We granted discretionary review in this action to determine the ownership of a cashier’s check found among the personal effects of the decedent. He had obtained the cashier’s cheek and was one of the named payees on the check, along with his son. The issue is whether the check belongs to the surviving named payee or to the estate of the decedent.
Eddie Raichel, the decedent, obtained a cashier’s check for $42,000.00 with his own funds, in August 1997 from the Bank of Whitesburg. The language on the check states, “Pay to the order of Eddie Raichel or James Raichel.” James Raichel is the decedent’s son and Appellant in this action. At the time the decedent obtained this check, he was married to Eunice Raichel, Appellee. She was his second wife. They were married in 1993, and she was not the biological mother of his children. In November 1997, the decedent and Appellee were vacationing in Florida when Eddie Raichel died. The cashier’s check was with the decedent’s personal effects, and the Appellee found and took possession of it. Neither side presented evidence showing that Appellant or Appellee knew of the $42,000.00 check previous to decedent’s death.
Appellee was appointed administratrix of Eddie Raichel’s estate in December 1997. Appellant filed a motion in late December in the probate proceeding in Letcher District Court seeking a release of the cashier’s check. The matter was submitted to the district court for a ruling after a hearing. Then, in January 1998, Appellee filed a declaratory judgment action in Letcher Circuit Court in order to determine the ownership of the cashier’s check. On June 25, 1998, the Letcher Circuit Court entered judgment in favor of Appellant determining that KRS 391.315(1) controlled and that ownership passed automatically to the son upon the death of the decedent. The Appellee appealed to the Court of Appeals which reversed and remanded, holding that the check belongs to the estate, and instructing the court to look to Article III of the Uniform Commercial Code. This Court granted discretionary review.
The issue before us is whether Appellant, as a named joint payee on the cashier’s check, has ownership rights in the instrument or whether Appellee, as the estate of the decedent, has said rights. For the reasons set forth below, we hold the circuit court appropriately found that the Appellant has superior rights to the check.
Appellant claims that ownership of the check passed to him upon his father’s death and not to the estate of the decedent because the legal presumption is that “[slums remaining on deposit at the death of a party to a joint account belong to the surviving party and parties as against the Estate of the decedent.” KRS 391.315(1). For this to be true, the cashier’s check must be a joint account. An account is “a contract of deposit of funds between a depositor and a financial institution, and *499includes a checking account, savings account, certificate of deposit, share account and other like arrangement.” KRS 391.300. Further, a joint account is “an account payable on request to one or more of two or more parties whether or not mention is made of any right of survivor-ship.” KRS 391.300. Appellant argues that this was a joint account because the depositor, decedent, deposited the $42,000.00 with the bank, a financial institution, thereby creating a contract of deposit between them. That is, when the payee presents the cashier’s check to the bank, the bank must pay the $42,000.00 that was deposited by the decedent. As a result, a cashier’s check is an “other like arrangement,” such as a certificate of deposit or checking account, that is contemplated in the statutory language of KRS 391.300, which defines a joint account.
Conversely, the Appellee argues that this is not a joint account because it is not listed in the definition of an account in KRS 391.300, rather this is actual cash. Therefore, the legal presumption of a right of survivorship does not apply to this matter and the check therefore belongs to the estate of Eddie Raichel. However, the Appellee argues that if this Court decides KRS 391.315 does apply, then it must be applied in conjunction with KRS 355.3-110. This UCC section dictates that “if an instrument is payable to two (2) or more persons alternatively, it is payable to any of them and may be negotiated, discharged, or enforced by any or all of them in possession of the instrument.” KRS 355.3-110(4). Accordingly, since the decedent was in possession of the cashier’s check at the time of his death, his rights to the check are superior to the Appellant’s even though the Appellant was an alternative joint payee. Furthermore, the decedent’s personal representative, Appellee, then succeeded to the rights in the cashier’s check at the decedent’s death. In addition, Appellee argued that since she knew nothing of the cashier’s check until after decedent died, it appears as though Eddie was trying to conceal funds from his wife and in effect deprive her of her dower rights.
We believe that this was a joint account and therefore the cashier’s check belongs to the surviving party as against the estate of the decedent. First, this is an account because the decedent had to present and deposit $42,000.00 with the bank in order to obtain the cashier’s check. This created “a contract of deposit of funds between a depositor [Decedent] and a financial institution [Bank of Whitesburg].” KRS 391.300(1). Second, this is a joint account because it is “payable on request to one (1) or more of two (2) or more parties.” KRS 391.300(4). As the language on the check indicates, the $42,000.00 is to be paid, “to the order of Eddie Raichel [Decedent] or James Rai-chel [Appellant].” Therefore, the balance is “payable on request to one (1) or more of two (2) ... parties.” KRS 391.300(4). As a result, this cashier’s check is a joint account according to the definitions set forth in KRS 391 .300.
A layperson probably would not deem a cashier’s check an “account.” One normally thinks of an account as a deposit of funds upon which the depositor can draw, not as the purchase of a negotiable instrument. However, KRS 391.300(1) provides:
“Account” means a contract of deposit of funds between a depositor and a financial institution, and includes a checking account, savings account, certificate of deposit, share account and other like arrangement.
Clearly, a cashier’s check is not an “other like arrangement” in comparison to a checking account, savings account, or share account. However, KRS 355.3-*500104(10) identifies a “certificate of deposit” as a negotiable instrument and defines it as, inter alia, “a note of the bank.” Further, KRS 355.3-412 provides that issuers of notes and cashier’s checks have identical obligations with respect to payment. Professors Leibson and Nowka interpret KRS 355.3-412 as removing any “doubt, if ever there was, that a cashier’s check shall not be treated as an ordinary check, but rather as a primary obligation of the issuer, just as a note.” David J. Leibson and Richard H. Nowka, The Uniform Commercial Code of Kentucky, § 4.3(D)(1) (2d ed. Matthew Bender 2000 cum. supp.). Since a cashier’s check and a certificate of deposit are both notes, the former is an “other like arrangement” as to the latter, and falls within the scope of KRS 391.315(l)(a), which provides: “Sums remaining on deposit at the death of a party to a joint account belong to the surviving party or parties to the account as against the estate of the decedent unless there is clear and convincing written evidence of a different intention at the time the account is created.” Therefore, the $42,000.00 belongs to the Appellant, the surviving party to the account, as against the Appellee, the estate, unless there is clear and convincing evidence otherwise. Here, there is no such evidence. In fact, the only clear and convincing written evidence indicates the decedent’s desire for his son, Appellant, to have this cashier’s check, as he is the only other named payee on the check. There is also case law supporting this position.
In Hensley v. Ball, Ky., 380 S.W.2d 279 (1964), the decedent died intestate and was survived by his wife and children from a previous marriage. Among his property were two cashier’s checks made out to Smith Ball, the decedent, and Charlie Ball, his son. The Kentucky Court of Appeals held that the two cashier’s checks belonged equally to the estate and the son due to the “and” language. The court found that
Stock certificates, notes, bonds, and cashier’s checks are basically alike in that each is evidence of contract rights held by the owner or payee against the signatory institution or party. When one person causes such a document to be issued by a second person in favor of another, individually or jointly, the latter becomes a third party beneficiary of the transaction, and is vested with the rights evidenced by the instrument, which is no less a contract simply because it may generally and more familiarly be regarded as a title document.
Id. at 283. There, the right of survivor-ship language, “and,” indicated an intent for both the decedent and the son to share the cashier’s check; unlike in the case at bar where the intent is for either the decedent or the son to have the money, alternatively. In a similar case, Farmer’s Bank & Trust Co. v. Brazell, Ky., 902 S.W.2d 830 (1995), a mother and daughter were alternative payees to a certificate of deposit. Before the mother died, she pledged the joint certificates of deposit as collateral on a loan with a bank. After her death, her daughter, as joint payee, sued the bank in order to have herself declared as owner of the certificates of deposit as against the bank. The Kentucky Court of Appeals ultimately determined that the certificates of deposit belonged to the bank and not to the payee because the certificates of deposit were negotiable instruments and, therefore, “the party who possessed them could negotiate them.” Id. at 832. Since the decedent had negotiated them before her death, they belonged to the bank and not the alternative payee. The Court also noted, however, that “had the certificates of deposit not been pledged to [the bank], they would have automatically belonged to [the surviving payee].” Id. That is, like the case at bar, these instru-*501merits “were payable in the alternative because of the inclusion of ‘or’ on their faces.” Id. Therefore they were payable to either the mother or daughter. However, while the mother was in possession of these certificates of deposit, she was able to negotiate them, which she did when she pledged them as collateral for a bank loan. This is unlike the present matter because here, the decedent never negotiated the cashier’s check. As a result, the cashier’s check now belongs to the alternative joint payee, Appellant James Raichel.
KRS 355.3-110(4) provides:
If an instrument is payable to two (2) or more persons alternatively, it is payable to any of them and may be negotiated, discharged, or enforced by any or all of them in possession of the instrument. If an instrument is payable to two (2) or more persons not alternatively, it is payable to all of them and may be negotiated, discharged, or enforced only by all of them. If an instrument payable to two (2) or more persons is ambiguous as to whether it is payable to the persons alternatively, the instrument is payable to the persons alternatively.
The Court of Appeals reasoned that, since Appellant’s father was in possession of the instrument at the time of his death, it was his property and passed to his estate which then could negotiate it on his behalf. There is support for this proposition in Thomas v. Estate of Eubanks, 358 So.2d 709 (Miss.1978), interpreting a Mississippi statute virtually identical to KRS 355.3-110(4). The instrument in Thomas was a certificate of deposit, not a cashier’s check, but, as noted above, both are negotiable instruments. Nevertheless, we believe that the purpose of KRS 355.3-110(4) was not to designate who owned an instrument, but to designate who, as between co-payees, has the right to negotiate that instrument. This interpretation is reinforced by the fact that KRS 355.3-101, et seq., is primarily concerned with identifying negotiable instruments and establishing rules pertaining to the rights and obligations of parties with respect to the negotiation thereof, while KRS Chapter 391 is specifically concerned with the descent and distribution of property interests of decedents after their deaths.
Appellee also expresses a concern about her dower rights to the $42,000.00 cashier’s check. KRS 392.020 defines the surviving spouse’s interest in the property of their deceased spouse. It states, “that when a spouse dies intestate”, “the surviv- or shall ... have an absolute estate in one-half (1/2) of the surplus personalty left by the decedent.” KRS 392.020. However, the $42,000.00 cashier’s check is not surplus personalty, as contemplated in the statute, because the decedent deposited it, before his death, in the name of himself or Appellant, and therefore it was not part of his estate. The $42,000.00 belonged to the alternative payee, Appellant, upon the decedent’s death, and as a result, it was not part of the surplus personalty to be given to his spouse, Appellee. We do not address the issue of dower rights as discussed in Harris v. Rock, Ky., 799 S.W.2d 10 (1990), because Appellee did not claim at trial that the check was purchased to defraud her dower rights.
For the reasons stated above, we reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the judgment of the Letcher Circuit Court.
GRAVES and WINTERSHEIMER, JJ., concur. COOPER and KELLER, JJ., concur in result only, as they do not believe this is a “joint account.” LAMBERT, C.J., dissents by separate opinion, with JOHNSTONE, J., joining that dissent.