Princeton State Bank v. Wayman

271 S.W.2d 600, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 369
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1954
Docket22078
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 271 S.W.2d 600 (Princeton State Bank v. Wayman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Princeton State Bank v. Wayman, 271 S.W.2d 600, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 369 (Mo. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

BROADDUS, Judge.

This suit was commenced on September 5, 1953, by the plaintiff, Princeton State Bank, filing a bill of interpleader in the Circuit Court of Mercer County. Frank Wayman, administrator of the estate of Coleman Wayman, deceased, and Anna Wayman were the named defendants. In said bill plaintiff asked the court to determine the ownership of a deposit of $6,686.65 in said bank standing in the name of “Coleman Wayman or Anna Wayman.”

On September 3, 1953, Frank Wayman served written notice on the plaintiff Bank that as such administrator he claimed the account as an asset of the estate of Coleman Wayman.

On September 9, 1953, said administrator filed his interplea alleging that Coleman Wayman died intestate on August 15, 1953; that on March 3, 1948, said Coleman Way-man issued his check against his then bank account in the plaintiff bank in the sum of $10,536.70, payable to himself and Anna Wayman; that at the time said deposit was made it was not made by him in form to create a fund to pass to the survivor as provided by Section 7996, Revised Statutes of Missouri for 1939, the law then in force and effect, being Section 362.470 of the Statutes of 1949, V.A.M.S.; that at the time of said deposit or at any other time did the said Coleman Wayman ever issue any order in writing or otherwise, that the deposit or deposits should pass to the survivor of said joint account, nor did he ever at any time instruct any of the officers of said bank that said deposit was to pass to the survivor of said joint account and that, therefore, the balance of the joint account at the time of the death of Coleman Wayman, totalling $6,686.65, passed to the administrator of the estate of Coleman Wayman.

On October 5, 1953, Anna Wayman filed her interplea. In it, she alleged: “that this defendant and the said Coleman Wayman set up said account in the said Princeton State Bank for the purpose and with the intention to create a joint account to be payable to the said Coleman Wayman or this defendant, it being the intention of the said Coleman Wayman and this defendant for the survivor to be the owner of said balance, and said account was carried in said bank in the name of ‘Coleman Way-man or Anna Wayman’ for that purpose, *602 this defendant starting the account with a deposit therein of her own personal money on the 3rd day of March, 1948, in the sum of $1789.75; that after said account was set up this defendant and the said Coleman Wayman both made numerous deposits to said account of their joint earnings from the farm on which she and the said Coleman Wayman lived and where she kept house and cared for the said Coleman Way-man for many years and through his last illness; that under the law this defendant is entitled to said account, and said sum is her absolute property.”

On December 15, 1953, the case came on for trial. The court sustained the bank’s bill of interpleader. It also rendered judgment in favor of Anna Wayman on her interplea and against Frank Wayman, administrator of the estate of Coleman Way-man, deceased, on his interplea, and found Anna Wayman to be the sole owner of the deposit and entitled to the balance — $6,-686.65. The administrator appealed.

The facts are that for many years Ed Wayman, Fred Wayman and Coleman Way-man and their sister, the respondent Anna Wayman, lived on a farm of 350 acres about three miles north of Princeton, Missouri. None of the Wayman brothers ever married. The respondent lived with them taking care of their home, an eight room house, doing their laundry, cooking, gardening, canning, and helping with their business affairs. The Wayman brothers carried their bank account in the Princeton State Bank as “Wayman Brothers.” Ed and Fred died prior to 1948. Fred died first leaving all of his property to his brothers Coleman and Ed. Upon Ed’s death Coleman became the owner of the Wayman Brothers’ account. Anna and Coleman were living on the farm at the time of Coleman’s death in August, 1953. Anna took care of her three single brothers during their last illness.

Coleman continued to carry his account in the plaintiff bank as “Wayman Brothers”. The respondent Anna had her own personal account in said bank. On March 3, 1948, Anna went to the bank, and after conferring with the president and cashier, the joint account was set up in the names of “Coleman Wayman or Anna Wayman”. The cashier, Bob Overton, prepared the form of the account.

Respondent Anna then by check transferred her entire personal account of $1,-789.75 to the joint account. Mr. Overton, the cashier, then wrote out a check on Wayman Brothers account for the balance therein, $10,536.70, payable to Coleman Wayman or Anna Wayman, which check was signed by Coleman Wayman and returned to the bank for deposit in the joint account the next day, March 4, 1948. Neither Anna Wayman nor Bob Overton, cashier, nor John Robbins, president of plaintiff bank, were permitted to testify as to what was said by any of them at the time the joint account was set up. Their testimony in that regard was offered.

Until the death of Coleman Wayman in August, 1953, he and Anna Wayman both made deposits in the joint account including Anna’s poultry, chicken and egg money, and both wrote checks thereon. Neither had any other account. For many years before and up to the time the joint account was opened Anna wrote checks on the old “Wayman Brothers” account. She offered in evidence 27 of these cancelled checks. There was no change in the manner of doing business after the joint account was set up.

In June, 1953, in a conversation with the family doctor, Dr. J. M. Perry of Princeton, Coleman Wayman said that he and Anna Wayman had a joint account and had it for some time. It was also shown that between the date of Coleman’s death, August 15, 1953, and September 3, 1953 (the date appellant administrator gave notice of his claim) Anna drew five checks, to-talling $977.79, on the joint account. These checks were honored by the plaintiff bank. One of them in the amount of $843.80 was for Coleman’s funeral expenses.

Ten witnesses, neighbors of Anna and Coleman Wayman testified that Anna had lived with her said bachelor brothers on the farm for many years doing all the house *603 work, laundry, cooking’, gardening, canning, sewing, raising chickens, and helping the brothers in their business affairs, and had cared for all three of them through their final sickness.

The appellant administrator contends that the court erred in finding that respondent, Anna Wayman, was the sole owner of the balance of the deposit “because the evidence does not show any intention to create a joint account which is payable on the death of Coleman to Anna.”

The deposit to “Coleman Wayman or Anna Wayman” does not fall within the purview of Section 362.470 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. It was not in “form to be paid to either, or the survivor of them”. Murphy v. Wolfe, 329 Mo. 545, 45 S.W.2d 1079, 1081. Thus the presumption which that statute gives rise to that a deposit made within its purview becomes the property of the depositors as joint tenants with the attendant right of survivorship does not arise in the instant case. However, as the Murphy case says: “It may very well be that the depositor by the use of the words, ‘payable to herself or G. N.

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Bluebook (online)
271 S.W.2d 600, 1954 Mo. App. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/princeton-state-bank-v-wayman-moctapp-1954.