Meyers v. Meyers

197 S.W.2d 477, 210 Ark. 714, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 423
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 18, 1946
Docket4-7982
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 197 S.W.2d 477 (Meyers v. Meyers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyers v. Meyers, 197 S.W.2d 477, 210 Ark. 714, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 423 (Ark. 1946).

Opinions

RobiNS, J.

This is a controversy between appellees, Max Meyers and Adolph Meyers, children of Joe Meyers, deceased, and their stepmother, Annie Meyers, the appellant, as to liability of appellees for certain shares of corporate stock delivered by appellant to -appellees. To appellant’s suit for an accounting as to these stocks, which appellant alleged appellees were holding for her as her trustees, appellees answered that appellant and appel-lees had made a compromise of the liability asserted in this snit and all other matters in dispute between them, said compromise being evidenced by a written agreement. Appellees also pleaded laches and limitation as additional defenses.

The lower court dismissed appellant’s complaint for want of equity. She has appealed.

Joe Meyers died in 1930, leaving surviving him the appellant, his widow, and five children now living, as his heirs at Iuav, to-wit: His sons, Max Meyers and Adolph Meyers, appellees herein, and his daughters, Sophia Meyers, Mrs. G-oldena Hassel and Mrs. Hannah Simon. No administrator was appointed for his estate until after this controversy arose. On the advice of appellees, appellant invested $5,546.88, proceeds of insurance on the life of Joe Meyers, payable to and collected by her, in certain stocks, and on June 13, 1930, at request of appellees, she indorsed the certificates evidencing her ownership of these stocks and turned same over to appellees and they gave her the following receipt therefor:

“Letterhead of Meyers Bros., •

“Cotton Merchants,

“Blytheville, Arkansas, June 13, 1930.

. “We hold in trust and receipt of Mrs. Annie Meyers —the following stocks:

“10 shares Annaconda Copper,

“25 shares Chrysler Corp.,

“25 shares Montgomery Ward,

‘ ‘ 50 shares General Motors,.

“20 shares Grisby Gruño.

“(Signed) Meyers Bros.

“By Max Meyers.”

Appellees were in financial difficulties when they obtained the stock certificates and in 1931 they disposed of all these stocks, belonging to their stepmother, the appellant, and used the proceeds thereof to apply on their own indebtedness. They did not inform appellant that they, had sold her stock, but, on the contrary, .they continued to pay her every three months, up until about March, 1944, the amount of dividends regularly accruing on these stocks.

Appellees testified that from time to time appellant would ask them for the stock certificates, but that they evaded her requests in different ways. As appellee, Adolph Meyers, put it in his testimony, he “avoided the question one way or the other.”

During all the years from 1930 to 1944 relations between appellant and all of her stepchildren were amicable and intimate. In the early part of 1944 one of the daughters of Joe Meyers learned that a diamond ring, that had belonged to her own mother, had been given by appellant to one of appellant’s nieces. This discovery led to a serious quarrel between appellant and her stepchildren, who began to insist that the home place and two other parcels of real estate bought by Joe Meyers during his lifetime, title to which was placed in appellant, should go to them as heirs of Meyers, rather than to kindred of their stepmother. The quarrel led to personal difficulties and to two suits — one brought by a daughter of Joe Meyers against appellant to recover certain furniture, and one, an injunction suit brought by appellant against her stepchildren to restrain them from molesting or threatening her. Appellant’s stepchildren also had their attorney appointed administrator of the estate of their father, who had died 14 years before, and had served on appellant an order to make disclosure as to personal property belonging to Joe Meyers at the time of his death.

The respective attorneys for the parties worked out a compromise agreement, which was embodied in the following writing, signed and acknowledged by all parties on July 11, 1944:

“This stipulation and contract is entered into at Blythevillo, Arkansas, on the 11th day of July, 1944, among Mrs. Annie Meyers, first party; and Max Meyers, Adolph Meyers, Sophia Meyers, Mrs. Goldena Hassell, and Mrs. Hannah Simon, second parties; and witnesseth:

“Mrs. Annie Meyers is the widow of Joe Meyers, deceased. Max Meyers, Adolph Meyers, Sophia Meyers, Goldena Hassell, and Hannah Simon are the children and the sole heirs at law of the said Joe Meyers, deceased. On May 19, 1944, at the request and direction of the second parties herein, W. Leon Smith filed in the office of the Probate Court clerk for the Chickasawba District of Mississippi county, Arkansas, an application for letters of administration upon the estate of Joe Meyers, deceased; and on said date letters of administration were issued to him by the clerk of said court, subject to the approval of the court. At this writing the court has neither approved nor disapproved the action of the clerk in issuing such letters of administration.

“Recently at least two suits have been filed in different courts of Mississippi county, in which Mrs. Annie Meyers was one party and some of the second parties named herein were adverse parties; and unless the parties succeed in compromising and settling their disputes, further litigation among them will unquestionably result. The questions in dispute among the parties hereto involve certain real estate and personal property that is in the possession of Mrs. Annie Meyers in which property the second parties herein claim that they own some interest. All of the parties are desirous of compromising ,and settling their differences, and all of them recognize that such a compromise and settlement is very desirable. The parties do hereby compromise and forever settle all questions in dispute among them upon the following terms and conditions:

“Mrs. Annie Meyers hereby agrees that she will forthwith deposit with, the Farmers Bank & Trust Company in the city of Blytheville, Arkansas, the sum of three thousand ($3,000) dollars, in cash to be held by said bank in trust for herself and second parties herein subject to the provision of a trust agreement of even date herewith, a copy of which will be attached to this stipulation and agreement and become a part hereof.

“In consideration of the agreements made and hereinafter made, Mrs. Annie Meyers hereby binds and oblir gates herself, her heirs, executors, administrators, assigns and successors in title that upon her death the title to the following real property now vested in her shall go to the second parties as tenants in common, owning equal interest with each other; that said property is described as follows:

“Lot one (1) in block three (3) of the Blythe Fourth Addition to the city of Blytheville, Arkansas.

“The west half of lot two and all of lot three in block thirteen (13) of the Chickasawba Addition to the city of Blytheville, Arkansas.

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.W.2d 477, 210 Ark. 714, 1946 Ark. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-meyers-ark-1946.