Clubb v. Scullin

139 S.W. 420, 235 Mo. 585, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 121
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 139 S.W. 420 (Clubb v. Scullin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clubb v. Scullin, 139 S.W. 420, 235 Mo. 585, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 121 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

STATEMENT.

BOND, C.

— Plaintiff, a minor when this suit was brought, now of full age and a party to the cause, alleges in his petition that on the 25th of April, 1902, his mother, Eleanore Clubb, as his guardian and curatrix, held 145 shares of stock in the Wiggins Ferry Company, which defendant agreed to sell for the highest market price; that defendant was then a stockholder in the Mercantile Trust Company and “largely interested” in the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company; that said Railway Company was then desirous of procuring control of the Wiggins Ferry Company, through the purchase of a majority of its capital stock; that defendant procured the employment of the Mercantile Trust Company as purchasing agent of said Railway Company;' that defendant agreed with said Railway Company to assist its purchasing agent in procuring a majority of the capital stock of said Wiggins Ferry Company at the price of $500 per sharp; that at said dates and afterwards the Mississippi Valley Trust Company of St. Louis,, as purchasing agent for the St. Louis Terminal Association of St. Louis, was also endeavoring to purchase and acquire the stock of said Wiggins Ferry Company, which was known to the defendant; that defendant sold plaintiff’s shares to the said Railway Company through its purchasing agent for the sum of $500 per share, amounting to $72,500, and delivered the same to the purchaser, and caused a transfer to be made of said stock on the books of said Wiggins Ferry Company; that while so doing, defendant “wrongfully and fraudulently concealed from plaintiff and from plaintiff’s said guardian the fact that he was in any manner interested in either the said Rahway [593]*593Company or its purchasing agent, or was in any wise acting on behalf of either of said companies;” that defendant broke his agreement and acted in violation of his duty as agent in selling said shares of stock for the sum above named, at a time when he had knowledge that they could be sold for $1500 per share, and withheld that knowledge from plaintiff’s guardian and curatrix, well knowing she was ignorant of said fact; that by defendant’s fraudulent refusal to sell said shares at the value of $1500 each, plaintiff lost the sum of $145,000, for which he prayed judgment.

The answer was a general denial, coupled with a second defense setting forth the following telegram:

St. Louis, April 24, 1902.
Ellen Clubb
S. C. Clubb,
The Grafton, Con. Ay., Washington, D. C.
I am offered five hundred dollars per share for a majority or all of'the stock of the Wiggins Ferry Co. Have agreed to-sell all my holdings and strongly recommend you to do likewise. If you concur in my recommendations, send me your stock by mail at once and if the owners of a majority of stock agree to-sell I will forward to you five hundred dollars per share for your holdings on or before May 5th next. Please regard this, as strictly confidential. Wire reply immediately.
John Scullin,
Pres’t Wiggins Ferry Co.

That pursuant to an authority from said Eleanore-Clubb, plaintiff’s guardian and curatrix, defendant signed an agreement to sell the shares of stock of this plaintiff and an equal number of shares of his sister and 179 shares of the said Eleanore Clubb on the terms set forth in the above telegram; that said Eleanore Clubb delivered all of the shares of this plaintiff and of his sister and 34 shares of her own, but failed and refused to deliver the remaining 145 shares of her own, and demanded as a condition of said delivery the payment of the further sum of $145,000; that this defendant had [594]*594thereafter no further connection with the matter, but the said Eleanore Clubb thereafter dealt directly with the Mercantile Trust Company, and entered into an agreement with it on the following terms, to-wit:

St. Louis, May' 2, 1902.
The Mercantile Trust Company having purchased from Eleanore Clubb, four hundred sixty-nine (469) shares of the capital stock of the Wiggins Ferry Company for the total sum of $379,500, hereby releases and discharges said Eleanore Clubb from any and all claims for damages or otherwise on account of her agreement to sell said shares or any thereof to said Mercantile Trust Company and agree to keep her harmles from any and all such claims.
Mercantile Trust Company.
By Festus J. Wade, President.
Accepted.
Eleanore Clubb.
The above mentioned purchase of 469 Shares of stock in the Wiggins Ferry Company, and the release of the said Eleanore Clubb, were made with our approval and sanction, and we ratify and confirm the same as done for our benefit.
May 2, 1902.
The Chicago, Rock Island & Pac. Ry. Co.
By Robert Mather, Vice President.

That said agreements between the said Eleanore Clubb and the Mercantile Trust Company as the purchasing agent of said railway, and the said railway on its own behalf were in full accord and satisfaction of all claims and demands of whatever nature growing out of the sale of’ any part or all of the said 469 shares of capital stock of the Wiggins Perry Company belonging to the said Eleanore Clubb and plaintiff and his sister.

The reply was a general denial.

Upon the trial of these issues the evidence tended to show that, consequent to the purchase of the St. Louis & Colorado Railroad, the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway desired an eastern entrance into the city of St. Louis by acquiring a majority of shares of stock of the Wiggins Ferry Company; that to accomplish this purpose it employed the Mercantile Trust [595]*595Company of St. Louis as a purchasing agent of said stock; that defendant was president of the Wiggins Ferry Company and the owner of a large number of the shares of its capital stock; that the plaintiff and his sister and mother were owners of capital stock of said Wiggins Ferry Company in the following proportion: 145 belonging to plaintiff; same amount belohging to his sister, and 179 belonging to their mother; that after the receipt of the telegram addressed to her by defendant, and set out in defendant’s answer, Mrs. Eleanore Clubb telegraphed in reply, as follows:

Baltimore, Md., April 25, 1902.
Mr. John. Scullin,
Pres’t Wiggins Ferry Co., St. Louis.
Accept offer for myself, Helen and Sam. Certificates with Union Trust Company.
Eleanore B. Clubb.

In reply to which defendant telegraphed her, as follows:

St. Louis, Mo., April 26, 1902.
(Received at Baltimore April 27, 1902)
Mrs. Eleanore B. Clubb.
303 Oakdale Road, Roland Park.

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205 S.W. 411 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 420, 235 Mo. 585, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clubb-v-scullin-mo-1911.