Wells Fargo Bank & Union Trust Co. v. Brady

254 P.2d 71, 116 Cal. App. 2d 381, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1079
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 2, 1953
DocketCiv. 15169
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 254 P.2d 71 (Wells Fargo Bank & Union Trust Co. v. Brady) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells Fargo Bank & Union Trust Co. v. Brady, 254 P.2d 71, 116 Cal. App. 2d 381, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1079 (Cal. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

*383 GOODELL, J.

Catherine L. Doran, a widow, died intestate on March 18,1949, at the age of 83 years and 11 months. Her next of kin are Emily Wilson, a niece, appellant Marie L. Brady, a niece (daughters of a deceased sister of decedent), Byron Fowzer, Leroy Fowzer and Elinor Fowzer Morris, children of a deceased niece of decedent, and Cecil Chesworth, the only child of a deceased nephew of decedent.

Shortly before her death decedent had on deposit in four San Francisco banks $81,069.81 distributed as follows: in The San Francisco Bank $14,927.58; in The Hibernia Savings & Loan Society $22,505.26; in The Anglo California National Bank $22,222.69, and in the American Trust Company $21,-414.28.

On February 11, 1949, decedent, accompanied by appellant and defendant Georgette Irwin (appellant’s daughter) called at all four banks and effected the transfer therein of the accounts from her individual name into the names of Catherine L. Doran, Marie L. Brady and Georgette Irwin, as joint tenants.

Respondent bank was appointed administrator of decedent’s estate and promptly commenced this action to recover for the estate the $81,069.81 so transferred, alleging the unsoundness of mind of decedent at the time of the transfers, and undue influence and fraud exerted on decedent by appellant and defendant Georgette Irwin.

The trial took 14 days and the record is voluminous. A jury heard the evidence and rendered four special verdicts all adverse to the defense. After the jury had retired to deliberate the judge announced his purpose to treat the verdicts, whatever they might be, as merely advisory, and his intention to make findings. This was done and a judgment was entered for $81,459.13 against both defendants. A new trial was denied, and this appeal was taken by defendant Marie L. Brady but not by defendant Georgette Irwin.

The four banks were joined as defendants and filed answers, and the judgment runs against each of them for the respective amounts on deposit, but it is conceded, of course, that the banks are merely stakeholders.

Appellant’s answer shows that on March 21, 1949, she caused to be transferred by all four banks “the balances standing to the credit of the aforesaid joint bank accounts to new accounts opened in the name of” appellant alone. The evidence shows without contradiction that this was done without the knowledge or consent of the other surviving joint *384 tenant, defendant Georgette Irwin, and without disclosing to any of the banks the fact that Catherine L. Doran, the other joint tenant, had died three days before.

Appellant filed a cross-complaint against her codefendant daughter wherein she alleged that on February 11, 1949, decedent advised appellant that she desired to go to the banks and arrange to have her accounts put in appellant’s name and that if anything happened to decedent she desired appellant to have her property, and requested appellant to accompany her to the banks for that purpose; that in April, 1948, appellant had been seriously ill and since then had been in extremely poor health and, in addition, was not familiar with business transactions of the character requested of her by decedent and did, therefore, call her daughter. Georgette Irwin, requesting that she take decedent and appellant to the banks for the purpose of making the transfers; that Mrs. Irwin on said day came to appellant’s home and at once and prior to the making of any transfers. represented to both decedent and appellant that her own name should be placed on the bank accounts as a joint owner, inasmuch as appellant was in poor health, and that should anything happen to appellant, she could then take care of the moneys in the bank accounts for the family of appellant, and at said time Mrs. Irwin represented and held out to decedent and appellant that the name of Georgette Irwin should be placed on said bank accounts for the sole purpose of taking care of the moneys in said bank accounts for the family of appellant should appellant predecease decedent; that Mrs. Irwin is a woman of business experience and advised and importuned decedent and appellant to have her name placed on the new bank accounts as a joint owner for the purposes aforesaid and for no other purpose.

Appellant alleged further in her cross-complaint against her daughter that both decedent and appellant relied on such representations and, believing them to be true, agreed to the placing of her name on the bank accounts as a joint owner, but solely for the purpose so represented to them by her; that neither decedent nor appellant would have permitted Mrs. Irwin’s name to be placed on the bank accounts as a joint owner if said representations were not made by her as alleged and relied upon by decedent and appellant.

She alleged further that immediately after decedent’s death Mrs. Irwin made claim to the moneys standing to the credit of the joint bank accounts, demanded of appellant the passbooks *385 therefor, and, in fact, forcibly 'took the same from the home of'appellant but shortly thereafter returned them; that appellant upon the return of the passbooks, and because of the asserted claims of her daughter to the moneys standing to the credit thereof, contrary to the latter’s representations made at the time the joint accounts were opened, immediately went to the various banks and transferred the balances standing to the credit of the joint bank accounts to new accounts opened in the name of appellant alone; that the total amount of moneys standing to the credit of said joint accounts, and so transferred to the name of appellant alone was $80,869.81. She then alleged that her daughter claims to be the owner of the moneys now standing in the various bank accounts in the name of appellant, or claims some right, title or interest therein or thereto, but such claims are wholly without right and that appellant is the sole owner of all funds standing to the credit of said bank accounts.

The prayer of appellant’s cross-complaint is for a judgment that she is the owner of all the money and that her daughter “has no right, title or interest in or claim to all or any portion of the moneys . . . and that said cross-defendant be forever enjoined and debarred from asserting any claim whatever thereto. ’ ’

In answering her mother’s cross-complaint defendant Georgette Irwin denied certain of its allegations, and alleged that on March 21, 1949, appellant, without the knowledge or consent of herself, had caused the $80,869.81 remaining in the four joint tenancy accounts to be transferred from those accounts into four bank accounts in appellant’s sole and individual name, but that such funds so transferred nevertheless “remained the joint tenancy property of cross-plaintiff and cross-defendant.” She asserted her right, title and interest as a joint tenant with her mother in all four accounts.

Georgette Irwin filed a cross-complaint against her mother, wherein she made substantially the same claims and assertions of title as those just stated, with the prayer that her right, title and interest as a surviving joint tenant (with her mother) be adjudged as against her mother’s assertion of individual and total ownership of all four accounts.

A separate set of findings was made by the court on the issues raised on both cross-complaints and the answers thereto, wherein,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 P.2d 71, 116 Cal. App. 2d 381, 1953 Cal. App. LEXIS 1079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-fargo-bank-union-trust-co-v-brady-calctapp-1953.