Reagan v. Phillips

Decision Date04 February 1963
Citation187 N.E.2d 801,345 Mass. 387
PartiesJames J. REAGAN, executor, v. Frances PHILLIPS et al.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court

Charles A. Watson, Cambridge (James J. Reagan, Cambridge, with him), for petitioner.

Bradley Gilbert (A. Leavitt Taylor, Boston, with him), for respondent Frances Phillips.

Before WILKINS, C. J., and SPALDING, WHITTEMORE, SPIEGEL, and REARDON, JJ.

SPIEGEL, Justice.

This is a petition in equity to determine the ownership of a savings bank account in the East Cambridge Savings Bank standing in the name of John J. Flavin, trustee for Frances Phillips. The petitioner is the executor of the will of the depositor, John J. Flavin. The respondent Frances Phillips has appealed from a decree by a judge of the Probate Court that the 'bank account is the property of the estate.' The evidence is reported.

The judge made a report of material facts, the more pertinent of which follow. The testator died on November 5, 1960, at the age of eighty years leaving two nieces as his only heirs at law, one of whom is Frances Phillips. The testator left legacies of $5,000 to each of them. In 1955, prior to the execution of his will, the testator 'informed the executor that the trust account was his [the testator's] property'; that he opened it on April 17, 1946, at which time he was advised by a teller at the bank that since he already had an individual account there for the maximum amount allowable under G.L. c. 168, § 21, 1 the bank could not accept the new deposit but that a 'better way to make the deposit' would be to name himself as trustee. He later made other deposits to and withdrawals from this account. Frances Phillips 'never knew about the account, never had the pass book in her possession and never heard of the trustee account until the executor showed it to her.' The judge found 'that there was no valid inter vivos trust established, nor that any interest or benefit was conferred or bestowed at the time of the creation of the trustee account that would take effect on the demise of the testator.'

'It is so common for an owner of personalty to put the apparent title in his own name as trustee for another who furnishes no consideration, without any intent to create a genuine present interest in that other, or to surrender any part of his own dominion over the property, that the law is skeptical of the reality of a trust so declared.' O'Hara v. O'Hara, 291 Mass. 75, 77, 195 N.E. 909, 911. A finding that no trust existed has often followed the disclosure that the reason the depositor put the account in the presently questioned form was to avoid a law limiting the size of such accounts. Brabrook v. Boston Five Cents Sav. Bank, 104 Mass. 228, 232; Cleveland v. Hampden Sav. Bank, 182 Mass. 110, 112, 65 N.E. 27; Robertson v. Parker, 287 Mass. 351, 354, 191 N.E. 645. As...

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3 cases
  • Schleifstein v. Greenstein
    • United States
    • Appeals Court of Massachusetts
    • March 7, 1980
    ...of the reality of a trust so declared." O'Hara v. O'Hara, 291 Mass. 75, 77, 195 N.E. 909, 911 (1935). See Reagan v. Phillips, 345 Mass. 387, 388-389, 187 N.E.2d 801 (1963). Cf. Blanchette v. Blanchette, 362 Mass. 518, 523-524, 287 N.E.2d 459 (1972). While this initial skepticism is overcome......
  • In re AB&C Group, Inc., Case No. 08-482 (Bankr.N.D.W.Va. 7/1/2008)
    • United States
    • U.S. Bankruptcy Court — Northern District of West Virginia
    • July 1, 2008
    ...when in fact the putative trustee is "without any intent to create a genuine present interest in that other . . . ."7 Regan v. Phillips, 187 N.E.2d 801, 802 (Mass. 1963). In this case, the Letter Agreement is an attempt to allow Sovereign Bank to engage in the liquidation of the Debtor's as......
  • Thomas Bros. Corp. v. Com.
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
    • February 4, 1963

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