McBride v. Mercantile-Commerce Bank & Trust Co.

48 S.W.2d 922, 330 Mo. 259, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 687
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 12, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 48 S.W.2d 922 (McBride v. Mercantile-Commerce Bank & Trust Co.) 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
McBride v. Mercantile-Commerce Bank & Trust Co., 48 S.W.2d 922, 330 Mo. 259, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 687 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*264 WHITE, J.

Each of these cases is in replevin. They were argued and submitted together. In the McBride case the plaintiff seeks to recover possession of bonds and other securities valued at $491,071.88. In the Hackmann case the plaintiff seeks to recover bonds and other securities of the value of $444,940.

These securities were held in possession by the defendant as executor of the last will of Thomas Halpin, who died December 10, 1929.

The plaintiffs were his stepchildren and claim title to the property sued for each by gift causa mortis from Halpin.

One James McBride, father of plaintiffs, operated two drug stores in rented buildings in the city of St. Louis. He died in 1873, leaving three children, Redmond McBride, five years of age, and Mary Belle McBride and Joseph McBride, who were younger. Thomas Halpin, since 1870, had been a clerk in one of McBride’s drug stores. He had been educated for a physician. In 1877 he married Margaret McBride, the "widow of Thomas McBride and mother of the plaintiffs. He thereafter conducted the drug business with such success that at the time of his death in 1929 he left an estate, it ivas said, of two million dollars in Value. Appellants say that it was a condition of the marriage that Thomas Halpin should adopt his wife’s children. No adoption papers were introduced in evidence. One child was born of that marriage, James Halpin, who died in 1915. After the marriage Halpin treated the McBride children as his own. The relations between them, as stated by both sides to the controversy, were of the closest and most intimate affection. He called them “son” and “daughter,” and they called him “father,” and there w^as nothing to distinguish them as other than his own children. Mary Belle "was married to Hack-mann in 1897. At the time of the trial she had two children, both grown. Redmond McBride was married in 1904, and at the time of the trial he had three children.

The property claimed in his suit by Redmond McBride was in a safety deposit box with the Mercantile Trust Company and the *265 property claimed by Mrs. Hackmann was in a safety deposit box with the. Mississippi Yalley Trust Company. In 1897 he had rented a box with the Mississippi Yalley Trust Company, and in 1906 he took another box and gave his son James access to it. That arrangement continued until James died in 1915. Soon after that he made arrangement by which he gave joint access to that box to Mary ¡Belle Hackmann. That continued until 1926, when he discontinued that box and took another in his sole name, and so continued it until his death. He rented a box in the Mercantile Trust Company in 1905, in his name and in the name of his sister of whose business he had charge. She died in 1909. In 1912 he placed that box in the name of Thomas Halpin, or Mary Belle Hackmann, or Redmond McBride. It remained that way until October, 1926. From that time until his death it was in his name alone. It was stated by Redmond McBride in his testimony that in 1916 Mr. Halpin was seriously ill with pneumonia and he called Redmond to him and gave him a paper designated as Exhibit 7. It was written on a prescription blank of Dr. Kier. The written part was ,as follows:

“1-1-17.
“To Mary Belle Hackmann and R. W. McBride
“The box in Mercantile Trust Co. Yaults
“The box in Mississippi Yalley Trust Co.
‘ ‘ Jointly hold. Railroad. Municipal,
“State and Co. Securities _ $377,000
“Real Estate Notes _.;_ 65,000
$442,000”

The witness said Halpin told him that he wanted him and Mrs. Hackmann to have those securities in event he died. He recovered. ■ In May, 1923, he made a will in which he made several specific legacies and devised the residue of his property to the Mercantile Trust Company to hold and manage during the lifetime of Redmond McBride and of Mary Belle Hackmann; to pay McBride monthly $350, and Mary Belle Hackmann $400 monthly, the trust to terminate at the death of McBride and Mary Belle Hackmann. In 1925 he made a second will revoking the first, making sundry legacies as in the first with the same provision as to monthly payments to Redmond McBride and Mary Belle Hackmann, the trust to terminate at the end of ten years, then the corpus to v'est in equal shares in McBride and Mary Belle Hackmann. In 1927 he made a third will revoking former wills, making similar specific bequests with the same trust to continue for a period of ten years with a monthly payment of $750 each to McBride and Mrs. Hackmann, and $35 a month to Joe McBride. The trustee was directed at *266 the end ol ten years to pay over to Redmond McBride and Mary Belle Hackmann, or in ease of their death to their children per slirpes in equal shares the remainder of the estate.

The evidence for plaintiffs tends to show the following:

Thomas Halpin had been in ill health for some time at the hospital suffering with cancer and knew he could not recover. He was returned to his home November 12, 1929, and died December 10, 1929. During his last illness Mary Belle Hackmann and Redmond McBride visited him daily. About the 15th of November while they were present, George Linde, a furniture dealer, came to the house and into the room where Halpin was to take measurements for a mattress for the bed on which Halpin lay. At that time Margaret Hogan, who had been in service in the family at intervals for many years, happened to be present. Katie Loftis, the housekeeper, came into the room and asked the sick man for money with which to pay a butcher’s bill. He reached for his trousers to get the money and in taking the money from his pocket he drew out two ke3rs, one a key to a safety deposit box in the Mercantile Trust Company, which he gave to Redmond telling him that the contents of the safety deposit box were for him and the other a key to a safety deposit box in the Mississippi Valley Trust Company which he gave to Mrs. Hackmann telling her the contents were for her. Each of the five persons present testified and were cross-examined at length upon this incident, as to just the language used by Thomas Halpin at that time. The testimony as to the expressions used varied with the different witnesses on direct and on cross-examination. These different expressions will be noticed more fully in determining the sufficiency of the proof.

The plaintiff relies entirely upon what was said and done at that time in order to establish a gift causa mortis. It was shown that Halpin knew he was going to die, stated the time was not far off and that he could not recover. No testimony was offered by the defendant as to what actually took place at that time but it contends that the evidence was insufficient to make out a prima-facie case of a gift aausa moi-tis; that it lacked the clearness and cogency which is necessary to convince a court that such a gift was intended and was actually made at the time.

Immediately after Halpin’s death both the keys to the safety deposit boxes were delivered to the defendants by Redmond McBride.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 S.W.2d 922, 330 Mo. 259, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbride-v-mercantile-commerce-bank-trust-co-mo-1932.