McCaslin v. Grand Rapids Trust Co.

282 Mich. 566
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1937
DocketDocket No. 90, Calendar No. 39,714
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 282 Mich. 566 (McCaslin v. Grand Rapids Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCaslin v. Grand Rapids Trust Co., 282 Mich. 566 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Btjshnell, J.

On March 31, 1930, the late Senator William Alden Smith, then the largest stockholder in the Grand Rapids Savings Bank, caused certain certificates representing 4,377 shares, then owned by him, to be reissued in the names of himself and his wife, Nana A. Smith. Thereafter and until his death, these 4,377 shares of stock stood on the books of the bank in the names of Smith and wife as joint tenants with full right of ownership by survival in case of the death of either. On the same day, a certificate representing 50 shares was issued in the name of William Alden Smith, individually. Eleven dividends were thereafter declared and paid upon the stock, and each dividend check, payable to William Alden Smith and Nana A. was indorsed either by Senator Smith or his secretary, without Mrs. Smith’s signature. In all instances, except one, these dividends were deposited in the Grand Rapids Savings Bank to the credit of the personal account of William Alden Smith; it being his custom to have a part of the dividends in varying amounts transferred to the checking account of Mrs. Smith. The exception was a check dated July 1, 1930, for $2,626.20, of which $1,000 was deposited directly to the credit of Mrs. Smith’s personal checking account without passing through the bank account of her husband.

Senator Smith died on October 11, 1932, leaving a last will and testament, in which he nominated as his executors, Mrs. Smith, Arthur H. Vandenberg, and Gilbert L. Daane, president of the bank. For reasons satisfactory to themselves, the executors were unwilling to assume the burden imposed [569]*569and the probate court for the county of Kent, on November 17, 1932, appointed the Grand Rapids Trust Company, Vandenberg, Daane and Mrs. Smith as administrators of the Senator’s estate.

At the time the stock was transferred to the joint names of Smith and wife the Senator was not indebted to the bank, hut at the time of his death he owed the bank some $12,500 on past due notes and he was surety upon the obligations of others. Shortly after his death, Mrs. Smith executed an agreement in which she designated the Grand Rapids Trust Company as her agent; the agreement reciting that:

“Whereas said principal and her deceased husband, William Alden Smith, owned a considerable amount of stock in tbeir joint names, which has come to said principal as survivor,” etc.

At the same time Mrs. Smith constituted the trust company as her agent in fact, giving to it the usual powers contained in a power of attorney.

The trust company prepared an inventory of the assets of Senator Smith’s estate, which was signed by three and sworn to by all the administrators on November 17, 1932, and subsequently filed in the probate court together with an appraisal. In this inventory the 4,377 shares of bank stock were not listed as an asset of the Senator’s estate. The corporate administrator set up on its hooks the Senator’s bank stock holdings as only 50 shares, with a value of $1,000.

At the next annual meeting of the bank held on January 1.0, 1933, Gilbert L. Daane, then president of the bank, appeared and voted the 4,377 shares in the name of the executors of William Alden Smith as well as the 50 shares standing in the Senator’s name. The testimony of Mr. Daane’s secretary, [570]*570Miss Twynam, shows that a printed ballot, bearing Mrs. Smith’s signature, was brought into the bank that day by her chauffeur. Miss Twynam' claims she told the bearer that the meeting was over and that the stock had already been voted. Nevertheless the signed ballot, which then bore no indication of the number of shares to be voted, was filed in the records of the bank and subsequently someone typed in, above Mrs. Smith’s signature, the number of shares.

On January 27th the trust company wrote a letter to the bank calling attention to the fact that it held 50 shares belonging to the Smith estate and asked that future notices, etc., be sent to them.

February 13, 1933, all the banks in the State of Michigan were closed by proclamation of the governor and the Grand Rapids Savings Bank never reopened, its affairs being handled thereafter by a conservator and later by plaintiff receiver.

December 8th, the four administrators signed and filed their first annual account, in which they did not list the 4,377 shares but only showed the 50 shares owned by the Smith estate. Subsequent accounts contained the same listing of the stock.

In April, 1935, the bank receiver filed a claim against the estate of William Alden Smith for 100 per cent, assessment on 4,427 shares, thereby including both the 4,377 held jointly and the 50 shares held individually. The claim finally came on to be heard before the late Judge Perkins in the circuit court for the county of Kent, who held that the estate of Senator Smith was not liable for the assessment on the 4,377 shares because this stock became the property of Mrs. Smith by operation of law upon his death. No appeal was taken from Judge Perkins’ determination.

Mrs. Smith died on February 15, 1936, prior to the trial of the instant cause. She had been served [571]*571with process in the suit against the bank stockholders bnt no appearance or answer had been filed in her behalf and the cause was dismissed, without prejudice as to her. It appears from a colloquy between counsel that the attorneys for the trust company had informed the receiver’s counsel that, although they did not like to take an inconsistent position, their responsibilities in the matter were such that they were obliged to insist that Mrs. Smith’s estate was not liable for the assessment. They called attention to the fact that Mrs. Smith had advised the trust company, in an undated letter, that she wished to confirm an oral statement made “some time ago” that she was “unwilling to accept the title to the stock of the Grand Rapids Savings Bank,” etc.

The instant case is an appeal from the order of the probate court of Kent county, disallowing the claim of the receiver against the estate of Nana A. Smith, deceased, and was heard by Judge Verdier of the circuit court for the county of Kent, sitting without a jury. The transcript of the testimony before the commissioners on claims was filed with the court, considerable additional testimony was taken and many exhibits were introduced. There was little, if any, dispute as to the facts. After oral argument and the submission of briefs, the trial judge found that, notwithstanding Mrs. Smith’s letter of repudiation, she had, through her voluntary acts, asserted ownership of the 4,377 shares, and, although she might have at one time elected not to accept the stock because of the acts heretofore referred to, she had become a stockholder and her estate was liable for the payment of the assessment upon the 4,377 shares as of June 8, 1937, in the sum of $87,540, with interest to date of judgment, which was entered in the sum of $102,481.49.

[572]*572The controlling question in this appeal is whether Mrs. Smith’s estate is. subject to the statutory liability on bank stock standing in the name of her deceased husband and herself as joint tenants, with the right of survivorship.

The general banking act (Act No. 66, Pub. Acts 1929), being 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 11906, provides the conditions under which shares of stock may be transferred, and says:

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Bluebook (online)
282 Mich. 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaslin-v-grand-rapids-trust-co-mich-1937.