Present: All the Justices
MALLORY BUCK, EXECUTOR OF THE
ESTATE OF CALVIN HUGH BUCK
v. Record No. 972315 OPINION BY JUSTICE CYNTHIA D. KINSER
November 6, 1998
SANDRA B. JORDAN, ET AL.
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE CITY OF NORFOLK
Everett A. Martin, Jr., Judge
The primary issue in this appeal concerns the
ownership of an investment account registered as belonging
to joint tenants with rights of survivorship. Because the
language of the account agreement overcomes the presumption
that the account was opened for the convenience of the
decedent, we will affirm the circuit court’s judgment
awarding the funds in the account to the surviving joint
tenant.
I.
On July 10, 1991, Calvin Hugh Buck (Buck) and his
daughter Sandra B. Jordan (Jordan) opened a joint
investment account (the Account) with Sovran Investment
Corporation, NationsSecurities’ predecessor. Buck and
Jordan signed a form titled “New Account Information” (the
Agreement) and entered into the Account as “Joint Tenants
with Rights of Survivorship and not as tenants in common or
as tenants by the entirety.” 1 The parties do not dispute
that Buck funded the Account with $100,000 and that the
funds were used to purchase a United States Treasury Note.
After Buck suffered a stroke in May 1995, he and his
family met on November 4, 1995, to discuss his business
affairs. During this meeting, Buck learned that Jordan had
withdrawn $30,000 from one of the bank accounts he held
jointly with her. Buck asked Jordan to put the money back
into the bank account, but Jordan refused and stated that
she was going to have her father evaluated to determine his
competency.
After this dispute, Buck removed Jordan’s name from
several joint accounts. With regard to the Account at
NationsSecurities, Buck specifically asked his son, Ronald
Buck (Ronald), on two separate occasions to call
1
The Agreement signed by Buck and Jordan further
provided that “[i]n the event of the death of either or any
of the undersigned, the entire interest in the Joint
Account shall be vested in the survivor or survivors on the
same terms and conditions as theretofore held, without in
any manner releasing the undersigned or their estates from
the liability provided for in this Agreement.”
In August 1993, NationsSecurities sent out a new
account agreement in order to update its records. Jordan
concedes that she signed her name and Buck’s name on this
agreement. In completing the Account papers, Jordan
checked two boxes, one for “Rights of survivorship” and one
for “Tenants in common.” Since none of the parties
contends that this second agreement has any effect on the
outcome of this case, we will not consider it in our
decision.
2
NationsSecurities and inquire as to how the Account was set
up. Buck wanted to know whether he had made Jordan the
beneficiary of the Account and, if so, what steps he needed
to take to remove her as the beneficiary. Accordingly,
Ronald called NationsSecurities twice and spoke with Sue
Carmen (Carmen) each time. Ronald testified as follows
regarding the first conversation:
Q. And what did she tell you?
A. She told me that the account was joint tenants in
common and I asked her, I said, “What does that mean?”
She said, “That means that both own equal shares in
the account and if one passes away the Estate of that
individual will receive that half and the other living
party will get half”.
Ronald testified that when he called NationsSecurities
the second time, he initially spoke with a receptionist who
advised him that the Account was “joint survivorship,”
meaning “if one passes away . . . the survivor gets 100
percent of the account.” Kenneth C. Buck was listening to
the conversation on another telephone and related this
information to his father. Buck then directed Ronald to
advise the person on the telephone that he wanted to take
his money out of the Account. When Ronald relayed this
directive to that person, the individual decided to connect
him with someone who would be more familiar with the
Account. Ultimately, Ronald again talked with Carmen. At
3
trial, Ronald recounted his second conversation with
Carmen:
A. I told her what the receptionist said, or
whoever the lady was that answered the phone,
and she was very disturbed. She said, “This
individual has no knowledge on this account
whatsoever.”
Q. This individual, meaning who?
A. The lady that answered the phone that first
talked to me. She said, “I am very familiar
with the account. I have already told you one
time that it was joint tenants in common and
that’s the way it is”. I said, “Well, my father
wanted to know if he could draw the money out”,
and she said, “Yes. He can draw the money out
or Sandra can draw it out, but both names will be
on the check”.
Q. All right. Did she explain again what she meant
by that?
A. She told me again, assured me, to tell my father
that it was 50 percent each or joint ownership
and that joint tenants in common, she said,
is initialled “J.T.C.” on the account.
After this call to NationsSecurities, Buck concluded
that it would be pointless to withdraw the funds since the
check would have Jordan’s name on it and he could not cash
it without her signature. Based on the information from
Carmen that 50 percent of the funds in the Account would go
to Jordan and 50 percent to the Estate, Buck reasoned that
4
it would be better to leave the funds in the Account so
that they would continue to earn interest. 2
Stephanie Adler Calliott, Senior Vice-President at
NationsSecurities, admitted that the information given to
Ronald that the Account was held as a tenancy in common was
incorrect. However, she also testified that, if Buck had
asked NationsSecurities to liquidate the Account in 1995,
the check would have been made payable to the parties
exactly as the Account was titled, that is, to C. H. Buck
and Sandra B. Jordan as joint tenants. She further
explained that NationsSecurities’ policy of issuing a check
exactly as an account is titled is the same whether an
account is set up as belonging to joint tenants with rights
of survivorship or as owned by the parties as tenants in
common.
On December 23, 1995, Buck died. He was survived by
five children. A dispute then arose in regard to the
ownership of the funds in the Account. As a result of that
dispute, Jordan commenced this action by filing a bill of
complaint against NationsSecurities and the executor of the
estate of Calvin Hugh Buck (the Estate) seeking a
2
Mallory H. Buck and Kenneth C. Buck confirmed that
their father decided to leave the funds in the Account
since it was his understanding that the Estate would
receive half of the funds when he died.
5
declaratory judgment that she, not the Estate, was the sole
owner of the Account. 3 In response, NationsSecurities
sought to interplead the funds in the Account and be
dismissed from the suit. The Estate filed a cross-bill
against NationsSecurities and alleged breach of contract
and constructive fraud.
At a bench trial on July 22, 1997, the circuit court
granted NationsSecurities’ motion for summary judgment on
the Estate’s breach of contract claim. The court also
granted partial summary judgment to Jordan and ruled that
the Estate had the burden of going forward with the
evidence to establish that Buck had not intended for Jordan
to receive all the funds in the Account upon his death.
The court specifically found that the language in the
Agreement signed by Buck and Jordan to open the Account was
“clear, unambiguous, and unequivocal and sufficient to
rebut the presumption that the account was opened solely as
convenience to Mr. Buck.”
At the conclusion of the Estate’s evidence, the court
granted Jordan’s motion to strike and ruled that she was
entitled to the funds in the Account. However, the court
denied NationsSecurities’ motion to strike the Estate’s
3
As an alternative remedy, Jordan asked for
reformation of the Account to the extent necessary to
6
evidence on the constructive fraud claim. After hearing
NationsSecurities’ evidence, the court determined that the
Estate’s constructive fraud claim should be dismissed on
the basis that the misrepresentation by NationsSecurities
that any check issued to close the Account would be payable
to Buck and Jordan was a misrepresentation of law and not
one of fact, and that the Estate had not proven its
damages. The court entered its final order on August 7,
1997. The Estate appeals.
II.
We first address the assignment of error that pertains
to the action commenced by Jordan to determine the
ownership of the funds in the Account. The Estate assigns
error to the circuit court’s ruling, after granting partial
summary judgment to Jordan, that the Estate had the burden
of going forward with the evidence to show that it was not
Buck’s intent, at the time that the Account was opened, for
title to the Account to pass to Jordan upon his death.
With regard to this issue, the Estate argues that
evidence of Buck’s intent at or near the time of his death
is more compelling than evidence of his intent when the
Account was first opened and should be used to determine
whether he intended for title to the Account to pass to
_________________
entitle her to all the funds in the Account.
7
Jordan upon his death. The Estate contends that Buck's
intent with regard to the Account changed after learning
that Jordan had withdrawn funds from another joint account.
Buck manifested his new intent by revoking a power of
attorney previously given to Jordan and removing her name
from other joint accounts. Thus, the Estate asserts that
Buck’s intent just prior to the time of his death rather
than the language of the Agreement should be dispositive.
We begin our analysis of this issue by noting that the
investment account at NationsSecurities is not an “account”
as defined in Code § 6.1-125.1(1). 4 See Bennet v. First &
Merchants Nat’l Bank, 233 Va. 355, 360, 355 S.E.2d 888, 891
(1987) (holding Treasury Bill was not an “account” within
meaning of Title 6.1, Chapter 2.1). Thus, Code § 6.1-
125.5(A), which provides, in pertinent part, that any sum
remaining on deposit at the death of a party to a joint
account belongs to the surviving party, does not apply to
this case.
However, we are not without statutory guidance in
resolving this issue. Although Code § 55-20 abolished the
common law right of survivorship between joint tenants,
4
Code § 6.1-125.1(1) defines “account” as "a contract
of deposit of funds between a depositor and a financial
institution, and includes a checking account, savings
8
Bennet, 233 Va. at 360, 355 S.E.2d at 891, Code § 55-21
creates an exception “when it manifestly appears from the
tenor of the instrument that it was intended the part of
the one dying should then belong to the others.” We have
previously held that this section applies to bank accounts,
Colley v. Cox, 209 Va. 811, 814, 167 S.E.2d 317, 319
(1969); Wilkinson v. Witherspoon, 206 Va. 297, 304, 142
S.E.2d 478, 483 (1965); Johnson v. McCarty, 202 Va. 49, 56,
115 S.E.2d 915, 920 (1960), and we hold that it equally
applies to the Account at issue in this case. Thus,
pursuant to Code § 55-21, we must examine the “tenor of the
instrument” that Buck and Jordan signed.
In selecting the type of account to be opened at
NationsSecurities, Buck and Jordan checked the box for
“Joint Tenants with Rights of Survivorship.” This section
of the Agreement further states that “[i]n the event of the
death of either or any of the undersigned, the entire
interest in the Joint Account shall be vested in the
survivor or survivors . . . .” This language is
unambiguous and manifestly signifies the intent that the
entire interest in the Account would vest in the surviving
tenant upon the death of the other joint tenant. The
_________________
account, certificate of deposit, share account, and other
like arrangement.”
9
Agreement thus satisfies Code § 55-21 and reflects Buck’s
intent that Jordan would acquire ownership of all the funds
in the Account upon his death.
In reaching this conclusion, we are not unmindful of
the presumption “that a deposit by a person in the name of
himself and another, not his wife, was made for the
convenience of the depositor, and the presumption is
strengthened by the illness or disability of the
depositor.” Thurston v. Maggard, 220 Va. 815, 818, 263
S.E.2d 64, 66 (1980). 5 However, we have addressed language
in other account agreements or signature cards similar to
that at issue in this case and concluded that, in light of
such language, this presumption “pales” or is overcome.
Wilkinson, 206 Va. at 305, 142 S.E.2d at 483; accord
Thurston, 220 Va. at 818, 263 S.E.2d at 66; Robbins v.
Grimes, 211 Va. 97, 100, 175 S.E.2d 246, 248 (1970);
Campbell v. Campbell, 211 Va. 31, 33, 175 S.E.2d 243, 245
(1970). In contrast, we held in Colley, 209 Va. at 817,
167 S.E.2d at 321, that no survivorship account was created
because the depositor gave no instructions to the bank when
an account was opened and the signature card did not
5
In regard to contracts of deposit between a depositor
and a financial institution, Code § 6.1-125.5 abolished
this presumption, effective July 1, 1980. Thurston, 220
Va. at 818 n. *, 263 S.E.2d at 66 n. *.
10
contain any contractual language indicative of the intent
to create a survivorship account.
The Estate, nevertheless, argues that our decisions in
Wilkinson and Thurston are not applicable to this case
because the signature cards in those cases not only
included language vesting title to the accounts in the
surviving joint tenants but also contained an agreement
between the joint tenants that any funds deposited in the
accounts during their joint lives would be joint property.
Although the Agreement in this case does not contain this
additional language, we, nevertheless, conclude that the
Agreement manifests a clear intention on the part of Buck
that the Account would belong to Jordan upon his death.
As we have previously stated, “the rights of the
parties are to be determined . . . by rules pertaining to
the interpretation of contracts.” Wilkinson, 206 Va. at
304, 142 S.E.2d at 483. The Agreement is a contract
between Buck, Jordan, and NationsSecurities, and the rules
for interpreting contracts require that we give effect to
the intention of the parties. Id. “Where the terms of the
deposit show a clear intention that title shall vest in the
survivor, the intention is upheld.” Thurston, 220 Va. at
818, 263 S.E.2d at 66.
11
Thus, we conclude that the circuit court did not err
when it required the Estate to go forward with the evidence
to show a contrary intent at the time the Account was
opened. After finding that the signature card in Thurston
rebutted the presumption that the account was opened as a
convenience to the decedent, we specifically stated that
the burden of going forward with the evidence fell upon
those opposing the claim of the surviving joint tenant.
Id. at 819, 263 S.E.2d at 67. We then noted that no
attempt was made to establish that the decedent was
mentally incompetent when he executed the signature card or
that he signed by mistake or as a result of undue
influence. Id. Likewise in the present case, the Estate
did not present evidence of fraud, undue influence, or
mental incompetence at the time Buck signed the Agreement.
Absent such proof, the ownership of the Account as
evidenced by the Agreement prevails. Since the Agreement
is a contract between three entities, it cannot be altered
solely because one party’s intent changes. Therefore,
evidence that Buck’s intent changed subsequent to opening
the Account is not pertinent to determining whether Jordan
acquired title to the Account upon Buck’s death.
We next address the Estate’s assignment of error with
regard to the circuit court’s granting NationsSecurities’
12
motion for summary judgment on the breach of contract
claim. The Estate claims that NationsSecurities breached
its contract with Buck by refusing to close the Account and
issue a check for the proceeds solely in Buck’s name. We
do not agree.
One of the essential elements of a cause of action for
breach of contract is that a legal obligation exists from
one party to another. Caudill v. Wise Rambler, 210 Va. 11,
13, 168 S.E.2d 257, 259 (1969). The Agreement authorizes
but does not obligate NationsSecurities to make payments of
the monies in the Account, even if such payments are to
only one of the joint tenants. Thus, NationsSecurities had
no legal obligation to issue a check solely in Buck’s name,
and the trial court, therefore, did not err in granting
summary judgment for NationsSecurities on this issue.
In paragraph 16 of the Agreement, Buck and Jordan
agreed, in consideration of NationsSecurities’ carrying the
joint account, that each of them could individually take
actions with respect to the Account without notice to the
other joint tenant and authorized NationsSecurities to
follow the instructions of either one of them. Paragraph
16 allows NationsSecurities to deal fully and completely
with either joint tenant as though either one of them was
solely interested in the Account. Thus, as Calliott
13
explained, NationsSecurities would accept instructions from
either joint tenant to sell a security and provide
proceeds, but it would issue a check made out exactly as
the account is titled, which in this case was C.H. Buck and
Sandra B. Jordan as joint tenants. Nothing in the
Agreement requires NationsSecurities to do otherwise.
Turning now to the constructive fraud claim, we first
consider the Estate’s assignment of error that the trial
court erred by ruling that NationsSecurities’
“misrepresentations as to the type of account in which
Calvin Buck’s money was invested were only
misrepresentations of law, not misrepresentations of fact.”
The Estate argues that the statements by NationsSecurities
that the Account was registered as being held by tenants in
common when actually it was owned by two joint tenants with
rights of survivorship was a misrepresentation of fact.
In response, NationsSecurities contends that the
misrepresentation contained in the Estate’s assignment of
error was neither relied upon by it before the circuit
court nor decided by that court. NationsSecurities also
contends that the Estate did not object to the court’s
failure to rule on the issue whether the statement that the
Account was held as tenants in common was a
misrepresentation of law or fact. Thus, NationsSecurities
14
asserts that the Estate has procedurally defaulted this
assignment of error. We agree.
The Estate never advised the circuit court that the
misrepresentation upon which it was relying to assert a
claim for constructive fraud was the statement that the
Account was registered as tenants in common. 6 Instead, the
Estate argued to the circuit court that the
misrepresentation of fact was that Jordan was an owner of
the Account and that the Estate and Jordan would each
receive 50 percent of the Account upon Buck’s death. 7
Moreover, when the circuit court specifically identified
the misrepresentation upon which it was ruling, the Estate
6
The Estate also did not plead this misrepresentation.
In its cross-bill, it alleged that NationsSecurities
committed constructive fraud based on its false
representations that Buck could not withdraw the funds in
the Account unless Jordan’s name appeared on the check. In
Henderson v. Henderson, 255 Va. 122, 126, 495 S.E.2d 496,
499 (1998), we stated that “[f]raud, whether actual or
constructive, is never presumed and must be strictly proved
as alleged.” Accord Mortarino v. Consultant Eng’g Serv.,
251 Va. 289, 295, 467 S.E.2d 778, 782 (1996).
7
The following excerpt is an example of the Estate’s
argument before the circuit court:
[T]he representation is as an existing fact and that
existing fact is whether or not Sandra Jordan was an
owner of this account . . . . And there was a clear
representation that was not only made once, but it was
reiterated, that she was the owner and that the Estate
would have 50 percent of it . . . .
15
did not object. 8 And the Estate never objected to the
court’s failure to decide whether the misrepresentation
regarding how the Account was held was one of law or fact.
Rule 5:25 provides, in part, that “[e]rror will not be
sustained to any ruling of the trial court . . . unless the
objection was stated with reasonable certainty at the time
of the ruling . . . .” This Court has held that “[t]he
purpose of requiring timely specific objections is to
afford a trial court the opportunity to rule intelligently
on the issues presented, thereby avoiding unnecessary
appeals and reversals.” Chawla v. BurgerBusters, Inc., 255
Va. 616, 622, 499 S.E.2d 829, 832 (1998) (citing Wright v.
Norfolk & Western Ry. Co., 245 Va. 160, 167-68, 427 S.E.2d
724, 728 (1993)). We have repeatedly refused to consider
issues or objections raised for the first time on appeal.
See, e.g., Cardinal Dev. Co. v. Stanley Constr. Co., Inc.,
255 Va. 300, 305, 497 S.E.2d 847, 850 (1998); Fairfax Hosp.
v. Curtis, 254 Va. 427, 447-48, 492 S.E.2d 642, 648 (1997);
Angstadt v. Atlantic Mut. Ins. Co., 254 Va. 286, 291, 492
S.E.2d 118, 121 (1997); Clarendon House, Inc. v. Helfert,
8
In announcing its decision, the circuit court
specifically identified the misrepresentation upon which it
was ruling by stating, “The misrepresentation is that
someone at [NationsSecurities] informed the decedent that
he could not withdraw the account unless [Jordan’s] name
appeared on the check.”
16
213 Va. 28, 29, 189 S.E.2d 331, 331 (1972). Thus, we
conclude that the Estate waived the assignment of error as
presented and failed to assign error to the trial court’s
actual finding that the statement that Buck could not
withdraw the funds in the Account without Jordan’s name
appearing on the check was a misrepresentation of law.
Therefore, we conclude that the circuit court did not err
in granting judgment for NationsSecurities on the
constructive fraud claim. 9
For these reasons, we will affirm the judgment of the
circuit court.
Affirmed.
9
We need not address the remaining assignment of error
regarding the circuit court’s finding that the Estate did
not suffer any damages.
17