PUBLISHED
OPINION
COURT OF
APPEALS
DECISION
DATED AND FILED
June 14,
2000
Cornelia G. Clark
Clerk, Court of Appeals
of
Wisconsin
NOTICE
This opinion is subject to further editing. If
published, the official version will
appear in the bound volume of the Official
Reports.
A party may file
with
the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the
Court of Appeals.
See
Wis. Stat.
§808.10
and Rule 809.62.
No. 99-1211
STATE OF
WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS
DISTRICT
II
In the Matter of
the
Estate of
Ronald E. Jung,
Deceased:
(L.C.
#97-PR-223)
____________________________________
Teresa Reichel,
Timothy
A. Jung,
Thomas L. Jung,
Tamara
Hall and
Todd Jung,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Dianne Jung,
Defendant-Respondent.
APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Racine County:
GERALD P.
PTACEK, Judge. Affirmed.
Before Brown, P.J., Nettesheim and Snyder, JJ.
¶1. SNYDER, J. The children of Ronald E. Jung (Jung
children) appeal from
an order of the circuit court dismissing their claim seeking the
proceeds of an annuity (the
Annuity) owned by Ronald prior to his death. The Jung children
argue that the Annuity
transferred to Ronald's estate pursuant to Ronald and his wife
Dianne's "Marital
Property Classification Agreement."1 Dianne counters that the terms of
the Annuity
should dispose of the policy because it expressly directed
ownership to pass to her as
"co-annuitant."
¶2. We agree with Dianne that the terms of the Annuity
control this dispute. In
reaching this conclusion, we follow Wisconsin law concerning
nonprobate transfers at death
and joint accounts with the right of survivorship. Under Wis.
Stat. § 705.20
(1995-96),2 the Annuity passed
to
Dianne as a nonprobate transfer of property, thereby defeating
the marital agreement's
classification of the Annuity as individual property and the
will's bequest of individual
property to the Jung children. In addition, under Wis. Stat.
§ 705.04, the Annuity
constituted a joint account which transferred to Dianne as
Ronald's survivor. We therefore
conclude that the trial court's decision should be affirmed.
BACKGROUND
¶3. The pertinent facts have been stipulated. On April
14, 1997, Ronald and
Dianne entered into a marital agreement for purposes of
identifying and classifying the
couple's individual and marital property. The agreement
provided:
1. Purposes. The purposes of
this
Agreement are to classify and reclassify all properties, both
real and personal, (including
joint tenancy properties and properties held as
tenants-in-common) now owned and/or
hereafter acquired by either or both parties, as INDIVIDUAL
PROPERTY or MARITAL
PROPERTIES, as the case may be, pursuant to Sections 766.31(10)
and 766.58 of the
Wisconsin Statutes in order to avoid any confusion and
uncertainty as to each party's
ownership interests. This Agreement shall be construed in
accordance with Chapter 766 of
the Wisconsin Statutes.
....
3. Property Classified as Dianne's Individual
Property. Both
parties agree that the property described on Exhibit A attached
hereto and incorporated
herein by reference as though set forth in its entirety, together
with all income and
appreciation attributable to that property, shall be classified
and reclassified as Dianne's
INDIVIDUAL PROPERTY. In addition, all property acquired in
exchange for any such
INDIVIDUAL PROPERTY and/or acquired from the proceeds of the sale
of such
INDIVIDUAL PROPERTY, shall also be classified and reclassified as
Dianne's
INDIVIDUAL PROPERTY.
4. Property Classified as Ron's Individual
Property. Both
parties agree that the property described on Exhibit B attached
hereto and incorporated herein
by reference as though set forth in its entirety, together with
all income and appreciation
attributable to that property, shall be classified and
reclassified as Ron's INDIVIDUAL
PROPERTY. In addition, all property acquired in exchange for any
such INDIVIDUAL
PROPERTY and/or acquired from the proceeds of the sale of such
INDIVIDUAL
PROPERTY, shall also be classified and reclassified as Ron's
INDIVIDUAL
PROPERTY.
5. Classification of All Other Property. The
parties herewith
classify and reclassify all other properties of the parties,
together with all income and
appreciation, with the exception of those properties classified
as the INDIVIDUAL
PROPERTY of a party in accordance with the above paragraphs 3 and
4, as MARITAL
PROPERTIES of the parties.
¶4. Ronald and Dianne also agreed to
waive any
claim they may have to the other's individual property:
6. Property Rights of the
Survivor. Each
of the parties hereby waives, bars and absolutely relinquishes
any and all rights which he or
she may have under the law (regardless of the jurisdiction) with
respect to the INDIVIDUAL
PROPERTY of the other party upon the death of the other party.
Without limiting the
generality of the foregoing, this waiver shall include any and
all elective rights under Chapter
861 of the Wisconsin Statutes or any other similar statute in any
other jurisdiction where the
parties may reside, it being the intention of the parties to
absolutely bar any right of either
party in the INDIVIDUAL PROPERTY of the other party. This
paragraph is intended to
apply to all rights and property interests acquired as a result
of the parties' marriage,
including but not limited to rights of intestate succession,
dower and curtesy, rights to elect
against the will, election of deferred marital property, election
of augmented marital property
estate treatment, and election against the augmented estate;
provided, however, that this
paragraph shall not divest the surviving party of his or her
one-half (1/2) interest in all
MARITAL PROPERTY, acquired in accordance with paragraph 5 of this
Agreement.
Each party shall join in the execution and filing of
any instrument or
conveyance and take any other action necessary to relinquish or
otherwise avoid the effects
of the laws of any jurisdiction conferring any right or interest
relinquished above, if the other
party's legal representative or successor in interest so
requests.
However, nothing in this Agreement shall restrict the
right of either party to
voluntarily provide for the other party in accordance with his or
her overall estate
plan.
¶5. The agreement further allowed for
transfer of
record title upon request consistent with Ronald and Dianne's
property classification:
7. Change of Record Title. In
the event
record title to property classified as a party's INDIVIDUAL
PROPERTY is titled in the
name of the other party or in both parties' names, each party
agrees upon request to transfer
record title to the party in whose name the asset has been
classified as his or her
INDIVIDUAL PROPERTY.
¶6. Exhibit B of the marital agreement
enumerates items of property identified as Ronald's individual
property. Included among
these items is Prudential Annuity No. 98-623-456 (the Annuity)
with an estimated fair market
value of $182,813.
¶7. The Annuity lists Ronald as the first annuitant,
Dianne as co-annuitant and
the Jung children as primary beneficiaries.3 Under a provision entitled
"Ownership and
Control," the Annuity reads:
Unless we endorse this contract to say
otherwise: (1) the
owner of the contract is the Annuitant (the First Annuitant, if
two are named); (2) while any
annuitant is living the owner alone is entitled to (a) any
contract benefit and value, and (b)
the exercise of any right and privilege granted by the contract
or by [Prudential]; and
(3) if two annuitants are named and the First Annuitant dies
while the Co-Annuitant is
living, the Co-Annuitant will become the Owner. (Emphasis
added.)
¶8. On the same date of the marital
agreement's
execution, Ronald executed his will. The will provides in
relevant part:
SECOND. I give, devise and
bequeath all
my household furniture and furnishings, jewelry, wearing apparel,
automobiles and all other
articles of household or personal use or ornament of which I may
die possessed, to my wife,
Dianne M. Jung, if living, or if she shall not be living, then
equally to my children
then-living in such properties as my personal representative in
my personal representative's
sole discretion shall determine.
THIRD. I hereby ratify and confirm that my
wife, Dianne M.
Jung, owns all of the individual property classified by us
pursuant to a Marital Property
Classification Agreement, bearing even date.... To the extent at
the time of my death we
own any marital property, I hereby declare that my wife, Dianne
M. Jung, owns a one-half
(1/2) interest in all marital property and I intend that this
Will dispose only of my interest in
such marital property.
FOURTH. I give, devise and bequeath the
entire rest, residue
and remainder of my estate equally to my children and to the
then-living descendants, by
right of representation, of any deceased child of mine. At the
present time I have five (5)
children whose names are as follows: Timothy A. Jung, Teresa J.
Reichel, Thomas L. Jung,
Tamara A. Hall and Todd M. Jung.
Thus, the will conveyed Ronald's interest in
his
personal effects to Dianne and bequeathed all other property,
including his individual
property, to the Jung children.
¶9. On April 29, 1997, Ronald died. He was survived by
Dianne and the Jung
children. Following his death, the representative of Ronald's
estate, Teresa Reichel,
demanded that Dianne relinquish her ownership interest held in
the Annuity.4
¶10. On August 14, 1998, the Jung children brought this
action against Dianne,
requesting the court to transfer her interest in the Annuity to
Ronald's estate.5 The Jung children then sought a
motion for
summary judgment seeking the proceeds of the Annuity. After the
parties submitted briefs
supporting their respective positions, the circuit court ruled in
Dianne's favor. The court
was persuaded by language contained in the Annuity indicating
that if the first annuitant died,
the co-annuitant would become owner. The Jung children
appeal.
DISCUSSION
¶11. Motions for summary judgment are reviewed using the
same methodology
used by the trial court. See M & I First Nat'l Bank v.
Episcopal Homes
Management, Inc., 195 Wis.2d 485, 496, 536 N.W.2d 175
(Ct. App. 1995).
We will not repeat this well-known methodology here except to
observe that summary
judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine issue of
material fact and the moving party
is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See id.
at 496-97.
¶12. The issue in this case is what document controls the
disposition of the
Annuity-the Annuity itself or Ronald and Dianne's marital
agreement. The Jung children
argue that the marital agreement is dispositive based on the
breadth of its terms. They
contend that by retaining ownership of the Annuity, Dianne has
violated paragraphs six and
seven of the agreement because: (1) she has failed to relinquish
her rights in Ronald's
individual property; (2) she never executed an instrument or
conveyance with respect to
Ronald's individual property; (3) she did not take any action to
avoid the effects of
relinquishing her right to Ronald's property; and (4) she did not
transfer record title of
Ronald's individual property to his estate. Because the Annuity
is listed under Exhibit B of
the marital agreement as Ronald's individual property, the Jung
children maintain that
Dianne's claim of ownership is defeated.
¶13. Dianne counters that the terms of the Annuity govern
because they provide
that upon the first annuitant's death, "the Co-Annuitant
will become owner."
Therefore, once Ronald died, Dianne became the owner. Dianne
also points out that the
marital agreement permits her retention of the Annuity because it
states that "nothing in
this Agreement shall restrict the right of either party to
voluntarily provide for the other
party in accordance with his or her overall estate
plan."
¶14. Standing alone, the Annuity no doubt prescribes
transfer of ownership to
Dianne as the co-annuitant upon the death of Ronald, the
annuitant. The Annuity's language
is clear in this regard and the Jung children do not dispute its
terms nor do they seek
reformation of the contract. On the other hand, the marital
agreement affirmatively sets
forth that Ronald's and Dianne's individual property shall belong
to each of them separately
and that each "absolutely relinquishes any and all rights
which he or she may have
under the law ... with respect to the INDIVIDUAL PROPERTY of the
other party upon the
death of the other party." Included among Ronald's
individual property is the Annuity.
The marital agreement's language, however, is tempered by a
further provision stating that
the marital agreement shall not restrict either party from
"voluntarily provid[ing] for
the other party in accordance with his or her overall estate
plan." The agreement does
not further explain what an "overall estate plan"
entails.
¶15. The parties would have us determine which document
controls by looking
solely at the terms of each. Such an exercise, however, reveals
conflicting directions from
each document. To resolve this conflict, we consider two
Wisconsin Statutes which address
the transfer of property upon the property owner's death.
¶16. The first statute is Wis. Stat. § 705.20,
entitled "Nonprobate
transfers on death." The statute reads:
(1) A provision for a nonprobate
transfer on death
in an insurance policy, contract of employment, bond, mortgage,
promissory note,
certificated or uncertificated security, account agreement,
custodial agreement, deposit
agreement, compensation plan, pension plan, individual retirement
plan, employe benefit
plan, trust, conveyance, deed of gift, marital property
agreement, or other written
instrument of a similar nature is nontestamentary. This
subsection governs a written
provision that:
....
(c) Any property controlled by or owned by the
decedent before death which is
the subject of the instrument passes to a person whom the
decedent designates either in the
instrument or in a separate writing, including a will executed
either before or at the same
time as the instrument, or later.
Id. (emphasis added).
¶17. Although an annuity is not enumerated within Wis.
Stat. §705.20(1),
we nonetheless believe it falls under the language "other
written instrument of a similar
nature" because it has similar characteristics to the other
items listed. While often
issued by insurance companies, an annuity is more accurately
classified as an investment, not
an insurance policy. See Prudential Ins. Co. v.
Howell, 148 A.2d 145,
148 (N.J. 1959). Like a pension plan, an annuity confers a right
to receive payments over a
period of time. See Grochowski v. Larson, 196 Wis.2d
231, 235, 538
N.W.2d 802 (Ct. App. 1995). Like many securities, an annuity
contract is conceived by
submitting an application and a single payment of the policy's
principal. See 19
George J. Couch, Cyclopedia of Insurance Law § 81:2 (2d ed.
1983). As is true with
many investment tools, co-owners (or co-annuitants) and
beneficiaries may be established.
We conclude that an annuity qualifies as a "written
instrument of a similar
nature."
¶18. Under Wis. Stat. § 705.20(1)(c), a nonprobate
transfer applies to any
property owned by the decedent prior to death which is "the
subject of the
instrument" and which "passes to a person whom the
decedent designates ... in
the instrument." The instrument here, the Annuity, contains
such a provision. It states
that "if two annuitants are named and the First Annuitant
dies while the Co-Annuitant
is living, the Co-Annuitant will become the Owner." Ronald
designated Dianne as a
co-annuitant with a right to ownership upon his death.
Consistent with § 705.20(1)(c),
the Annuity's language calls for transfer of ownership upon
Ronald's death to Dianne and
therefore avoids any contrary testamentary designation.
¶19. We pause to observe that Wis. Stat. § 705.20(1)
does specifically
mention a "marital property agreement" and would
apparently lend support to the
Jung children's claim. In Ronald and Dianne's case, however,
their marital agreement does
not purport to transfer property upon the death of the other.
Rather, the agreement seeks to
classify their property and, in Ronald's case, works in
conjunction with his will which he
executed on the same day as the agreement. Ronald's will is what
calls for the conveyance
of his individual property to the Jung children as beneficiaries
of the remainder of his estate.
The will therefore provides the means by which the Jung children
seek the proceeds of the
Annuity. However, conveyance of the Annuity through Ronald's
will is precisely what a
§705.20(1) nonprobate transfer seeks to avoid. Section
705.20(1) precludes the
transfer of property according to a testamentary arrangement
where a contractual agreement
provides otherwise.
¶20. Wisconsin Stat. § 705.20(1) is identical to the
language presented by
§ 101 of the Uniform Nonprobate Transfers on Death Act of
the Uniform Laws
Annotated (U.L.A.). The U.L.A. comments following § 101
describe the purpose and
scope of the above provision:
This section is a revised version of
former Section 6-201
of the original Uniform Probate Code, which authorized a variety
of contractual
arrangements that had sometimes been treated as testamentary in
prior law. For example,
most courts treated as testamentary a provision in a promissory
note that if the payee died
before making payment, the note should be paid to another named
person; or a provision in a
land contract that if the seller died before completing payment,
the balance should be
canceled and the property should belong to the vendee. These
provisions often occurred in
family arrangements. The result of holding such provisions
testamentary was usually to
invalidate them because not executed in accordance with the
statute of wills. On the other
hand, the same courts for years upheld beneficiary designations
in life insurance contracts.
The drafters of the original Uniform Probate Code declared in the
Comment that they were
unable to identify policy reasons for continuing to treat these
varied arrangements as
testamentary. The drafters said that the benign experience with
such familiar will substitutes
as the revocable inter vivos trust, the multiple-party bank
account, and United States
government bonds payable on death to named beneficiaries all
demonstrated that the evils
envisioned if the statute of wills were not rigidly enforced
simply do not materialize. The
Comment also observed that because these provisions often are
part of a business transaction
and are evidenced by a writing, the danger of fraud is largely
eliminated.
Because the modes of transfer authorized by an
instrument under this section
are declared to be nontestamentary, the instrument does not have
to be executed in
compliance with the formalities for wills; nor does the
instrument have to be probated, nor
does the personal representative have any power or duty with
respect to the assets.
The sole purpose of this section is to prevent the
transfers authorized here from
being treated as testamentary.
Unif. Nonprobate Transfers on Death Act
§ 101
cmt., 8B U.L.A. 200 (1993).
¶21. In short, these comments explain how certain
contractual arrangements
have been treated as testamentary regardless of contractual
language addressing the transfer
of rights and ownership upon the death of the contract creditor.
The purpose of Unif.
Nonprobate Transfers on Death Act §101 is to take such
contractual arrangements out
of the realm of probate and to permit the terms of the contract
to be upheld. We believe the
same holds true in this case.
¶22. Although disputes between annuity contracts and
marital property
agreements are uncommon, our reliance on the language in Wis.
Stat. § 705.20 is not
unprecedented. In Orr v. Peterson, 34 Cal. Rptr. 2d
449, 457 (Cal. Ct.
App. 1994), the California court of appeals addressed a similar
dispute arising from the death
of an annuity holder. In that case, the decedent was survived by
his wife Loretta and by a
child from a previous marriage. The decedent's will made no
bequest to Loretta and instead
bequeathed all of his property (his personal effects and the
"residue" of his
estate) to his child and her family. See id. at 452.
The will did not
mention two annuity contracts which the decedent and Loretta had
purchased. The contracts
themselves identified the decedent as "annuitant" and
"owner" and
Loretta as "joint owner." The contracts also stated,
"If there is more than
one owner, at the death of the first owner payment will be made
to the surviving owner. If
the deceased owner's spouse is the surviving owner, then the
surviving spouse will become
the owner." Id. at 454. The court concluded
that this language was
sufficient to establish a nonprobate transfer of funds to the
decedent's spouse.
¶23. In reaching its conclusion, the Orr court
relied upon a
statute identical to Wis. Stat. § 705.20 and to Unif.
Nonprobate Transfers on Death
Act §101. California Prob. Code § 5000 (West 2000)
recognizes the validity of
nonprobate transfers upon death provided "in an insurance
policy, contract of
employment, bond, mortgage ... or other written instrument of a
similar nature." The
court found this section applicable to "written
provisions" that direct that
"money or other benefits due to, controlled by, or owned by
a decedent before death
shall be paid after the decedent's death to a person whom the
decedent designates" in
the written instrument. Cal. Prob. Code §5000(a)(1);
cf. §
705.20(1)(a). The court concluded that the annuity contracts at
issue "fit the broad
description" of § 5000 and that the written
instructions for payment to the
surviving owner upon the death of the other owner or spouse
should be given effect.
See Orr, 34 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 457. This holding is
consistent with our
decision.
¶24. In addition to its reliance on the nonprobate
transfer statute, the
Orr court reviewed a statute pertaining to joint
accounts with the right of
survivorship.6 The statute,
Cal.
Prob. Code § 5302(a) (West 2000), provides that "[s]ums
remaining on deposit
at the death of a party to a joint account belong to the
surviving party or parties as against
the estate of the decedent unless there is clear and convincing
evidence of a different
intent." The court found that an annuity fit the definition
of a joint account under Cal.
Prob. Code § 5122(a) (West 2000) because an annuity involves
a "deposit of
funds between a depositor and a financial institution." The
court also found the issuer
of the annuity, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., to be a
"financial institution"
because, while not a "bank, savings and loan or credit
union," it was a
"like organization" since it held the deposit in
substantially the same manner and
for the same purpose as funds deposited in traditional banking
institutions. See
Cal. Prob. Code § 40 (West 2000); Orr, 34
Cal. Rptr. 2d at
456. Thus, pursuant to § 5302(a), the annuities in
Orr belonged to
the surviving account holder upon the annuitant's death, and not
to the annuitant's estate.
¶25. California's law on joint accounts has a parallel in
Wisconsin. Wisconsin
Stat. § 705.04(1) provides that joint account funds belong
to the surviving party unless
there is clear and convincing evidence of a different intention
"at the time the account
is created." Wisconsin Stat. § 705.01(1) also
similarly defines
"account" and "financial institution" as
California has.7 In addition, Wisconsin and
California law
shadows the U.L.A.'s language on the rights of survivors under
joint accounts. See
Unif. Multiple-Person Accounts Act §§12, 1, 8B
U.L.A. 178
(1993).
¶26. In this case, while the Annuity is not referred to
as an account within the
terms of the contract, we nonetheless find compelling the
analysis proffered in
Orr. An annuity, like a traditional bank account, is
opened by depositing
funds into a financial organization. Like a savings bank account
and a certificate of deposit,
an annuity can earn interest which is payable to the owner. A
savings account or certificate
of deposit is an investment tool analogous to an annuity. Here,
although the issuer of the
Annuity, Prudential Insurance Co., may not be a traditional bank
or savings institution, it
provides a similar function. Additionally, like a joint bank
account, the Annuity contains a
clause giving the co-annuitant the right of survivorship upon the
annuitant's death.
¶27. Wisconsin Stat. § 705.04(1) is applicable here.
The Annuity
constitutes a "joint account" because the sums of money
in the Annuity
transferred ownership to Dianne upon Ronald's death. It is clear
that no other intention was
evidenced at the time the Annuity was created. See
id. While the Jung
children would argue that the marital agreement and will express
a different intent, as a joint
account such later intentions do not enter the equation. See
id.
Therefore, we conclude that as a joint account, the Annuity
circumvents the conflicting
language presented by the marital agreement and the will.
¶28. Aside from the terms of the marital agreement, the
Jung children seek
refuge in the policy argument that the "efficiency" of
marital property agreements
is threatened if they are not strictly followed. They contend
that if the trial court's decision
stands, a marital agreement that classifies property as one
spouse's individual property and
requires the other spouse to relinquish that property would have
virtually no effect.
¶29. We agree with the Jung children that in some cases a
marital agreement
must yield to the terms of a previously agreed-upon contractual
arrangement. As we have
determined, under Wis. Stat. § 705.20, a contractual
arrangement that creates a
nonprobate transfer of property will defeat a marital agreement
that does not make such a
transfer. Under Wis. Stat. § 705.04(1), a joint account
with the right of survivorship
will defeat a marital agreement that seeks to transfer funds
otherwise. We acknowledge that
this result places the onus on marital partners to be
knowledgeable of the terms of contractual
arrangements which are included within their marital agreements.
This result, however, does
not strike us as particularly troubling because it will encourage
marital parties to become
more aware of the terms of their prior contractual arrangements
and to express more clearly
their intentions in planning their estate.
¶30. In this case, if Ronald had desired ownership of the
Annuity to pass to his
children and not to Dianne, he could have authorized such a
change by removing Dianne as a
co-annuitant. As the Annuity provides, "If a First
Annuitant and a Co-Annuitant are
named, we will remove one from the contract upon: (1) receipt of
your written request to
remove that annuitant ...." We are not convinced that the
purposes of the marital
property agreement are subverted by upholding the terms of the
Annuity.
By the Court.-Order affirmed.
Recommended for publication in the official reports.
1 The Jung children are from Ronald's first marriage; Dianne was
his second wife.
2 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 1995-96
version unless otherwise
noted.
3 The application for Prudential Annuity No. 98-623-456 listed
Ronald as the annuitant,
Dianne as the co-annuitant and primary beneficiary, and the Jung
children as contingent
beneficiaries. Because Dianne could not be both the co-annuitant
and primary beneficiary,
the Annuity was amended to name Dianne as the co-annuitant and
the Jung children as the
primary beneficiaries.
4 Although Dianne was named personal representative of Ronald's
estate, she later resigned
and Teresa became the successor personal representative of the
estate.
5 The Jung children's lawsuit seeking transfer of Dianne's
interest in the Annuity was later
consolidated with the probate action involving Ronald's
estate.
6 The court in Orr v. Peterson, 34 Cal. Rptr. 2d 449,
457 (Cal. Ct. App.
1994), also considered a third statutory provision involving
nonprobate transfers of
community property. Wisconsin has no statutory equivalent to
this section and thus it will
not be discussed.
7 Wisconsin Stat. § 705.01(3) contains slightly different
language than Cal. Prob.
Code § 40 (West 2000). Wisconsin defines "financial
institution" as
"any organization authorized to do business under state or
federal laws relating to
financial institutions, including, without limitation, banks and
trust companies, savings banks,
building and loan associations, savings and loan associations and
credit unions."
Section 705.01(3). California Prob. Code §40 regards a
"financial
institution" as "a state or national bank, state or
federal savings and loan
association or credit union, or like organization."