A 16 year-old minor has a joint savings account with her father. She would like to remove her father from this account and add her mother. Is the father’s permission required? We believe that an adult could make this account change, but we are uncertain about minors.

We recommend obtaining the father’s permission as a joint account owner before removing him from the account.

The Illinois Banking Act states that banks may accept deposits from minors and open accounts in the name of minors, and the bank’s rules and regulations are the same as for accounts held by adults. However, there is conflicting case law in Illinois as to whether joint account owners — whether adults or minors — may unilaterally remove other joint owners from an account without their consent or signatures. At least two Illinois cases have held that a joint account owner cannot remove another owner from the account or terminate the account without the other owner’s consent. However, a more recent case held that a joint owner could unilaterally remove other owners without their consent, because the account agreement permitted the bank to pay account funds to any one of the account owners.

We are not aware of any court decisions that reconcile these apparently conflicting opinions. Because at least two Illinois courts have held that all joint owners must consent to the removal of an owner, we believe the conservative approach would be to require the father’s consent before removing him from the account.

For resources related to our guidance, please see:

  • Illinois Banking Act, 205 ILCS 5/45.1 (“A state bank may accept deposits made by a minor and may open an account in the name of such minor and the rules and regulations of such bank with respect to each such deposit and account shall be as binding upon such minor as if such minor were of full age and legal capacity. The receipt, acquittance or order of payment of such minor on such account or deposit or any part thereof shall be as binding upon such minor as if such minor were of full age and legal capacity.”)
  • In re Estate of Macak, 302 N.E.2d 436, 437–38 (1st Dist. 1973) (“[T]he nature of a joint tenancy agreement is such that it may not be terminated by a unilateral action of one of the parties, even though each has the authority to draw out all of the money.”)
  • Siemianoski v. Union State Bank of S. Chicago, 242 Ill. App. 390, 392, 394–95 (1st Dist. 1926) (“On September 22, 1921, after a quarrel with his wife, Rydzynski went to the bank alone and told Walter J. Prybylinski, an official of the bank, that he wanted to revoke his wife's authority ‘to draw money out’ of the account. . . . In the case at bar Rydzynski did not attempt to sever or terminate his interest in the joint account. He attempted to terminate the joint account altogether. But in our opinion the joint account could not be terminated altogether except by the mutual agreement of Rydzynski and his wife.”)
  • Drenckpohl v. Barker, 625 N.E.2d 651, 656 (5th Dist. 1993) (“The provision on the back of the certificates of deposit was applicable to the joint tenants at the time the joint tenancy was created, and it permits any one of the joint tenants to receive payment on the instruments by surrendering them to State Bank. . . . According to the terms incorporated into the certificates of deposit, Velma Drenckpohl was permitted to invade the corpus of the certificates of deposit to the detriment of the other joint tenants. It is undisputed that she did so, and she deleted Merle and Wendell as joint tenants.”)