Hidden v. Edwards

285 S.W. 462, 313 Mo. 642, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 947
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 5, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 462 (Hidden v. Edwards) 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
Hidden v. Edwards, 285 S.W. 462, 313 Mo. 642, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 947 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*649 WHITE, J. —

The plaintiffs filed their petition as trustees in charge of property belonging to the defendants, Florence Noble Edwards and Mary Elizabeth Edwards, presented their accounts, duly verified, and prayed the court to accept their resignation as trustees, approve their accounts and appoint their successors.

The defendants, Florence Noble Edwards and Mary Elizabeth Edwards, filed a cross-bill making Albert N. Edwards and Edward Hidden as trustees, and as executors of the last will of George L. Edwards, also Ben F. Edwards, Mrs. F. W. Edwards, and Albert N. Edwards, surviving partners of the firm of A. G. Edwards & Sons, a partnership, also A. G. Edwards & Sons Brokerage Company, a corporation, cross-defendants, thus bringing into the case by the cross-bill the. trustees in their capacity as executors, and one of them as a surviving partner; also two other persons and a corporation. The original defendants became cross-plaintiffs and the original plaintiffs became cross-defendants. The cross-bill alleged that the cross-defendants named therein had waived objections to the jurisdiction of the parties, misjoinder and non-joinder of causes of action. The several cross-defendants filed their separate answers to the cross-petition and the case was tried mainly upon the issues thus joined.

George L. Edwards, the husband of Florence Noble Edwards and the father of Mary Elizabeth Edwards, their only living child, died July 11, 1919. His wife and daughter were his beneficiaries under his will. During his life he created a trust and appointed the trustees mentioned, placing certain property in their hands as such.

In 1894 A. G. Edwards & Sons Brokerage Company, a corporation, was organized. It succeeded a partnership of that name which then passed out of existence. A. G. Edwards, who died many years before, was the father of the other Edwardses mentioned in the record. The brokerage company originally was incorporated for $100,000. Its capital stock was increased from, time to *650 time until it reached $1,000,000, but in 1920 it was reduced to $50,000.

In 1808 the officers and managers of the brokerage company found it very important to have a membership in the New York Stock Exchange, but no corporation under the requirements of that body could be a member. In order to accomplish their purpose certain officers of the corporation formed a partnership, called A. U. Edwards Sa Sons, consisting of George L. Edwards, Harry F. Knight and A. D. Grant. A membership was taken out in,the New York Stock Exchange in the’name of Harry F. Knight, which he held for the benefit of the partnership, and which the partnership held in trust and for the benefit of the corporation. The amount paid for the membership was $26,000, and in addition a transfer fee of between one and two thousand dollars. This sum was paid, cross-defendants claim, by the corporation, a fact disputed by the cross-plaintiffs.

The membership of this firm was changed from time to time by the retirement of members and the accession of others. In each case a written contract was entered into among the members of the partnership. Until 1908 the corporation was not a party to any of those contracts, and the relation of the partnership to the corporation was not expressed in writing. In 1908 the corporation and the partnership entered into a written contract which stipulated their engagements with each other. At that time the partners were George L. Edwards, Harry F. Knight, J. Herndon Smith, Charles W. Moore, W. Arthur Stickney and Theodore D. Peck. In 1912 another contract was entered into between the partnership and the corporation. The partnership at that time consisted of the same persons as when the 'first contract was made except that Smith and Moore were no longer members.

During all the time from the organization of the partnership in 1898, until 1920,, the business of the corporation was conducted by the partnership. No one was a member of the partnership at any time except stockholders in the corporation. The details and the man *651 ner in which it was done will be explained below. Prom the organization of the corporation until the death ■ of George L. Edwards in June, 1919, he was the ruling influence inboth the corporation and the partnership. A great deal of money was made for the stockholders of the corporation, and at the time of his death a large amount of property was in existence which the cross-plaintiffs assert belonged to the partnership and which the cross-defendants claim belonged to the corporation.

In 1903 George L. Edwards made an arrangement with Albert N. Edwards and Edward Hidden, the original plaintiffs in this case, to take charge as trustees of certain property for the benefit of his wife, Florence Noble Edwards. In the following year, 1904, a written declaration was made whereby Edwards and his wife placed certain personal property and real estate in the hands of those trustees for her. They continued as such trustees until they started this proceeding.

In the year 1903 George L. 'Edwards created a trust in favor of his daughter, Mary Elizabeth Edwards; also a third trust in favor of his son, George Lane Edwards, Jr. In 1918 George Lane Edwards, Jr., was killed in the World War, and the property held in trust for him was by the trustees turned over to themselves to be held for Florence Noble Edwards. The trusteeship of the property of Mary Elizabeth Edwards continued until this proceeding.

Albert N. Edwards and Edward Hidden, trustees, in instituting this proceeding, set forth the trust agreements, with an account of their dealings with the trust property from the time of the creation of the trusts down to the time of filing their petition. This property consisted, among other things, of stock in the A. G. Edwards & Sons Brokerage Company, 740 shares, which they had purchased with trust funds. George L. Edwards at the time of his death also owned 1260 shares of stock in the corporation; all of it was pledged as collateral security for his debts, except 360' shares, which were in the hands of A. N. Edwards and Edward Hidden as executors.

*652 The cross-plaintiffs claim that all the property of the corporation was turned over to the partnership and belonged to the partnership at the time of George L. Edwards’s death; that the shares of stock held by the trustees in reality represented the interest of the trustees in the partnership assets, and cross-plaintiffs demand that the trustees account for the interest of their beneficiaries in the partnership estate, which they say was dissolved by the death of George L. Edwards. It is also claimed that the shares of stock held by George L. Edwards at the time of his death represented his interest in the partnership estate and they demand that the executors account for the interest of the deceased in that estate, and ask for the appointment of a referee to settle said accounts in accordance with the law relating to the administration and settlement of partnership estates. The cross-plaintiffs further claim that Ben F. Edwards, Albert N. Edwards and Mrs. F. W. Edwards were partners in the firm, and for that reason they are made parties to the proceeding and the cross-bill demands that they account to the trustees and executors as surviving partners.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 462, 313 Mo. 642, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hidden-v-edwards-mo-1926.