Steinhauser v. Repko

249 N.E.2d 567, 19 Ohio Misc. 43, 47 Ohio Op. 2d 344, 1969 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 289
CourtMahoning County Probate Court
DecidedMay 2, 1969
DocketNo. 75957-C
StatusPublished

This text of 249 N.E.2d 567 (Steinhauser v. Repko) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mahoning County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steinhauser v. Repko, 249 N.E.2d 567, 19 Ohio Misc. 43, 47 Ohio Op. 2d 344, 1969 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 289 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1969).

Opinion

Henderson, J.

This case involves the ownership of money in a safe deposit box leased to the decedent and another under a lease agreement purporting to give both parties to the agreement joint and survivorship rights in the contents.

The decedent, John Repko, died- intestate, August 28, 1968. On September 22, 1958, he and his daughter-in-law [44]*44Mildred L. Repko, entered into an agreement of lease of a safe deposit bos with the Lowellviiie Savings and Banking Company. Both the decedent and Mrs. Repko signed the printed lease form as “joint tenants with right of survivorship.” No officer of the bank signed the agreement for the bank, although the printed lease form was furnished by the bank and the bank was referred to in the lease by name as lessor.

Paragraph three of the lease provides as follows:

“Lessor shall under no circumstances, except as provided in paragraph 9, be considered as bailee, howsoever in control or possession of the contents of the leased box; the relation of the lessor and lessee (s) under this agreement, being that solely of landlord and tenant.”

Paragraph four of the lease provides in part as' follows :

“In all cases of joint lessees, it' is hereby declared that each of them has such interest in the entire contents of said box as to entitle him or her to the possession thereof, without liability to lessor for misappropriating same, and lessor is not bound to take notice of the contents of said box or of the death or insolvency of either of lessees.

Paragraph ten provides in part as follows:

“In case the lessees are joint tenants and have indicated below their signatures hereto that they are joint tenants with right of survivorshit) (but only in such cases, it being agreed that two or more lessees are tenants in common unless they have agreed to be joint tenants with right of survivorship by executing this lease as such joint tenants) it is hereby declared that all property of every kind at any time heretofore or hereafter placed in said box is the joint property of both lessees and upon the death of either, passes to the survivor subject to inheritance tax laws.”

Upon decedent’s death there Avere in the safe de-nosit box five savings bonds, each in the joint names of the decedent and one other than Mildred L. Repko, and $8020.00 in currency.

The husband of Mildred L. Repko testified- that in [45]*45September 1958, the decedent brought to their home a large amount of currency in fruit jars which he had theretolore kept m his own home, said that he was going to put it in a safe deposit box and that he wanted Mildred L. Repko’s name on the box. According to the witness, the decedent acknowledged that he understood that if Mrs. Repko’s name were on the box she would have the right to use the money and that at his death the money would become hers. Mrs. Repko was given one of the two keys to the box furnished by the bank and the decedent kept one in his home. From the time of the leasing of the box until the death of the decedent only the latter entered the box, which he did on six occasions. The exact amount of currency deposited in the box when it was leased is not shown by the evidence, but it was conceded by the defendant that all of the money in the box was originally the decedent’s.

The administratrix of the estate filed a petition for a declaratory judgment against Mildred L. Repko and the bank seeking a finding that the currency in the box belonged to the estate and not to Mildred L. Repko. ■

The defendant Mildred L. Repko claims the right to the currency by reason of the literal words of the lease giving her title to the contents of the box as survivor, in accordance with the decedent’s expressed intentions. No claim is made by her to the savings bonds in the box upon which her name did not appear. Plaintiff, the administratrix, on the other hand, claims that the currency is properly a part of the assets of the estate because there-was no gift from the decedent to Mildred L. Ropko, because the relationship between the bank and decedent and Mildred L. Ropko was that of bailor and bailee, and because there was no debtor-creditor relationship between the bank and the other two parties to the contract.

The law is well settled in Ohio that while joint tenancies are not recognized, survivorship rights in personalty, including bank savings accounts, may be established by contract. In re Estate of Hutchison (1929), 120 Ohio St. 542 ; Sage v. Fluech (1937), 132 Ohio St. 377. It is also well established in Ohio that the right of survivorship [46]*46pertaining to a joint and survivorship savings account is Lamed upon contract rather than upon gift. Cleveland Trust Company v. Scobie (1926), 114 Ohio St. 241. The form of the contract ot‘ deposit, however, is not conclusive, and the true intent of the parties may be shown. Fecteau v. Cleveland Trust Company (1960), 171 Ohio St. 121 ; In re Estate of Svab (1967), 11 Ohio St. 2d 182.

There appear to be, however, no reported decisions in Ohio upon the question of the establishment of rights of survivorship in the contents of a safe deposit box by the language of the contract of lease of the box purporting to do this. The decision most nearly in point, and the one relied upon most heavily by plaintiff, is that of In re Es-state of Copeland (Athens Co. 1943), 74 Ohio App. 164. In this case the decedent placed currency in a safe deposit box in his own name and for which there was no formal written lease contract. A cashier did give decedent a receipt for the money reciting that it was to be placed in the box “subject to withdrawal by Gusta Norris,” and volunteered to add to the name of the owner “Thomas Copeland” upon the bank’s own boxholder records “or Gus-ta Norris or the survivor.” In its opinion the court analyzes prior Ohio Supreme Court decisions beginning with Cleveland Trust Company v. Scobie, supra, and thereafter, and points out that in all these cases involving survivorship rights in savings accounts a debtor-creditor relationship was established by the deposit contract, which relationship is absent from the safe deposit box rental whether it be considered a lease or a bailment. The court’s concluding paragraph appears to summarize the reasons for its holding:

“This case does not come within that class of cases wherein the survivor is permitted to take by reason of a contract of deposit. Here decedent placed his own money in his own safe-deposit box and arranged only that his niece should have the right to make withdrawals. This right terminated upon the death of Copeland Bender v. Cleveland Trust Co., 123 Ohio St. 588, 176 N. E. 452. Neither does the record divulge compliance with the procedure and require-[47]*47merits which the law says are essential to the completion of a, valid gift inter vivos. Bolles v. Toledo Trust Company, Exr., supra.”

Although the court in the Seobie case does discuss the debtor-creditor relationship between the bank and the depositor, it would seem that such mention was made not so much to pronounce a necessary ingredient of survivor-ship by contract, but rather to demonstrate a barrier to survivorship by the gift theory in savings account cases. See 11 Western Reserve Law Review 511 at 513 (10(50).

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Bluebook (online)
249 N.E.2d 567, 19 Ohio Misc. 43, 47 Ohio Op. 2d 344, 1969 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinhauser-v-repko-ohprobctmahonin-1969.