Frank v. Heimann

258 S.W. 1000, 302 Mo. 334, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 806
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 11, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 1000 (Frank v. Heimann) 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
Frank v. Heimann, 258 S.W. 1000, 302 Mo. 334, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 806 (Mo. 1924).

Opinions

This is a suit in equity to enforce what is claimed to be an executed voluntary trust in personal property. The petition alleges: *Page 338

"That she (plaintiff) is the only child of defendant; that on or about the 21st day of June, 1905, plaintiff being then a minor, defendant declared his intention to create and execute a trust in her favor and for her benefit, and in pursuance of such intention and as the beginning and nucleus of said trust deposited in the State National Bank of the City of St. Louis the sum of $392.49 in the name of `Morris A. Heimann, Trustee for Melba Heimann;' that said `Melba Heimann' is the plaintiff herein and daughter as aforesaid of defendant; that by said deposit defendant created and executed a valid, irrevocable trust for the use and benefit of and in favor of plaintiff, and declared and constituted himself her trustee of said trust; that thereafter and weekly, with few exceptions, beginning June 24, 1905, and ending March 14, 1914, defendant deposited or caused to be deposited the sum of $25 each week to the credit of said account opened as aforesaid by him in said bank on the 21st day of June, 1905, and continuously thereafter kept in the name aforesaid, to-wit, `Morris A. Heimann, Trustee for Melba Heimann;' that in addition to said deposits there was credited to said trust funds and account by said bank from time to time interest on said deposit; that each and every deposit made as aforesaid was made by the defendant as a deposit on account of said trust, and did constitute and become a part of the trust fund, and interest thereon accruing and credited by the said bank as aforesaid became and constituted a part of said trust fund; that the aggregate amount of said deposits made as aforesaid, with the interest thereon credited as aforesaid by said bank, amounted on March 14, 1914, on which date the last of said deposits was made, to a sum in excess of $12,000, the exact amount of which plaintiff is unable to state, not having in her possession or under her control the necessary information by which the exact amount can be ascertained.

"Plaintiff further states that in entire disregard and in breach and violation of his duties as trustee as aforesaid of said executed and irrevocable trust, of which *Page 339 defendant declared himself trustee as aforesaid, defendant did from time to time wrongfully convert to his own use all of said trust fund so created as aforesaid except the sum of $1.44, which still remains in said bank to the credit of said trust fund and has failed and refused to account for or pay over to plaintiff any part of said trust fund so converted by him to his own use."

The prayer is for an accounting and for judgment for the total amount deposited to the credit of the alleged trust fund. It is further alleged that certain real estate described in the petition "was purchased and paid for in part by defendant with money wrongfully converted by him out of said trust fund," and it is sought to impress such real estate with a lien to the extent of the funds so used.

The answer is a general denial and a plea of the five-year Statute of Limitation.

With respect to the general situation of the parties and the principal facts out of which the controversy grows, there is but little, if any, dispute. In 1905 and prior thereto, the defendant, under the name of the M.A. Heimann Manufacturing Company, was engaged in the manufacture of shows window fixtures, in the city of St. Louis. His wife, Lilly Heimann, was actively assisting him in his business, giving especial attention to the financial end of it. He kept an account with the State National Bank in the name of M.A. Heimann Manufacturing Company in which he deposited the funds employed in the operation of the factory. But such funds as could be withdrawn from the business from time to time, as earnings or savings, were deposited in the same bank in the name of Lilly Heimann.

Mrs. Heimann died in 1905. At the time of her death the balance in the bank to the credit of "Lilly Heimann" was $392.49. Shortly afterward the defendant opened an account in the same bank in the name of "Morris A. Heimann, Trustee for Melba Heimann," and transferred to it the balance standing in the name of Lilly *Page 340 Heimann. Melba was his only child; she was then ten years of age.

After the death of his wife defendant continued his manufacturing business as theretofore, and as theretofore kept his factory account with the State National Bank in the name of the M.A. Heimann Manufacturing Company. An employee named Judlin was the manager and bookkeeper in charge of the factory. As such he handled the funds of the business, made the deposits in bank and drew checks against the account of the M.A. Heimann Manufacturing Company. When defendant, in 1905, started the account at the bank in the name of Morris A. Heimann, Trustee for Melba Heimann, he instructed Judlin to thereafter deposit $25 a week in that account. These deposits continued to be made until the defendant sold his factory in 1914. Upon the death of her mother, defendant placed his daughter in Forest Park University, where she remained for three terms. In 1908 she went to live with his sister. During the time she was in school he expended between $1100 and $1200 for her tuitution and maintenance; afterward and until she was married, in 1913, he gave her an allowance of $75 a month. In addition to the allowance he paid from time to time debts incurred by her for clothing on charge accounts at various stores. He drew for his own use $35 a week. All of their living expenses, both for himself and his daughter, seem to have been paid from the funds of the M.A. Heimann Manufacturing Company as distinguished from those deposited to the credit of "Morris A. Heimann, Trustee," etc.

Defendant did not permit his employees to draw checks against the account of Morris A. Heimann, Trustee for Melba Heimann. If collections were slow, or for other reasons the factory was short of funds with which to meet its obligations, defendant himself drew a check against this account for whatever sum was needed and turned it over to Judlin, with instruction to replace it when sufficient funds came in. Some of the moneys so *Page 341 drawn were returned; but the major portion of them never were.

The total amount that was deposited to the credit of Morris A. Heimann, Trustee for Melba Heimann, from the date of the first entry, in June, 1905, until the last, in March, 1914, was $24,094.15. The weekly deposits of $25 made up approximately one-half of this total. The deposits going to make up the remainder were for the most part the proceeds of loans, all personal, except one for $25,000 on defendant's home. The account, however, never at any time showed a credited balance of anything like $24,000. The largest balance appearing at any time on that side of the ledger was $2665.75, on March 16, 1907. At times it was nil. A year and a half after it was opened the account became an active checking account. Defendant drew against it not only for the use of his factory, but for other purposes wholly disconnected with its operations. He expended $8000 of the fund in improving two pieces of real estate. On April 16, 1914, the balance remaining to the credit of the fund was $1.44. No further deposits were made after that date, the defendant having sold his factory at about that time.

Defendant sold his manufacturing plant to five of his employees, among others, Judlin, Frank (plaintiff's husband), Frieda Frank, a sister of the latter, and A.Q. Merz. The sale price was $15,000. They paid $1000 in cash and were given five years in which to pay the remainder. They at once incorporated as the M.A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 1000, 302 Mo. 334, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-v-heimann-mo-1924.