Missouri Wesleyan College v. Shulte

142 S.W.2d 644, 346 Mo. 628, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 441
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 16, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 142 S.W.2d 644 (Missouri Wesleyan College v. Shulte) 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
Missouri Wesleyan College v. Shulte, 142 S.W.2d 644, 346 Mo. 628, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 441 (Mo. 1940).

Opinions

This cause was commenced in the Probate Court of Holt County, and is based on a claim of Missouri Wesleyan College, *Page 631 in the principal sum of $10,000, against the estate of Adda Bruntmyer, deceased. Claimant appealed to the circuit court from the finding and judgment of the probate court, and in the circuit court, at trial without a jury, the claim was allowed in full, plus interest, and from the judgment entered the executor of the estate appealed. Hereinafter we refer to the claimant as plaintiff and to the executor as defendant.

Plaintiff has filed motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that defendant's abstract does not comply with our Rule 13 in that (as claimed) it does not "set forth a copy of so much of the record as is necessary to be consulted in the disposition of the assigned errors." We do not think that the abstract offends sufficiently against Rule 13 to justify dismissal of the appeal, hence the motion is overruled.

Defendant makes eleven separate assignments, but all are, in effect, embraced in the assignment on the refusal of a demurrer to the evidence at the close of the case.

Missouri Wesleyan College, prior to its closing (May 5, 1930), was located at Cameron, Missouri, Clinton County, and offered and gave a four years college course from 1897 to 1926, and a two years college course from 1926 until it closed. A campaign, ending midnight May 9, 1918, was put on to raise money for the college, and during that campaign, and on April 15, 1918, Fred and Adda Bruntmyer (husband and wife) signed the instrument upon which this cause is based, which instrument is as follows:

"Missouri Wesleyan College Board of Education $435,000 15,000 Estate Pledge April 15, 1918

Missouri Conference Educational-Jubilee Campaign."
"In consideration of my interest in Christian education and in consideration of others subscribing, for the purpose of providing one-half million productive endowment, and paying all indebtedness in behalf of Missouri Wesleyan College, located at Cameron, Missouri, and for the general work of the Board of Education of the Methodist Episcopal Church, as herein specified, I hereby subscribe and will pay to the trustees of Missouri Wesleyan College of Cameron, Missouri, ten thousand dollars ($10,000.00), which sum shall become due one day after the decease of the last survivor and shall be payable out of their estate, the same being subscribed under the following further terms and conditions, namely:

"1. This subscription shall become binding and a bona fide obligation when the total asking of $450,000, including all amounts subscribed, since April 1, 1916, shall have been secured by midnight of May 9, 1918. Official findings of executive committee (of the college) shall be final.

"2. Each of the above institutions in interest shall share pro *Page 632 rata as cash is received from subscriptions secured on a basis of 95.7% and 4.3%.

"Fred Bruntmyer "Mrs. Adda Bruntmyer."

Fred Bruntmyer died December 26, 1933; Adda died July 23, 1934, and demand was filed in the probate court November 8, 1934.

Defendant relies on three propositions: (1) That plaintiff cannot maintain this cause; (2) that there was a total failure of consideration; and (3) that Adda Bruntmyer, prior to her death, revoked the subscription. The first proposition is based on three separate contentions: (1) That the subscription instrument is made payable to the trustees, and for that reason the college, under its corporate name, cannot prosecute the cause; (2) that prior to commencing the cause, plaintiff was merged with Baker University, Baldwin, Kansas, and that whatever interest plaintiff had in the subscription instrument passed to Baker University; and (3) that plaintiff and the Board of Education of the Methodist Episcopal Church (hereinafter referred to as the Board of Education) are to share pro rata in the subscription, and that, such being so, plaintiff, in no event, can, alone, maintain this case.

[1] Plaintiff is a corporation, and "a conveyance to the trustees of a corporation without naming them vests title in the corporation." [14A C.J., p. 519, sec. 2410; North St. Louis Christian Church v. McGowan et al., 62 Mo. 279; Keith Perry Coal Co. v. Bingham, 97 Mo. 196, l.c. 211, 10 S.W. 32.] The North St. Louis Christian Church case was an action by an incorporated church to recover from a bank, and was based on a deposit made by the treasurer of the church. A minority of the congregation claimed to be the original church and owner of the fund and interpleader. In that case it is said [62 Mo. l.c. 288]:

"It has been contended, that the corporation cannot maintain this action in its own name, and that if it is maintainable at all, it should have been brought in the name of the trustees. But this argument is founded upon an obvious error. Religious incorporations are aggregate corporations, and whatever property they possess or acquire is vested in the body corporate. It is true the officers have it under their control or dominion, but their possession is the possession of the artificial person whose agents they are. Although called trustees, they do not hold the property in trust. Their right to intermeddle with or manage the property is an authority, and not an estate or title. They have no other or greater possession than the directors of a bank in a banking establishment. The whole title or estate is vested in the incorporated body, and the corporation is the proper party to sue."

In the Keith Perry Coal Company case (97 Mo. l.c. 211, 10 S.W. 32), the court said: "It is also insisted that, although the church *Page 633 had become a separate body when Moore executed his deed conveying the lot in dispute to `The Trustees of the First Baptist Church of Kansas City, Missouri,' said deed was ineffectual to vest the title of the lot in the corporation. In support of this contention, we have been cited to a line of cases which hold that when a conveyance is made to certain named persons as trustees of a corporate body that the effect of such conveyance is to vest title in them as trustees, but that is not this case. Here the conveyance is made to the trustees, etc., without naming them or any of them, and in such case the title vests in the corporation named in the deed."

Plaintiff college was conducted by a board of trustees who were appointed by the Missouri Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, which was also a corporate entity. And whatever business affairs plaintiff has had, before and since it ceased to operate as a college, have been conducted by its board of trustees. We do not think that the mere fact that the instrument, here concerned, is made payable to the trustees, precludes plaintiff from prosecuting the cause in its corporate name.

[2] Does the merger of plaintiff with Baker University preclude the prosecution of this cause by plaintiff? Defendant relies upon Sec. 698, R.S. 1929, Ann. Stat., p. 900, which section provides that "every action shall be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest," except actions by administrators, executors, and trustees of an express trust as provided in Sec. 699, R.S. 1929.

Plaintiff contends that the Bruntmyer subscription "is not and never was" transferred to Baker University, but says that even though the beneficial interest therein was transferred by the merger, plaintiff nevertheless, under the facts, can prosecute the cause, citing, in support of this contention, 8 C.J., p. 829; Nicolay v.

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W.2d 644, 346 Mo. 628, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-wesleyan-college-v-shulte-mo-1940.