Mudge v. Mitchell Hutchins & Co.

54 N.E.2d 708, 322 Ill. App. 409, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 758
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 6, 1944
DocketGen. No. 38,549
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 N.E.2d 708 (Mudge v. Mitchell Hutchins & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mudge v. Mitchell Hutchins & Co., 54 N.E.2d 708, 322 Ill. App. 409, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 758 (Ill. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Friend

delivered the opinion of the court.

On September 25, 1931 plaintiffs Bessie S. Mudge, Anna Mudge and Hugh U. Mudge, filed a bill in equity against Mitchell Hutchins and Company, Inc., and the individual defendants who by succession continued the stock brokerage and investment business of the corporation as copartners doing business as Mitchell Hutch-ins and Company, seeking an accounting for the alleged conversion of certain shares of the capital stock of the New York Trust Company which belonged to the estate of their mother, of which they were beneficiaries. After issue was joined, the cause was submitted to the chancellor upon a lengthy stipulation of facts, and a decree was entered dismissing the bill of complaint for want of equity, from which plaintiffs have taken an appeal.

The case was docketed in the Appellate Court for the December term 1935. Thereafter by stipulation of the parties, appellants were granted numerous extensions of time for filing their abstracts and briefs over a period of more than seven years, pending the outcome of certain other litigation in the Federal courts, and in June 1943 after all briefs had been filed, the cause was ordered placed on the oral argument calendar and argued on March 14, 1944.

From the salient stipulated facts it appears that under a trust agreement dated March 4,1920 Arwilda M. Mudge, the mother of plaintiffs, conveyed to her son, Burton M. Mudge, as trustee, certain securities in trust which included two stock certificates aggregating 68 shares of the capital stock of the' Liberty National Bank of New York. Pursuant to a merger, that stock was later exchanged for 68 shares of stock of the New York Trust Company. It is for the alleged conversion of these shares that this suit was filed.

The trust agreement of March 4, 1920 (hereinafter referred to as the first trust) provided that the income should be divided into four equal parts, one of which was to be paid to Mrs. Mudge, the settlor, and the remaining three parts, one each to her sons, Charles, George and Hugh; that upon the death of Mrs. Mudge, the trust was to terminate and the assets were to be turned over to the executor named in her will. She reserved the right to revoke the agreement during her lifetime, and if not terminated or revoked it was to be automatically terminated upon her death. Shortly after her death on March 30, 1927, her son Charles died in Cook county, Illinois, on July 24, 1927, leaving him surviving as his sole heirs the plaintiff Bessie Mudge, his widow, and John Henry Mudge, his minor son. By his will Bessie Mudge was named executrix thereunder, as well as the sole legatee. The estate has been administered and the executrix discharged. Upon oral argument the recent death of Bessie S. Mudge was suggested, and an order was entered that Harriet Long, as executrix, and John Henry Long, her sole heirs at law, should be substituted as parties appellant in lieu of Bessie S. Mudge, deceased. In October 1929 George Paul Mudge, another son of Arwilda Mudge, died in the State of Missouri, leaving him surviving his widow Anna Mudge, one of the plaintiffs herein, and two minor children,' Wallace and Arwilda Mudge. His will was admitted to probate in Jackson county, Missouri, and it appearing that the assets of the estate did not exceed the amount to which the widow was entitled by law, the executor was discharged. Shortly thereafter in March 1930 Wallace, the minor son of George Paul, died, leaving his mother and his sister as the only heirs at law.

On October 22, 1921 Mrs. Mudge-entered into a second trust agreement "with her son Burton Mudge. That agreement made no mention of the first trust, but all the securities deposited under the first agreement, including the 68 shares of the Liberty National Bank stock, were deposited under the second trust. The terms of holding, investment and distribution in the second trust agreement were identical with those contained in the first, but in the second agreement a different successor trustee was named.

It was in March 1921, just prior to the execution of the second trust agreement, that the Liberty National Bank merged with the New York Trust Company, and in due time a certificate for 68 shares of the new stock of the New York Trust Company was issued in the name of ‘ ‘ Burton Mudge as Trustee under trust agreement between Arwilda M. Mudge and Burton Mudge, dated March 4, 1920,” but this certificate was not received by Burton Mudge until some time in November 1921, and in the meantime the second trust agreement of October 22, 1921 had been executed. Upon the receipt of the certificate in November 1921, Burton Mudge, the trustee, did not have it changed into his name as trustee under the second trust agreement, but retained it in his name as trustee under the first trust.

Mrs. Mudge died March 30,1927, and by her will Burton Mudge was named as executor without bond. She left her surviving her four sons. Her will' was admitted to probate in Cook county, Illinois, and Burton Mudge, after qualifying as executor thereof, filed his inventory in the probate court, listing therein all the property which came into his possession as trustee, including the 68 shares of the capital stock of the New York Trust Company. After the death of Charles Mudge, his widow Bessie Mudge raised the question whether Mrs. Mudge had set up a trust under her will or whether the assets of the estate passed under the residuary clause. Burton Mudge as executor thereupon filed a bill in the superior court on November 3, 1928, asking for a construction of the will, and some two years later an agreement was reached between the parties and a decree entered by the court finding that when Mrs. Mudge died, Burton Mudge did not have in his possession or control any part of her estate which had been delivered to him as trustee under the agreement of March 4, 1920, and that Burton Mudge, Hugh Mudge, Bessie Mudge as sole legatee under the last will of her husband Charles, and Anna Mudge as residuary legatee under the last will of George Paul Mudge, were each the owner of one-fourth part of the estate under the residuary clause contained in the will.

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Bluebook (online)
54 N.E.2d 708, 322 Ill. App. 409, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mudge-v-mitchell-hutchins-co-illappct-1944.