Court Opinion

ID: 3273833
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:42:23.524886+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:11:38.977214
License: Public Domain

Appellee, husband of appellant, brought this action against her and the First National Bank of Fort Smith, to recover the sum of $3,640 and the accrued interest thereon, the total amounting to $4,211.11, which she had deposited in a savings account in said bank, in *Page 591 
her maiden name of Ethel Marie Mivelaz. The parties to this action were married January 1, 1928. At that time appellee was under a "try out" contract of employment as traveling salesman with the R. Hoe Company, manufacturers of printing machinery and supplies, by which he received traveling expenses only, but in June or July he began receiving a salary in addition to expenses. Fort Smith was his headquarters during 1928, where they lived with appellant's sister. In December he was transferred to New Orleans, became sales manager of a large territory, and was given a salary of $350 per month plus traveling expenses. Some time after their marriage, appellee opened a checking account in the First National Bank in their joint names, giving either the right to check thereon. Salary and expense checks from his employer were sent to him at Fort Smith, were received by her in his absence, and she was instructed by him to deposit same to said account after deducting such sums as she might need for her living expenses in his absence. Some of the funds she received were deposited according to instructions, but, from August 28, 1928, to March 3, 1930, she withheld from deposit in that account $3,640 of said money sent her, and deposited same to her own credit under her maiden name, Ethel Marie Mivelaz. From May, 1929, to December, 1932, there was deposited in the checking account in their joint names the sum of $8,750.57, but he received no salary or expenses after February 15, 1932, as he suffered a serious and permanent injury in an automobile wreck January 18, 1932, and did no work thereafter, and it appears from the bank records that $2,427.50 was deposited in said account from April 11 to December 23, 1932.
Appellant defended the action on the ground that the money deposited to her credit was a gift from her husband. The court found against her contention, and she has appealed.
Substantially the only question presented is one of fact. Did appellee give her the money she deposited to her credit in a savings account? There is no conflict in the testimony, except on the issue of gift or no gift. It *Page 592 
is undisputed that all the money deposited in both accounts came from his earnings. It is also undisputed that he knew nothing about this account in her maiden name until the bank charged him with an overdraft, and, upon investigation of this matter, discovered same. Appellant says he gave her the money, and is corroborated to some extent by her two sisters and a niece. Appellee denies that he gave her the money to be kept as her own, but that it was to be deposited in the checking account. In this he is corroborated to some extent by the facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction. The fact that she deposited it to her credit in her maiden name; that she did not deposit it in the bank where she had another savings account, the Merchants' National; that she did not tell him that she had done so, all tend somewhat to show an effort to hide or conceal the matter, and to corroborate him that there was no gift. The court found the issue in favor of appellee, and we are unable to say the finding is against the preponderance of the evidence.
Moreover, if this is a gift at all, it is a gift inter vivos or donatio inter vivos. In Stifft v. W. B. Worthen Co.176 Ark. 585, 3 S.W.2d 316, we said: "Gifts inter vivos or donationes inter vivos are gifts between the living, and are perfected and become absolute during the lifetime of the donor and the donee. * * * The elements necessary to constitute a valid gift inter vivos were stated by this court in Lowe v. Hart, 93 Ark. 518, 125 S.W. 1030, to the effect that the donor must be of sound mind, must actually deliver the property to the donee, must intend to pass the title immediately, and the donee must accept the gift." We think the evidence in this case fails to satisfy this rule. There was no intention on his part to pass the title to her immediately or at all. He intended that the money be deposited in their joint checking account, over which he had some control. While she did not draw any checks on that account, she could have done so without accounting to him therefor.
It follows that the decree must be affirmed.
JOHNSON, C.J., and KIRBY and BUTLER, JJ., dissent.