Butler v. Butler

114 N.W.2d 595, 253 Iowa 1084, 1962 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 659
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 3, 1962
Docket50434
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 114 N.W.2d 595 (Butler v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. Butler, 114 N.W.2d 595, 253 Iowa 1084, 1962 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 659 (iowa 1962).

Opinion

Peterson, J.

This is an equity action involving two cases consolidated for trial. Plaintiffs pray for the establishment of a trust as to real and personal property, deeded and assigned by Eugene K. Butler and wife, Sarah, to their son Robert S. Butler *1088 on December 2, 1929. The property had a book value of $969,-821.79. They had three sons: Hubert, Robert and Earle. Eugene, Sarah, Hubert and Robert all died prior to the action.

In this case Margaret sued for Hubert’s share as the sole beneficiary under his will, and alleged Hubert’s share was held in trust by Robert. Earle sued, also alleging Robert held his one-third share in trust. Both parties filed claims for their respective demands in Robert’s estate. Appellees claim the transfer was an outright gift to Robert.

The case is not an accounting action between the parties. This question was settled in connection with settlement of law points, and was accepted by all parties during the trial. Only one question of whether or not a trust existed was tried, and will be settled herein. If a trust exists as to one or both plaintiffs, the accounting will be settled later, either by agreement of the parties or by trial in an equity proceeding.

The District Court dismissed both petitions and claims, holding the existence of a trust had not been established by clear, convincing and satisfactory evidence. Both plaintiffs appeal.

I. A general statement of the facts is essential in this case for the purpose of creating the proper background as to the issues involved. We will outline the family history without paying too much attention at this time to the technical objections raised by defendants. We will give them attention, infra, as we consider the legal questions. The story of Eugene K. Butler, one of the settlors in this case, is a typical American Horatio Alger story. The active business life of the three generations involved in this proceeding extends for almost one hundred years.

Eugene K. Butler was born in 1843. His wife, Sarah, was born in 1846. They became residents of Chicago shortly after the Civil War. Mr. Butler worked for many years for McCormick Harvester Company. He was an executive in the company and some years after he commenced his work, by reason of his energy and intelligence, he reached the point where his salary was $50,000 per year. Based partly on receiving such a fine salary and partly by careful investments in Chicago and other property he acquired great wealth.

*1089 By 1900 he had accumulated (including substantial gifts made to his three sons from time to time) a fortune of over two and one-half million dollars. He retired from the Harvester Company in 1900 and thereafter devoted his full time to maintenance and development of his investments. He had one very valuable tract of ground in the Chicago loop on which a lessee, under a ninety-nine-year lease, erected what was known as the Butler Building. He also had a smaller property in Chicago known as the Clark Street property. The annual rental on the ninety-nine-year lease was $30,000. He had made very extensive investments in buildings in Des Moines and some land adjacent to the city. He purchased a farm in Oklahoma and a valuable tract of land near Brownsville, Texas.

There were four sons born to the marriage, but one died in infancy. The eldest son, Hubert W. Butler, was born in 1868. The second son was Robert Spring Butler. He was born in 1882. The youngest son was Edward Earle Butler, one of the plaintiffs in this action. He was born in 1885.

Hubert died in 1943 at the age of seventy-five. His widow, Margaret, was born in 1890. She married Hubert in 1925. It was her first and only marriage. Hubert had been married twice before and had two children, one by each of his former wives. His first wife secured a divorce and his second wife died. Margaret is the other plaintiff in this action.

The Butler family all erected and lived in beautiful and expensive homes. Eugene K. Butler had a very large family home on Greenwood Avenue in Chicago. In 1925 Hubert built a $45,-000 home on one of his real-estate developments at Glencoe, a suburb of Chicago. In 1929 he built a new $75,000 home on his Skokie development near Winnetka, Illinois. In about 1925 Robert built an $80,000 home at 4507 Grand Avenue in Des Moines, and Earle built a home costing approximately $150,000 on or near Fleur Drive in Des Moines.

Hubert graduated from the Yale Law School in 1888, but he devoted most of his life to real-estate development in Chicago and its suburbs. His father had given him fjom time to time, on the basis of book value, property valued at $517,874.95. These gifts started shortly after he was graduated from college and continued until 1929. In spite of this substantial fortune *1090 lie became deeply indebted and financially embarrassed in tbe 1920s and 1930s. This was for two reasons: First — be did not have tbe ability that bis father had to properly preserve and maintain his properties. Second — he was the unfortunate victim of the depression years in the two decades above mentioned.

Robert graduated from the University of Chicago in 1904 and came to Des Moines in 1906 at the age of twenty-four to manage his father’s properties, and in later years his own properties.

Earle attended the University of Chicago, but left the university when Robert graduated. He came to Des Moines in 1908 at the age of twenty-three to assist in the management of his father’s properties and to manage his own property, which he received from his father.

Robert and Earle were very close in their childhood and as they matured through their teens. There were many rooms in the Eugene K. Butler mansion, but the boys insisted on rooming together because of their affection for each other. They offieed together in the K. P. Block in Des Moines for over forty years.

Both Robert and Earle entered World War I. Earle had some military experience in Culver Military Academy and enlisted early. He was promoted from time to time and was a Major when the war ended. When they came back from the service their father made them very substantial gifts, of Des Moines property in addition to former gifts. The book value of the properties, real and personal, which the father, Eugene K. Butler, made to his three sons throughout the years and prior to December 2,1929, was as follows: Hubert $517,874.95; Robert $914,302.93; Earle $310,102.95.

In 1916 the parents sold their large Greenwood Avenue home in Chicago and for the next ten years divided their time between Chicago, Des Moines and Brownsville, Texas. In 1926, when Mr. Butler, Sr., was 83 years of age and Mrs. Sarah Butler was 80 years of age, they decided to move to Des Moines and make their home with their son Robert.

In 1929 Eugene K. Butler and wife, Sarah, decided they could not physically properly maintain the approximately one million dollars worth of real estate and personal property of which Mr. Butler was still the owner.

*1091 Accordingly, on December 2, 1929, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene K. Butler called Clinton Nourse, a prominent.

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Bluebook (online)
114 N.W.2d 595, 253 Iowa 1084, 1962 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-butler-iowa-1962.