Common use of Joint With No Right of Survivorship Clause in Contracts

Joint With No Right of Survivorship. If your Account is a joint account with no right of survivorship (Joint as Tenants in Common), upon the death of one of the joint Account Holders, that person's proportionate ownership interest will pass to the estate of the deceased Account Holder. Xxxxxx Trust Account. A Xxxxxx Trust Account is an informal trust account, reflected on our records, but without a written trust agreement, where the Account is owned by the trustee. The beneficiaries have no right to any funds in the Account during the trustee's lifetime. As the owner of the Account, the trustee may withdraw money from the Account and may, by written direction to us, change the beneficiary under the Account. When the trustee dies, the Account is owned by the named beneficiary or beneficiaries. If the Xxxxxx Trust Account is held by more than one trustee, the trustees will be subject to the rules pertaining to joint account ownership in this Agreement. If there is no surviving beneficiary upon the death of the last trustee, state law will determine ownership of the funds in the Account. Payable on Death (P.O.D.). A Payable on Death designation is for an account that is payable to the Account Holder during his or her lifetime. P.O.D. designations are not allowed on Business Accounts. Power of Attorney (P.O.A.). Bank may, but is not required to, honor your orders and instructions to give another person authority to make transactions on your Account by giving power of attorney to another individual. The account owner and person executing power of attorney over a deposit account is known as the "Principal." The person granted Power of Attorney for the Principal is known as the "Agent." Bank may refuse to accept a power of attorney for reasonable cause, and Bank may require the Agent to sign an affidavit stating that the power of attorney presented to Bank is a true copy and that, to the best of the Agent's knowledge, the Principal continues to be alive and competent and that the relevant powers of the Agent have not been amended or terminated. The Principal is responsible to provide Bank with any information if an affidavit presented to Bank is untrue or misleading or if the Agent exceeds the authority granted by the Principal in the power of attorney. The Agent is required to notify Bank in writing if the Principal dies or is declared incompetent. The power of attorney will continue in force until (i) Bank receives written revocation from the Principal; (ii) Bank receives written notification of the Principal's death, or (iii) Bank receives written notification of the death or incapacity of the Agent. The Bank is not required to monitor any actions taken by your Agent.

Appears in 4 contracts

Samples: Deposit Account Agreement, Time Deposit Agreement, Time Deposit Agreement

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Joint With No Right of Survivorship. If your Account is a joint account with no right of survivorship (Joint as Tenants in Common), upon the death of one of the joint Account Holders, that person's proportionate ownership interest will pass to the estate of the deceased Account Holder. Xxxxxx Trust Account. A Xxxxxx Trust Account is an informal trust account, reflected on our records, but without a written trust agreement, where the Account is owned by the trustee. The beneficiaries have no right to any funds in the Account during the trustee's lifetime. As the owner of the Account, the trustee may withdraw money from the Account and may, by written direction to us, change the beneficiary under the Account. When the trustee dies, the Account is owned by the named beneficiary or beneficiaries. If the Xxxxxx Trust Account is held by more than one trustee, the trustees will be subject to the rules pertaining to joint account ownership in this Agreement. If there is no surviving beneficiary upon the death of the last trustee, state law will determine ownership of the funds in the Account. Payable on Death (P.O.D.). A Payable on Death designation is for an account that is payable to the Account Holder during his or her lifetime. P.O.D. designations are not allowed on Business Accounts. Power of Attorney (P.O.A.). Bank may, but is not required to, honor your orders and instructions to give another person authority to make transactions on your Account by giving power of attorney to another individual. The account owner and person executing power of attorney over o ver a deposit account is known as the "Principal." The person granted Power of Attorney for the Principal is known as the "Agent." Bank may refuse to accept a power of attorney for reasonable cause, and Bank may require the Agent to sign an affidavit stating that the power of attorney presented to Bank is a true copy and that, to the best of the Agent's knowledge, the Principal continues to be alive and competent and that the relevant powers of the Agent Agen t have not been amended or terminated. The Principal is responsible to provide Bank with any information if an affidavit presented to Bank is untrue or misleading or if the Agent exceeds the authority granted by the Principal in the power of attorney. The Agent is required to notify Bank in writing if the Principal dies or is declared incompetent. The power of attorney will continue in force until (i) Bank receives written revocation from the Principal; (ii) Bank receives written notification of the Principal's death, or (iii) Bank receives written notification of the death or incapacity of the Agent. The Bank is not required to monitor any actions taken by your Agent.

Appears in 3 contracts

Samples: Deposit Account Agreement, Deposit Account Agreement, Deposit Account Agreement

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