In Re Bauernschmidt's Estate

54 A. 637, 97 Md. 35, 1903 Md. LEXIS 128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 54 A. 637 (In Re Bauernschmidt's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Bauernschmidt's Estate, 54 A. 637, 97 Md. 35, 1903 Md. LEXIS 128 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

George Bauernschmidt had been engaged in the brewery business for some years and had amassed considerable property. His family consisted of himself, his wife and seven children. In eighteen hundred and eighty-nine he determined to conduct his business through and in the name of a corporation and accordingly he procured a certificate of incorporation creating the George Bauernschmidt Brewing Company. All the stockholders were members of his family. ’ The property and business taken over by the corporation were his individually, the other incorporators having no interest in that property or that business ; and it is not pretended that they gave any value whatever for the shares of stock which were issued to them. Upon the organization of the company certificates of stock were issued representing a total of two hundred shares, the number fixed in the articles of incorporation. Of those two hundred shares he retained one hundred and ninety-six and gave one to each of four of his children. Subsequently there was a new and different division made of the shares and later on, one of the children having died, the distribution of the shares was again rearranged and new certificates were issued.. Under this last arrangement one hundred and forty shares were issued to George Baurenschmidt and Margaretha Baurenschmidt, his wife, as joint tenants ; and ten shares to each of their six surviving children. In eighteen hundred and ninety-eight The Maryland Brewing Company was incorporated to take over and consolidate all the brewery business in Baltimore City. The George Baurenschmidt Company sold certain of its property and its whole business to the syndicate which organized the Maryland Brewing Company, and the price agreed to be paid was one million of dollars in cash and one million of dollars in stock of the new corporation—pre *45 ferred and common in equal amounts. Before that sale could be consummated the purchasers required the stockholders of the George Baurenschmidt Company to transfer in blank and to deliver to Sperry, Jones & Company, wjho were promoting the new enterprise, all the certificates of the capital stock of the Bauernschmidt Company ; and this was done on March the first, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine. Frederick Bauernschmidt, one of the sons who held a certificate for ten shares, was opposed to the scheme of selling to the Maryland Brewing Company. Without going into the details, because it is unnecessary to do so, it is enough to say that after some delay George Baurenschmidt agreed to give Frederick the sum of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars and thereupon Frederick transferred to his father the certificate which the former held for ten shares of the Bauernschmidt Company’s stock. On the first of March, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine the sale to the Maryland Brewery Company was completed and a conveyance was duly executed. George Bauernschmidt then gave to each of his other five children a like sum of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, though some of them did not receive the money until after his death. He had for some years rented from several of the Trust and Security Companies of Baltimore safe deposit boxes in which his own and the Bauernschmidt Brewing Company’s investments were kept; but he always retained the keys himself. After the consummation of the deal with the Maryland Brewing Company and on March the thirteenth, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, one of the boxes, viz., box No. 4392 in the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company which had stood in the name of the Bauernschmidt Brewing Company, was surrendered and was then re-rented to George and Margaretha Bauernschmidt to be entered severally under the following agreement : “We agree to hire and hold safe No. 4392, or any safe for which it might be exchanged, as joint tenants, the survivor or survivors to have access thereto in case of the death of either.” George Bauernschmidt gave to his wife one of the two keys to the box and retained the other, saying to her “here is your key to the safe-deposit box.”

*46 On December the thirtieth, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, whilst negotiations were pending for the sale of the Bauernschmidt brewery to the Maryland Brewery Company, George Bauernschmidt with three of his children and one of his employees organized a corporation called the Baltimore Realty Company whose chief object was to acquire and hold all the property of the Bauernschmidt Brewery Company which was not to be included in the sale to the Maryland Brewery Company. The capital stock was fixed at one hundred thousand dollars, divided into one thousand shares of the par value of one hundred dollars per share.- The stock was issued as follows: Nine hundred and eighty shares to George and Margaretha Bauernschmidt as joint tenants and five shares to each of four of his children—the two who were excluded being those who filed the bill of complaint by which the pending proceedings were begun. On the first of March, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine the Bauernschmidt Brewery Company conveyed considerable property to the Realty Company and assigned to the latter sundry mortgages, which property and mortgages it was agreed should be received in payment ■ for the entire issue of stock of the Realty Company. None of these conveyances or assignments embraced bonds, stocks or other like securities, except some judgments.

On April the fourth-, eight hundred and ninety-nine, George Bauernschmidt, then being quite ill, made his last will and testament and'on the twelfth of the same month he died. By his will he gave to his widow a life estate in all - his property coupled with certain powers which will be stated and considered later on. After the expiration of the life estate he directed “ the rest, residue and remainder of” his “ said estate then being ” to be equally divided amongst his six children—the share of one of them, who was afflicted, being placed in trust.

■ On July the twenty-sixth, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, or a little more than three months after the death of George Bauernschmidt, Mrs. Bauernschmidt executed a deed of trust to the Baltimore Trust and Guarantee Company conveying upon certain trusts six hundred and fifty thousand dollars of *47 securities. This sum of six hundred and fifty thousand dollars was made up of the following items : Three hundred and twenty-six thousand dollars in bonds which were in box No. 4392 of the Mercantile Trust Company. That box stood, as has been stated already, in the names of George and Margaretha Bauernschmidt as joint tenants. One hundred and seventeen thousand dollars in bonds which the evidence shows had been purchased by Mrs. Bauernschmidt; seven thousand dollars in Baltimore City stock held by the Bauernschmidt Brewery Company, but transferred to Mrs. Bauernschmidt on May the eleventh, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine ; sixty thousand dollars in stocks and bonds transferred by the Realty Company to Mrs. Bauernschmidt on August the twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine ; ninety thousand dollars in bonds of which eighty-five thousand and five hundred dollars were registered in the name of George Bauernschmidt and are accounted for in the inventory filed by his executrix ; and fifty thousand dollars in City and Suburban Railway bonds which were the sole property of Elizabeth Bauernschmidt— the afflicted daughter.

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Bluebook (online)
54 A. 637, 97 Md. 35, 1903 Md. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bauernschmidts-estate-md-1903.