, and said to one of the officers of the bank “that she would like that account arranged so that either she or her daughter could draw it, and, if anything should happen to her, her daughter could get the money without any further trouble.” The officer told her that he “would make out a new book in the name of herself or her daughter, or the survivor of them; that would arrange it as she wished.” A check for the balance appearing on the old book was drawn, Mrs. Beers indorsed the check, and delivered it to the bank, and a new bankbook was made out for the amount of the check. Both Mrs. Beers and Mrs. Kelly placed their signatures in the signature book of the bank.at the request of the bank officers. The néw book was made out in the name of “Kate V. Beers or Sarah E. Kelley, her daughter, or the survivor of them,” and it was delivered to Mrs. Beers. It appears in evidence without contradiction, except as to alleged admissions on the part of the plaintiff, that when the book was handed to Mrs. Beers by an officer of the bank she immediately delivered the same to her daughter, Mrs. Kelly. The amount then drawn and redeposited with the defendant Home Savings Bank was $1,829.34. There were no withdrawals from said bank from the time said deposit was changed on September 30, 1901, to the time of Mrs. Beers’ death, but Mrs. Beers made two further deposits therein. On the 7th day of January 1902, Mrs. Beers changed her account, amounting to $3,052.50, then standing in her individual name in the Albany Savings Bank to an account with “Mrs. Kate V. Beers, or Sarah E. Kelley, her daughter, or survivor.” And on the 5th day of September, 1902, she changed her .account in the Albany Trust Company, amounting to $1,545, then standing in her individual name, to an account with “Kate V. Beers, or Mrs. Sarah E. Kelley, payable to either or survivor of either.” About a month before her death Mrs. Beers went to visit her said son in Rome, and the plaintiff went to visit her daughter in Connecticut. On the 30th day of June, 1903, at Rome, the day before Mrs. Beers’ death, she executed a codicil to her will, by which she revoked the bequest to ¡her son of specific securities and to her daughter of savings and other hank accounts, and in place thereof she gave to her son the sum of .$7,000, and to the plaintiff the sum of $7,000. The residuary clause of her will, by which she directed that the residue of her estate be divided between her said son and daughter in equal shares, remained undisturbed. For about four years prior to the death of Mrs. Beers the plaintiff had resided in Albany with her mother, except that she was away at different times for several weeks or months, visiting her children, who lived in'other states. Franklin B. Beers resides, and had for [581]*581several years resided, at Rome, N. Y. The savings bank books were kept in a writing desk in the sitting room of Kate V. Beers, and the plaintiff and Mrs. Beers each had a key to such writing desk. When Mrs. Beers died, the book of the defendant Home Savings Bank, with the other bankbooks, were in said writing desk. A few days after her mother’s death plaintiff opened the writing desk, and took the bankbooks therefrom, and delivered them to the executors named in the will of her mother on their statement to her that, if they found that the books were the property of the plaintiff, they would return them to her. The plaintiff demanded of the defendant Home Savings Bank payment of said account in its bank, and, the amount not being paid, this action was brought to recover the same. By consent the executors of the will of Mrs. Beers were made parties defendant in the action, and the defendant Home Savings Bank by stipulation holds the money on deposit, subject to the final order and judgment of this court.

At the trial a jury was called, and plaintiff offered in evidence the book of the defendant bank; also testimony by the bank officials as to the transaction when the book was issued, and evidence that the book Was in the writing desk after Mrs. Beers’ death. Plaintiff also called three other witnesses—one her daughter, who testified that %%

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 N.Y.S. 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-home-savings-bank-of-city-of-albany-nyappdiv-1905.