Schmitt, Admx. v. Schmitt

177 N.E. 478, 39 Ohio App. 219, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 71, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 352
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 177 N.E. 478 (Schmitt, Admx. v. Schmitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmitt, Admx. v. Schmitt, 177 N.E. 478, 39 Ohio App. 219, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 71, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 352 (Ohio Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Vickery, J.

This cause comes into this court on a petition in error to the common pleas court of Cuyahoga county, the purpose being to reverse the judgment of that court in favor of the defendant in error, Barbara Schmitt, against plaintiff in error, Pauline Schmitt, administratrix of the estate of John Schmitt, deceased. It seems from the record, which is very meager, that one John Schmitt, having accumulated certain property, apparently had married a woman, to wit, Pauline Schmitt, and the marriage evidently was not made in heaven, for shortly after the relation was entered into the contracting parties unhappily fell out, and it is rather difficult to learn whether John Schmitt abandoned Pauline or whether Pauline abandoned John, but anyhow *220 they lived together only a short while. John Schmitt was a carpenter and had a daughter, Barbara Schmitt, defendant in error here. He likewise had two nephews, and apparently having in mind the unhappy relations between himself and his wife Pauline, he set his wits to working as to whether or not he could devise some way in which to deprive her of what the law would allow her as his widow in case of his death. Neither party sought or obtained a divorce. Subsequently John Schmitt lived with his daughter Barbara, the defendant in error in this action, and probably she looked after his welfare. Apparently, prior to this time, he had given her, by transferring it over to her by gift inter vivos, about three thousand six hundred dollars, which she afterwards invested in a home, although it apparently was taken in the name of another, and this probably was because of some domestic difficulties in Barbara’s family life, she having ultimately obtained a divorce from her husband, a man by the name of Clark. However that may be, that question is not involved in this lawsuit, but thereafter Schmitt having deposited in a bank, to wit, the South Side Savings & Loan Association, the sum of $292.60, or it amounted to that at his death from the accumulations of interest, he made this into a joint account with his nephew Louis Schmitt, and the card is here in evidence which authorized either John Schmitt or Louis Schmitt to draw this amount. The card says either during life or after death. I will revert to this question again. After John Schmitt died, within the next day or two, apparently without any demand on the part of Barbara, Louis Schmitt assigned this ac *221 count to Barbara and authorized Barbara to draw the money, which she did some time thereafter, and Louis Schmitt took a receipt from Barbara for the amount of money that he had paid her.

John Schmitt had another account in that same bank, to wit, the South Side Savings and Loan Association, of $1,080.63, and, by a card which is in court as part of the evidence, he made that a joint account for himself and a nephew Edmund Schmitt, and the card at least authorized either of them to draw any or all of this account during the lifetime of John Schmitt, and the survivor to draw the entire amount upon the death of either. Within a day or two after John Schmitt’s death, apparently without any demand on the part of Barbara, Edmund Schmitt likewise assigned and transferred this account to Barbara Schmitt, which she later withdrew and placed in another bank. This she also subsequently withdrew, and she now claims that it is in a safety deposit box of the bank together with the sum which she withdrew from the joint account of Louis and her father, after the latter’s death.

When Pauline learned of the death of Schmitt, she went to the probate court and was appointed administratrix of the estate, she being the widow and entitled to administration under the laws of Ohio. She then brought proceedings against Barbara, claiming that there had been a concealing of assets belonging to the estate, and it is admitted that the daughter had taken certain things, such as carpenter tools, a watch, and other articles, and the controversy over them is out of the case as it was adjusted by agreement, and the court found that she had sold an overcoat of the father and had in *222 her possession five dollars from the sale, and or-dered that turned over, but apparently held that these two accounts above referred to had been transferred to the nephews, and therefore were not assets of the estate.

We have examined this record, and, as already stated, it is very meager, and would have been more illuminating if the parties who sought to get at these assets had been less technical about their objections. Once the daughter Barbara was about to tell what her father told her, when counsel representing the administratrix objected, and so we did not get exactly what the father told; and Louis and Barbara Schmitt were also upon the witness stand. The rest of the evidence is simply the showing of the accounts and various matters connected therewith.

It is claimed in this case that Louis was somewhat displeased because he expected something from his uncle; something from the estate. The effect of this seems to have been lost upon the counsel who prepared the case. Now it is claimed by the daughter Barbara, defendant in error, and it must have been so decided by his honor in the court below, that this case comes within the rule laid down in the case of Cleveland Trust Company v. Scobie, 114 Ohio St., 241, 151 N. E., 373, 48 A. L. R., 182, to the effect that a joint account payable to either or both, or any of all, either before or after death, transfers the title to the survivor after death. Now we agree that that is the law laid down in the Scobie case, but it will be noticed that in the Scobie case the Supreme Court held that that was so where the transaction was intended to be a transfer of a present interest in that property to the joint depositor, and in the *223 Bcobie case the sister of Jerome Green, the man who had the money in the bank, had a vested interest in that account from the start, and she could have drawn all of that money at any time during the lifetime of Jerome Green, so the intention of the party who had the money in the bank must have been clear to have given a present ownership of the money in the bank to the survivor, whoever that might be, and that would transfer a vested interest even though the power to revoke remained in the party who put the money in the bank; in the Bcobie case, J eróme Green.

Now in the instant case Louis Schmitt was upon the witness stand and he claimed only to have had the right to draw this money after the death of John Schmitt. Edmund Schmitt did not testify and presumably the same thing was true as to him.

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Estate of Tonsic
235 N.E.2d 239 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1968)
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85 Ohio Law. Abs. 540 (Huron County Probate Court, 1959)
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36 A.2d 62 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1944)
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Bluebook (online)
177 N.E. 478, 39 Ohio App. 219, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 71, 1928 Ohio App. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmitt-admx-v-schmitt-ohioctapp-1928.