Holty v. Landauer

70 N.W.2d 633, 270 Wis. 203, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 405
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 N.W.2d 633 (Holty v. Landauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holty v. Landauer, 70 N.W.2d 633, 270 Wis. 203, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 405 (Wis. 1955).

Opinions

MaRtin, J.

Adolph Landauer, grandfather of the plaintiff and father of Joseph A. Landauer, deceased, operated a wholesale dry-goods business as a sole proprietorship under the name of A. Landauer & Son. He also operated several retail stores, including the Fair Company and the Fair Stores Appliance Company, Wisconsin corporations, at Wausau, Wisconsin. Adolph Landauer died in 1925, and in his will he provided for the establishment and maintenance of a trust during his widow’s lifetime from the income of which, among other things, the plaintiff should receive $250 monthly. Joseph Landauer was appointed one of the trustees. At the death of the widow in 1935, plaintiff signed a receipt for his distributable share of the trust estate and the trust was duly terminated.

During this time the Landauer business enterprises were carried on. When the trust was terminated the stock of the Fair Company of Wausau was divided equally between Joseph A. Landauer and the plaintiff, as directed in the Adolph Landauer will, and a certificate for 232 shares was issued to the plaintiff as of January 14, 1935.

A. Landauer & Son was incorporated in 1937 and thereafter operated the retail stores. A certificate for 536 shares of stock in the new corporation was issued to plaintiff December 2, 1937.

After the incorporation of 1937 the plaintiff, who resided in New York, received monthly payments through the Fair Store of Wausau and from May, 1943, on, through A. Landauer & Son, Inc. On May 8, 1942, Joseph Landauer wrote to plaintiff as follows:

“The books were set up I believe at the end of 1937 or the first part of 1938, at which time you had a credit of [206]*206$53,600. Your monthly withdrawals ever since that time were $450 a month or in total, $25,474.53, leaving a balance of $28,125.47.
“On the preferred stock, of which you had $5,000, this still remains intact. . . .
“So in total dollars you have standing to your credit at this time, $33,125.47. . . . you can readily see that of the total amount of money that you have to your credit, namely $33,125, if you continue to draw $450 or $475 monthly the same will last you approximately six years, maybe a little less or more. . . .”

As of January, 1943, the books of the company showed an indebtedness from the plaintiff of $29,320.53. On May 20, 1943, plaintiff’s account was credited with $29,000 and $24,600 (a total of $53,600) and stock-certificate stubs bearing the same date show the issuance of 246 shares to Joseph A. Landauer and 290 shares to A. Landauer & Son, Inc. (a total of 536 shares).

On April 24, 1943, Joseph Landauer made a will providing for the establishment of a trust out of his entire holdings in the Landauer corporation to continue for fifteen years after his death, the income payable $500 per month to his widow, Frances O. Landauer, $75 per month to a cousin, and $400 per month to plaintiff. It was also provided that of the annual distribution of the balance of income plaintiff was to receive 10 per cent in cash and 10 per cent in trust for the life of the trust and at the end of the fifteen years plaintiff was to receive such accumulations of trust income as well as 45 per cent of the trust principal.

On September 29, 1949, Joseph Landauer made a new will providing that his widow should receive one half of his entire estate and the balance of the Landauer corporation stock was to be left in trust for fifteen years, the income payable $750 per month to the widow, $100 per month to her mother, and $400 per month to plaintiff. The balance of the income was to be paid to the widow and at the end of the [207]*207fifteen-year period the entire principal of the trust was distributable to her.

It is undisputed that on May 20, 1943, plaintiff’s stock was transferred to Joseph Landauer and the company. Plaintiff contends that he agreed to the transfer on the sole basis of a contract between Joseph Landauer and himself (Exhibit 35). The alleged “testamentary commitment” is contained in an undated, unsigned document reading as follows:

“You had originally. $53,600.00
“You have drawn up to Jan. 1, 1943. 29,320.53
“Leaving balance $24,279.47
“You also have pfd. stock. 5,000.00
“$29,279.47
“You were credited with one divi- ] 3% on $53,600.00 dend in ’37 of $1,638.00 ]
“I shall try and give you over a period of 3 years, starting in 1943, $8,000.00 — which is about $1,600.00 per year, the equivalent for 5 years starting 1938-39-40-41-and 42. Will start this year with the first $3,000.00. This is in lieu of no dividends.
“Rather than making out a new certificate every year or two, your account at A. L. & S. will read as of January 1, 1943, $24,279.47 plus $3,000.00 — $27,279.47.
“The above equals 272 shares of stock plus $79.42.
“You are not aware of the fact, but our losses in closing out Waupaca at a loss of $21,000.00 and Sturgeon Bay at a loss of $33,000.00 totaled $54,000.00 in 1940-41.
“While I was advised that our common stock should not be valued at over $80.00 per share, I am crediting you at par at $100.00 per share, and you didn’t have to sustain any losses of the closing of the two stores.
“As long as you leave your money at A. L. & S., you’ll be credited yearly at the rate of 3%. After I leave .this earth, you can draw $400.00 monthly for 15 years; plus about, after [208]*208the years' businesses have been accounted, a sum of approximately $2,000 to $2,500 for 15 years, and also a like amount of $2,000 to $2,500 will be credited to your account for a period of 15 years.
“These figures in total should give your account each year for 15 years about $9,000 to $9,500. Naturally, these figures all depend on how well the businesses thrive; nevertheless are figured fair.
“After 15 years when the trust expires, you’ll receive ‘plenty.’ ”

Exhibit 7 is a carbon copy of Exhibit 35 with the portion beginning “After I leave this earth, etc.,” in the third paragraph from the end removed. Exhibit 7 was given by Land-auer to Miss Hoffman, the company bookkeeper, who kept it in the ledger and credited plaintiff’s account with the sums therein mentioned “in lieu of dividends,” which sums were charged against Joseph Landauer personally. Miss Hoffman could not remember when she first saw it but the fact that the first gratuity of $3,000 mentioned in the document was entered in the ledger as of December 31, 1943, makes it reasonable to conclude only that she received it sometime in 1943. That the document was considered by Joseph Land-auer as a bookkeeping memorandum necessary to maintain plaintiff’s account is evident from the fact that it was given to Miss Huffman and clipped to the ledger sheet as a part of the company records.

It is plaintiff’s contention that the portion of Exhibit 35 which was removed from Exhibit 7 before Miss Hoffman received it contains the testamentary agreement upon which he relies.

The trial court found:

“5. Exhibit 35, containing a notation with respect to Joseph A.

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Related

Kohler v. Kohler Co.
208 F. Supp. 808 (E.D. Wisconsin, 1962)
Holty v. Landauer
70 N.W.2d 633 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.W.2d 633, 270 Wis. 203, 1955 Wisc. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holty-v-landauer-wis-1955.