Tucker v. Merchants Bank

Decision Date20 December 1977
Docket NumberNo. 3-77,3-77
Citation382 A.2d 212,135 Vt. 597
CourtVermont Supreme Court
PartiesNeal V. TUCKER v. MERCHANTS BANK et al.

Angell & Angell, Randolph, for plaintiff.

Gary D. McQuesten and David L. Cleary of Richard E. Davis Associates, Inc., Barre, for defendant Estate.

Before BARNEY, C. J., and DALEY, LARROW, BILLINGS and HILL, JJ.

BARNEY, Chief Justice.

The plaintiff sought to withdraw funds on deposit in the defendant bank after the death of his mother, the depositor. The bank refused to honor the withdrawal request. Mrs. Tucker had other children and so her estate has made claim to the deposit. On suit, the trial court found a surviving joint interest in the plaintiff entitling him to the balance of the account. The appeal is by the Alyce R. Tucker Estate.

The facts are important. In November, 1972, Alyce R. Tucker withdrew the money from her savings account and deposited it in a so-called 90-day notice account, along with some other funds. In July, 1973, she returned to the bank and asked to have the plaintiff's name added to the account. Accordingly, his name was added to hers on a new passbook so that the account was titled "Mrs. Alyce R. Tucker or Neal Vancel Tucker." The full name of the plaintiff was used at the specific instruction of Mrs. Tucker.

A signature card was prepared at the same time, which was signed by Mrs. Tucker on the front, and the name of the plaintiff typed in on the second signature line. Neither this signature card nor any other was ever signed by the plaintiff in connection with this account. Moreover, the reverse of the card was never signed by anyone. This, if effective, would have authorized the bank to, among other things, honor the account as a joint account with the right of survivorship. It also would have represented an agreement that it would be such an account as between the parties signing.

The plaintiff was never asked to sign any signature card by Mrs. Tucker and knew nothing of the account until told about it by her six days before her death in 1976. The passbook was never turned over to him by her. It came into his possession as part of the contends of her pocketbook, which was handed to the plaintiff by his brother when Mrs. Tucker was taken to the hospital. The evidence also disclosed that Mrs. Tucker was familiar with joint accounts and trust accounts, since she had such accounts with and for other children.

There is a statute involved. 8 V.S.A. § 909 provides:

The recital of the words "payable to either or to the survivor" or words of like effect in the order creating such account and signed by the person or persons who furnish the funds for such deposit shall be conclusive evidence, as between the payees and their legal representatives, of the creation of an absolute joint account. However, nothing herein shall prevent the proof of fraud, under (sic) influence, or incapacity, to defeat such joint interests.

The case of Patch v. Squires, 105 Vt. 405, 165 A. 919 (1933), states at page 409, 165 A. at 920, that this statutory provision came about as an amendment to then G.L. 5376 by No. 97 of the Acts of 1923 for the purpose of overruling the majority holding in Rice v. Bennington County Savings Bank, 93 Vt. 493, 108 A. 708 (1920). The Patch opinion states:

It is unnecessary on the record before us to discuss the extent of the change in our common law effected by this added provision of the statute. It is enough for present purposes to say that its aim was to supersede the decision in the Rice Case (sic) by allowing donative intention to prevail without the technical formality of a delivery of the deposit book. That essential element of a valid gift is conclusively presumed when the form of the deposit is in conformity with that described in the statute.

This position was reaffirmed by this Court in Connor v. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., 112 Vt. 380, 384, 26 A.2d 105, 107 (1942). This added comment appears:

It is apparent that the Legislature by including words of survivorship in the statute intended to attach the attributes of a joint tenancy rather than those of a tenancy in common to the absolute joint account which it created.

Here the form of the deposit is indisputably not in the form of the statute, 8 V.S.A. § 909. If the presumptions of that law are to obtain, its application must be generated by the presence of "words of like effect" to those directly stating "to either or to the survivor." There is no doubt but that the Legislature did not intend to confine depositors to a single ritualistic formula in order for the statute to have application. But it is also not to be questioned that for that to happen, the words used must be of like meaning and substance. In this case the only added operative word aside from the name of the plaintiff is the word "or" inserted between the two names.

The added word may be protective to the bank in the event of a disbursement, through the application of 8 V.S.A. § 908 but in Rice v. Bennington County Savings Bank, supra, 93 Vt. 493, 503, 108 A. 708 (1920), the use of the word "or" was held to demonstrate an intent contrary to a joint tenancy with survivorship. This is also recognized at page 511, 108 A. 708, in Justice Powers' dissent, concurred in by Justice Miles. It certainly must be acknowledged as unlikely and improbable that the Legislature intended to, sub silentio, convert all bank accounts payable merely to A or B to joint accounts with survivorship under 8 V.S.A. § 909. The statute simply does not say that, and could have easily...

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6 cases
  • Brousseau v. Brousseau
    • United States
    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • May 29, 2007
    ...words of survivorship denies to a claim of gift the support their presence would give to a donative intent." Tucker v. Merchants Bank, 135 Vt. 597, 600-01, 382 A.2d 212, 214 (1977) (overruled on other grounds in Adams, 155 Vt. at 521 n. 1, 587 A.2d at 961 n. 1). Thus, terms of survivorship ......
  • Estate of Adams, In re
    • United States
    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • December 28, 1990
    ...vivos gifts with respect to the accounts. See Tucker v. Colburn, 140 Vt. 186, 189, 436 A.2d 1095, 1097 (1981); Tucker v. Merchants Bank, 135 Vt. 597, 600, 382 A.2d 212, 214 (1977). She would have had to show "a manifest intention to create a present interest in [her] during the joint lives ......
  • Holbrook's Estate, In re
    • United States
    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • September 8, 1980
    ...agree with appellee's contention, and note that even under Vermont law, the same result would follow. See Tucker v. Merchants Bank, 135 Vt. 597, 599-600, 382 A.2d 212, 213-14 (1977) (conclusive presumption of gift created by 8 V.S.A. § Appellant's argument for the applicability of Vermont l......
  • Estate of Isaacson v. Isaacson
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • June 3, 1987
    ...and, as a result, the CD will pass to the estate. See, e.g., Lovett v. Uptain, 450 So.2d 113 (Ala.Civ.App.1983); Tucker v. Merchants Bank, 135 Vt. 597, 382 A.2d 212 (1977). Assuming that the CDs before us were "negotiable," we still are not persuaded by the estate's argument that the provis......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

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