Cochran v. Whitby

264 N.W. 427, 196 Minn. 60, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 1067
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 27, 1935
DocketNo. 30,564
StatusPublished

This text of 264 N.W. 427 (Cochran v. Whitby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cochran v. Whitby, 264 N.W. 427, 196 Minn. 60, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 1067 (Mich. 1935).

Opinions

Julius J. Olson, Justice.

Plaintiffs appeal from an order denying their motion for new trial after the cause had been heard and decision rendered for defendants. The facts are not in substantial conflict. But solution of the legal problems presented thereby is decidedly controversial, at least so counsel for the parties seem to think.

Ira Collins Soper, a native and resident of Kentucky, was the central figure in the drama now to be depicted. In October, 1911, he and plaintiff Adeline Johnson Westphal were united in marriage. She was a widow with three young daughters, the issue of her first marriage. She and her three daughters lived with him until August, 1921, when he suddenly disappeared, not to be heard of again by his wife during his remaining lifetime. Their family life is said to have been a happy one. But there were many occasions when Mrs. Soper undoubtedly had real difficulties with which to contend. Soper was inclined to go on periodic sprees. He had been on such a spree immediately prior to his last departure from plaintiff wife. His sister, who was visiting at that time Avith the Soper family, had upbraided him about this affair and so had the wife of one of his friends. The Sopers are said to be proud of their family name, and the good repute of its members Avas a matter not to be lightly treated. On at least two prior occasions he had made unannounced trips, once to Memphis and at another time to St. Louis, after having been on such drunken sprees. But at the [62]*62time of,the last mentioned occasion he studiously and almost fiendishly made his disappearance take on the aspect of suicide. He wrote several suicide notes to his wife, one of them ending with this significant statement: “If there is any hereafter may meet you again.” His car was found at the bank of a near-by canal, and so were his hat and portions of his clothing. Pinned to his business card and left in his car was a note reading: “This belongs to Mrs. Soper.”

The record abundantly supports the view that he did not intend to end his life but went through these performances for the sole purpose of deceiving his wife and to leave with her the impression that he had in fact committed suicide. He managed to leave Louisville, that being his home, without clue or trace. He first went to Canada and shortly thereafter came to Minneapolis. There he assumed the name of John W. Young. By that name, and that name only, he ivas known to his business and social acquaintances from the time he came to Minneapolis until his death in 1932, something like 11 years. In Minneapolis he became well acquainted and established both in a business and social way. He entered the fuel business and with one Karstens formed a corporation known as the Young Fuel Company. In 1922, he married a widow, Mary Christopher, a resident of Minneapolis, and they lived together as husband and wife and were so known until she died in 1925. In May, 1927, he married defendant Gertrude Whitby, another Minneapolis widow, with whom he had been acquainted and had kept company for some six or eight months prior to their marriage. They lived together as husband and wife from the time of this marriage until his death in 1932, Avhen he actually did commit suicide. Gertrude in good faith believed him to be a widoAver, he having informed her and many others that his first wife died of pneumonia many years prior thereto.

Some time after Young’s marriage to Gertrude, he and Karstens were interviewed by one Smith, an insurance agent, Avho de\dsed a stock insurance plan whereby provision was to be made for the surviving partner of the fuel company to acquire the entire business in event of death of one of them, the surviving Avife of such de[63]*63ceased partner to be compensated by life insurance to be taken out by each partner upon his life, premiums to be paid by the fuel company and charged as an item of operating expense. The purpose was to keep the corporate enterprise from becoming split up as to Stock ownership in event of death of either,, owner. The capital of the fuel company ivas $10,000, represented by 400 shares of the par value of $25 each. The ownership of the stock was as follows: Karstens had 175 shares, Mrs. Karstens 25, Young 195, and Gertrude 5. Each owner, i. e., Karstens and Young,, was to take out a policy of life insurance in the amount of $5,000 payable to First Minneapolis Trust Company as trustee. The resulting agreement, designated “escroiv receipt,” after reciting the deposit of 200 shares by each depositor, provides:

“Upon the decease of either John W. Young or Ferdinand J. Karstens, the Trust Company shall proceed to collect the proceeds of the Insurance Policies upon the life of such deceased Depositor, and shall handle and dispose of such proceeds as follows:
“The Trust Company shall deliver the stock certificates of the deceased Depositor to the surviving Depositor and it shall deliver the proceeds of the insurance on the life of the deceased Depositor to the wife of the deceased Depositor if living, and if not living, then to the representative of his estate, and the stock certificates that were deposited by the Depositor who is then the surviving Depositor, together with the policies of insurance upon his life shall be delivered to such surviving Depositor.
“All of the stock deposited hereunder and all of the policies deposited hereunder or any part thereof may be withdrawn by said two Depositors on the joint receipt of both of them.”

The policies were duly issued and, with the stock certificates, appropriately indorsed, deposited with the trustee. The insurance premiums were paid by the fuel company. Shortly after Young’s death the trustee collected the insurance money upon the policy issued upon his life and paid the proceeds over to defendant Gertrude as his surviving wife, and at the same time delivered to Mr. Karstens as the surviving partner decedent’s 200 shares in the fuel company, together with the policy issued upon his life.

[64]*64The trust officer who dealt with the parties was informed that the relationship between Young and Gertrude was that of husband and wife, likewise that of Karstens and his wife. No one except Young knew anything about the first wife. She was to all intents and purposes, as to all arrangements and engagements heretofore related, entirely out of the picture.

Several months elapsed after these matters had been properly closed by the parties, as they in good faith thought, when Mrs. Soper, the true wife of Young, put in her appearance. An administrator of the estate of the late Soper, alias Young, was appointed. He and Mrs. Soper brought this suit against defendants to recover the insurance money. The suit was brought upon the theory that this fund had been erroneously paid by the trustee to Gertrude.

Plaintiffs have assigned áÓ errors and devote pages 18 to 50, inclusive, in their printed brief thereto. These are summarized, however, into more compact form thus:

“The essential issue, as it really presented itself at the trial, was this: granting that Mrs. Whitby was not the deceased’s wife, could not be his wife, was not his heir, did not have and could not have any rights of inheritance, statutory or otherwise, did Soper, by some valid, clear, effective supervening instrument, valid as a will or as a present deed or conveyance inter vivos,

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Bluebook (online)
264 N.W. 427, 196 Minn. 60, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 1067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cochran-v-whitby-minn-1935.