Smith v. Merchants National Bank of Leominster

4 Mass. App. Dec. 91

This text of 4 Mass. App. Dec. 91 (Smith v. Merchants National Bank of Leominster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Merchants National Bank of Leominster, 4 Mass. App. Dec. 91 (Mass. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

RILEY, P.J.

The plaintiff’s declaration in this action of contract in substance alleges that she and her late husband, John W. Smith, had entered into a contract with the defendant under the terms of which the defendant agreed to accept deposits of money from the plaintiff and her husband and to pay out the said money on check or order signed by the plaintiff or her husband and that in the event of the death of either the plaintiff or her late husband, the money in the account with the defendant would then belong to the sur[92]*92vivor and would be paid to the survivor’s order: that her husband, John \V. Smith, died on September 4, 1950, that the death became known to the defendant on September 5, 1950, and that on September 12, 1950 the defendant wrongfully and without authorization or order of the plaintiff and in violation of the contract withdrew the sum of $6390 from the account; that the defendant has refused to return or replace the said money in the said account in spite of requests by the plaintiff so to do and further that she was the owner of an account with the defendant and that the sum of $6390 was withdrawn without order or authorization by the plaintiff and that thereafter the defendant refused to pay certain checks drawn by the plaintiff against the said amount of $6390 and that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff for the said amount.

The defendant’s answer is a general denial and an allegation that any money owned to the plaintiff by the defendant has been paid in full.

The trial judge found that on January 24, 1946 the plaintiff went with her husband, John W. Smith, to the defendant bank and opened a bank account in their names jointly, signing the usual card by which it was agreed that all deposits in such account should be their joint property, payable to either or the survivor; that the defendant accepted the account on such terms; that thereafter both the plaintiff and her husband deposited funds in and withdrew funds from said joint account; that John W. Smith was associated with his father, John L. Smith, in an automobile business under the name of Smith Motors; that Smith Motors kept its bank account in the Clinton Trust Co.; that during the last three days of August, 1950 John W. Smith, for his own convenience, made three deposits in the joint account totaling $6390, which deposits were made up of funds rightfully in his possession but belonging to Smith Motors; that on August 31st John W. Smith drew a check for $6390 on the joint ac[93]*93count payable to Smith Motors which check was deposited in the latter’s account in the Clinton Trust Co.; that on September 4, 1950 John W. Smith died; that said check for $6390 was forwarded for collection by the Clinton Trust Co. through the Merchants National Bank of Boston, and the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston to the defendant bank where it was received on Sept. 5th after the defendant had learned of the death of John W. Smith; that the defendant bank caused said check to be protested and returned to the Federal Reserve Bank; that on Sept. 8th John L. Smith and the president of the Clinton Trust Co. went to the defendant bank and had a conference with the president of the defendant; that as a result of that conference the check of $6,390 was sent as a collection item from the Clinton Trust Co. directly to the defendant bank where it was received on Sept. 12th; that the defendant then paid said check and charged it against the joint account; that the plaintiff, until much later, was not informed either of the three deposits totaling $6,390 nor of the check of that amount, and never consented to its being charged against the account; and that the defendant thereafter refused the plaintiff’s demand for the $6,-390. He found for the plaintiff in the amount of $6,390.

It also appears in the judge’s finding that he was informed by counsel at the trial that a bill in equity had been brought in the Superior Court wherein the plaintiff and defendant in this action were among the parties named, and wherein they were enjoined from taking advantage of any judgment rendered in the District Court of Leominster in this action.

The defendant contends that payment of the check in question by it was authorized by G. L. Chapter 107, Section 17 which provides:

“A depositary of funds subject to withdrawal by check or demand draft may pay a check or [94]*94demand draft drawn on it by a depositor having funds on deposit to pay the same, notwithstanding his death, upon presentation within ten days after its date.”

The plaintiff on the other hand contends that this statute does not apply to a joint account such as the one in the case at bar and that even if it does, the payment by the defendant of the check more than ten days after its date, it having previously declined payment, nullifies for it the protection of the statute. Section 17 above set out, was first enacted by Chapter 210, Section 1 of the Acts of 1885 in substantially the same language and has come down through various codifications of the statutes with only minor changes in phraseology. Section 2 of the aforesaid Chapter 210 of the Acts of 1885 relates to savings bank deposits and reads as follows:

“Savings banks and institutions for savings are hereby authorized and empowered to pay any savings bank order, drawn by any person who has funds on deposit to meet the same, notwithstanding the death of such drawer in the interval of time between signing such savings bank order and its presentation for payment, when said presentation shall be made within thirty days after the date of such savings bank order, and at any subsequent period, provided the depositary has not received actual notice of the death of the drawer.”

The provisions of this section of the statute without substantial change now appear in G. L. Chapter 168, Section 52. After Section 2 of Chapter 210 of the Acts of 1885 was re-enacted in a codification of the savings bank laws by the Acts of 1908, Chapter 590, Section 65, it was construed by the Supreme Court in Brannen v. Eliot Five Cents Savings Bank, 211 Mass. 532. It was there held that if a depositor in a savings bank delivers to another person, his bank book and an order in [95]*95writing on the bank to pay to such person the amount standing to the depositor’s credit with the bank, the bank is liable to the drawee of the order although the book and order were not presented until after the depositor’s death and the bank had notice of the death, notwithstanding the by-laws of the defendant bank that on the death of a depositor, the money standing to his credit should be paid to the legatees, heirs-at-law or legal representatives of such depositor. The Court says at page 534:

“There is nothing in the statute referred to (St. 1908 c. 590, § 65) or the by-laws to prevent the plaintiff from maintaining this action. This statute merely provides that a bank may pay an order after the death of the depositor if presented within thirty days after its date. A similar provision exists in regard to the payment of checks. R.L. c. 73, § 17.” (Now G.L. Chap. 107, sec. 17) “The by-law provides for the payment, after the death of the depositor, of money standing to his credit to his legatees, heirs-at-law, or legal representatives, and has nothing to do with and does not affect in any way a transfer of a deposit by the depositor.”

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Related

Brannan v. Eliot Five Cents Savings Bank
98 N.E. 572 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1912)
Burrows v. Burrows
137 N.E. 923 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1922)
South Boston Trust Co. v. Levin
249 Mass. 45 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1924)
Gallup v. Barton
47 N.E.2d 921 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Mass. App. Dec. 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-merchants-national-bank-of-leominster-massdistctapp-1952.