Reese v. First Nat. Bank of Bellville

196 S.W.2d 48, 171 A.L.R. 516, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 515
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 11, 1946
DocketNo. 11789.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 196 S.W.2d 48 (Reese v. First Nat. Bank of Bellville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reese v. First Nat. Bank of Bellville, 196 S.W.2d 48, 171 A.L.R. 516, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 515 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinions

This proceeding was originated below by the First National Bank of Bellville as a stakeholder's suit to have it judicially determined to whom the bank was legally bound to pay the following described time deposit certificate:

"Bellville, Texas, September 9, 1944, No. 5333.

"This certifies that Will J. Jackson has deposited with the First National Bank of Bellville 4400 Dol's 00 Cents. Dollars $4400.00, payable to order of himself or Maggie Reese in current funds on the return of this certificate properly indorsed, 6 months after date with interest at the rate of 1 per cent per annum. No interest after maturity." (Signed) "H. O. Fisher, V. P. and Cashier."

A short time prior to the maturity date of the certificate the said Will J. Jackson, named as a payee therein, died intestate, and his heirs were named by the bank as those who were urging conflicting claims to the fund.

Appellant, Maggie Reese, who was one of the surviving children of Will J. Jackson, and who is named as alternative payee in the certificate, filed her answer asserting that she was the exclusive owner of the certificate and possessed the sole right by the express terms thereof to receive payment thereof; and filed a cross complaint against the other claimants who are named in the bank's bill of interpleader. In the alternative she pled that, if she was not entitled by the express terms of the certificate to receive payment thereof as being the only surviving payee, then the said Jackson and the bank, at the time of making the contract which culminated in the certificate, had mutually agreed that the interest bearing deposit was made upon the positive and distinct understanding that if the said Jackson died before it was paid to him, the same was to be paid to appellant, Maggie Reese. She asked in her pleading that the court reform the certificate to make it speak such mutual understanding and agreement. And in her pleading she called upon the bank "to confess and admit" that the true understanding and agreement which the draftsmen of the certificate had attempted to embody therein was that the deposit should, in case of the said Jackson's death, be paid to appellant.

The appellees were the heirs of Will J. Jackson (other than appellant Maggie Reese), and it is sufficient to say of the allegations of their pleading that they claimed ownership of the fund in question as forming a part of the said Jackson's estate to which they succeeded under the laws of descent and distribution. *Page 50

By supplemental petition the bank "confessed and admitted" the matters which appellant had in her pleadings so requested that it do.

Trial was before the court without a jury. Judgment was rendered that the fund be paid over to the administrator of the estate of Will J. Jackson, deceased, and distributed as a part of his estate to his heirs. From the judgment Maggie Reese alone has appealed.

Pursuant to appellant's request the court filed conclusions of law and fact, to some of which conclusions appellant objected and excepted. But there was no objection to the court's findings to the following effect, namely:

That the money used to purchase the time deposit certificate belonged to Will J. Jackson, and at the time of the purchase thereof same was delivered to him. That he was then about 80 years old, and not in the best of health. That after the purchase Jackson kept the certificate in his exclusive possession and under his exclusive control till he died. And there was never any kind of delivery thereof to Maggie Reese during his lifetime.

The findings of fact objected to by appellant were to the following effect:

That Will J. Jackson purchased the time certificate for the benefit of himself alone. That he made Maggie Reese alternate payee in the certificate a matter of convenience so that she could go to the bank to secure funds and bring same to him as his property, if he should become physically unable to do so. That he did not intend that the time certificate should become exclusive property of Maggie Reese after his death, but should become the property of all his children.

In response to appellant's request for additional conclusions, the court found: That his original findings covered the case; that the evidence of the banker H. O. Fisher in regard to the intentions of Will J. Jackson was inadmissible; but that if it was admissible, it was too uncertain upon which to base a judgment that Jackson intended Maggie Reese should have the time certificate at his death, or to reform the instrument. That the proper legal predicate to reform the instrument was not laid.

Appellant predicates her appeal upon these points:

I. That the certificate being payable to Will J. Jackson or Maggie Reese, or order, she was entitled to the entire proceeds by virtue of the certificate's express provisions.

II. That if not so entitled to such proceeds by the express terms of the certificate, then the certificate is of doubtful meaning, and the court erred in refusing to consider parol evidence to show the construction placed on the instrument by the parties themselves.

III. That it is undisputed that, at the time the certificate was issued, Jackson and the Bank intended the proceeds thereof should belong to Maggie Reese upon the death of Jackson. Therefore, if appellant is not entitled to the proceeds of such certificate by virtue of its express provisions, then she is entitled to have the same reformed so as to speak the true intent of Jackson and the bank.

We overrule appellant's first point. Under it appellant urges that the certificate by its express terms invested her with a present vested though defeasible right to the payment of the time deposit, similar to the right of a beneficiary of a life insurance policy. Describing the right of the beneficiary of a life insurance policy as the right of the third party for whose benefit the insurance contract was made, the Supreme Court, speaking through Judge Smedley, said in Edds v. Mitchell, Tex.Sup., 184 S.W.2d 823, 830, "If the policy gives the insured the power to change the beneficiary, the right of the beneficiary named in the policy is not indefeasible, but it is nevertheless a vested right" (citing authorities). The facts in the Edds case were that certain United States Savings Bonds were made payable to a Mrs. Rhode, as the registered holder thereof, and, on her death, to a Mrs. Edds. Mrs. Rhode died without having delivered the bonds to Mrs. Edds, and it was insisted against the claim of Mrs. Edds to the ownership of the bonds, that such transaction was either a gift, to take effect at the death of Mrs. Rhode, and *Page 51 so invalid, or that the provision of the bonds making them payable to Mrs. Edds on the death of Mrs. Rhode, was a testamentary disposition which failed to comply with necessary statutory requirements. But the court held that the contract made by the government with Mrs. Rhode was a contract to pay in the event of the death of Mrs. Rhode the sum and interest thereon specified in the bonds to Mrs. Edds, and that the right thereby vested in Mrs. Edds was in every material respect similar to the right of a beneficiary of a life insurance policy, where the insured had retained the power to change the beneficiary.

The obligation of the government under the terms of a U.S. Savings Bond which by its terms is made payable to a third party beneficiary, differs from the obligation of a bank which issues a negotiable certificate of deposit. "The obligation assumed by the bank which issues a negotiable certificate of deposit is to pay the fund represented by the instrument to the lawful holder

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196 S.W.2d 48, 171 A.L.R. 516, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reese-v-first-nat-bank-of-bellville-texapp-1946.