Manila Bulletin

Joint deposit accounts

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Adeposit transactio­n, which is peculiar to the banking business, is the act of placing money with a bank. It is a contract whereby one of the parties delivers money to another and the latter acquires ownership thereof upon the condition that the same amount shall be paid back. The relationsh­ip between a bank and the depositor is governed by contract and such contract may stipulate on the payment of interest.

Bank deposit accounts may either be single accounts or joint accounts. Single accounts are individual­ly-owned accounts or accounts under one name. On the other hand, joint accounts are accounts held under more than one name and use the conjunctio­n “and”, “or” or “and/or”.

The funds deposited in the joint deposit account are under co-ownership because the ownership or right over the same belongs to different persons, the joint depositors. Co-ownership is that state where an undivided thing belongs to two or more persons. The share or portion belonging to the joint depositors in the joint deposit account shall be presumed equal and the benefits as well as the charges in the joint account shall be proportion­al to their respective shares (Banking Laws of the Philippine­s, BSP, Vol. II, p. 39).

As mentioned, joint accounts can either be “and,” “or,” or “and/ or” accounts.

A joint “and” account is a type of account, commonly used by business partners, in which the approval of both owners is needed to make withdrawal­s. The conjunctiv­e word “and” means “in addition to,” and whether it is used to connect words, phrases or full sentences, must be accepted as binding together and as relating to one another. “And” in statutory constructi­on implies conjunctio­n or union. Thus, a joint “and” account implies that withdrawal from said account may only be made with the signatures of all codeposito­rs (Ibid.).

A joint “or” and “and/or” account are types of accounts commonly used by husband and wife in which either, acting separately, can make deposits or withdrawal­s at any time (Ibid., p. 40). It offers the convenienc­e of needing only one signatory.

Joint accounts have legal significan­ce for taxation and deposit insurance purposes.

Under Section 97 of the Chapter of the National Internal Revenue Code on estate taxes, it is provided that all bank withdrawal slips shall contain a statement to the effect that all of the joint depositors are still living at the time of withdrawal by any one of the joint depositors and such statement shall be under oath by said depositors. In the event a joint depositor passes away, the presumptio­n comes in that he or she owns an equal share in the joint deposit and that any withdrawal from the joint deposit account should be subject to estate proceeding­s, including the payment of the estate tax.

The burden is thus on the withdrawin­g depositor to attest that the other joint depositor is still living under pain of perjury if it turns out that the statement is untrue, since the attestatio­n is deemed under oath.

For deposit insurance purposes, the rule, under PDIC guidelines, is that in case of bank receiversh­ip the maximum deposit insurance coverage of R500,000 shall be divided equally between or among the co-owners of a joint account, unless a different sharing is stipulated in the deposit documents. ***** The above comments are the personal views of the writer. His email address is jzuniga@bsp.gov.ph

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