Old National Bank & Union Trust Co. v. Kendall

126 P.2d 603, 14 Wash. 2d 19, 1942 Wash. LEXIS 434
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1942
DocketNo. 28413.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 126 P.2d 603 (Old National Bank & Union Trust Co. v. Kendall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Old National Bank & Union Trust Co. v. Kendall, 126 P.2d 603, 14 Wash. 2d 19, 1942 Wash. LEXIS 434 (Wash. 1942).

Opinions

Driver, J.

The plaintiff, as administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Fay Kendall, deceased, brought this action against the Seattle-First National Bank and Fay Kendall, a minor, to recover the balance of a savings account in the defendant bank. The minor, appearing by her guardian ad litem, answered, asserting sole ownership of the account. Defendant bank, by its answer and cross-complaint, disclaimed all interest in the fund, and deposited it with the clerk of the court. A trial to the court resulted in a judgment in favor of the minor, and plaintiff appealed. The judgment dismissed the action as to defendant bank, and it is not a party to the appeal.

The question presented is whether the minor respondent acquired the savings account by gift inter vivos. There is no material conflict in the evidence. The de *21 cedent, Fay Kendall, adopted respondent, her niece, when the latter was “just a little tot.” When the adoptive mother married Homer B. Kendall in 1934, he also joined in legally adopting the respondent. Mrs. Kendall’s first husband, who was a wealthy man, had created a trust, from which she received, after his death and during her lifetime, an income of approximately nine thousand dollars a year. All of the deposits in the bank account in controversy were made from funds which Mrs. Kendall received from this trust. The record does not definitely show the amount of Mr. Kendall’s income. He testified, however, that it was substantially in excess of three thousand dollars a year.

On June 24,1939, when respondent was sixteen years of age, Mrs. Kendall took her to defendant bank and opened a savings account in the names of “Fay Kendall or Mrs. Fay Kendall.” Each of them signed the signature card and the ledger sheet. On the face of the former, in blank spaces provided for that purpose below the signatures, respondent wrote the address, telephone number, and occupation both of herself and her mother. On the back of the card, there is a printed form of agreement acknowledging the interest of each depositor to be several as well as joint in the whole account, and specifying that the death of either of them shall not affect the right of the other to withdraw the entire deposit. This agreement was not signed. Respondent testified that it had not been called to the attention of herself or of Mrs. Kendall. The bank’s savings teller, who opened the account, had no independent recollection of the transaction. A savings account passbook, in the usual form, was issued by the bank. It contained the printed provision that “This book must be presented when money is deposited or withdrawn.”

*22 Respondent testified that, when they got home from the bank, Mrs. Kendall gave her the passbook, and she put it in a dresser drawer in her own room. She kept it there at all times prior to Mrs. Kendall’s death except' when deposits or withdrawals were made, as hereinafter noted.

Mrs. Kendall died by drowning in October, 1939. The savings account ledger sheet of the bank shows that, prior to her death, deposits and withdrawals had been made as follows:

According to her own testimony, respondent made the deposits of July 28th and October 19th. On each of those occasions, Mrs. Kendall, as payee, indorsed a check which she had received from the trust established by her former husband and gave it to respondent, who took it to the bank, with the passbook, and deposited it in the account. The first of the three withdrawals was made by respondent. She took the passbook to the bank, drew out the money and gave it to her mother for the latter’s use. When each of the other two withdrawals was made, Mrs. Kendall had asked her for the book, and respondent gave it to her. Mrs. Kendall then went to the bank, drew out the money, and thereafter, on the same day, returned the passbook to respondent, who put it back in her bureau drawer — to her knowledge, Mrs. Kendall did not know *23 where the passbook was kept. Respondent did not know, she said, what her mother did with the money.

A friend and neighbor of the Kendalls’ testified that, in the early summer of 1939, Mrs. Kendall told her

“. . . that she had been to the bank and had given — put some money in the bank to give to Fay [respondent], and that was all she said. She was in a hurry and we talked for a very few minutes, and she said she felt badly that she hadn’t done it before, but she was going to start out by giving — putting this money in the bank for Fay, and then she would eventually put more in — that that is some way of seeing that Fay had money.”

The same witness testified that, shortly after Mrs. Kendall’s death, she had been at the Kendall home, and respondent had then shown her a little bank deposit book which she had taken from the dressing table . drawer in her bedroom.

Homer B. Kendall testified that, around the first of July, 1939, he had had a talk with his wife in which “She explained that she had opened a savings account in both of their names with some money for Fay [respondent] ; that this money was intended as a gift for Fay.” (Italics ours.) On cross-examination, Mr. Kendall stated: “We had discussed putting something away for little Fay for a good many years, and she [Mrs. Kendall] happened to mention she had opened a savings account for her [respondent] with her money and given her [respondent] the book.” He also testified that, in the early part of November, 1939, respondent had shown him the bank passbook in her room— “in fact, offered it to me,” and that she got it out of her dressing table.

By her will, Mrs. Kendall gave all her property to her mother, but provided that, in the event her mother should predecease her, the respondent would be the *24 sole beneficiary. The mother testified that Mrs. Kendall had often said she was setting aside money to provide a home for her, the mother, in Spokane. This testimony was corroborated by Mrs. Kendall’s father. Neither of these witnesses claimed, however, that Mrs. Kendall had ever mentioned specifically the savings account in the Seattle-First National Bank.

The essential elements of a valid gift of personal property are: (a) An intention on the part of the donor to presently give; (b) a subject matter capable of passing by delivery; and (c) an actual delivery at the time. In re Slocum’s Estate, 83 Wash. 158, 145 Pac. 204; Wolfe v. Hoefke, 124 Wash. 495, 214 Pac. 1047; In re McCoy’s Estate, 189 Wash. 103, 63 P. (2d) 522; Decker v. Fowler, 199 Wash. 549, 92 P. (2d) 254, 131 A. L. R. 961. In the Slocum case, p. 161, the court said that

“The delivery must be such as will divest the donor of the present control and dominion over the property absolutely and irrevocably and confer upon the donee the dominion and control. ... A gift will not be presumed, but he who asserts title by this means must prove it by evidence which is clear, convincing, strong and satisfactory.”

In orally announcing its decision at the close of the testimony, the trial court said:

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Bluebook (online)
126 P.2d 603, 14 Wash. 2d 19, 1942 Wash. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/old-national-bank-union-trust-co-v-kendall-wash-1942.