Pitts v. Weakley

55 S.W. 1055, 155 Mo. 109, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 235
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 14, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 55 S.W. 1055 (Pitts v. Weakley) 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
Pitts v. Weakley, 55 S.W. 1055, 155 Mo. 109, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 235 (Mo. 1900).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

Plaintiffs and defendant, Susan Weakley, are the children and only heirs at law of Dudley M. Steele, deceased. The object of this suit is to establish by decree a trust in favor of plaintiffs 'and their sister, Mrs. Weakley, in 794 shares of stock which were given to the latter by their father shortly before his death, which oaeurred March 10, 1896.

The petition states that plaintiffs’ father caused the certificate of the stock to be made out in the.name of his daughter, defendant Susan Weakley, in August, 1895, but did not deliver it to her then nor inform her of it but retained it in his possession until March 1, 1896. The act of creating the alleged trust and its terms are thus stated in the petition:

“On or about the 1st day of March, 1896, said Dudley M. Steele, being then aged and infirm, and desiring to make some suitable provision for all his children alike, handed to her, said Susan Weakley, the said certificates of stock, and gave her possession thereof, not for her own use and benefit, but in trust for the use and benefit, of all his children in equal proportions.” The petition also states that at the time, this stock was the only property Dudley M. Steele owned; [112]*112that after receiving the certificate Mrs. Weakley transferred it to her husband without consideration, under his influence and persuasion, in order to avoid the trust, and he now holds it; that defendants Woodson, Lemon and McDonald, as a committee or trustees, have some interest in the stock as collateral for the securityfor certain debts of which th'eplaintiffs are not particularly informed, 'but that these debts are otherwise sufficiently secured. The prayer is that the title to the stock be divested out of Weakley and vested in plaintiffs and Mrs. Weakley in equal proportions, that the old certificates be cancelled and new ones issued to the parties respectively as their interests appear, to be held subject to 'any lawful claim of the defendants Woodsqn, Lemon 'and McDonald.

The answer of defendants was a general denial.

The trial resulted in a decree for the plaintiffs as prayed, from which in due course the defendants have appealed.

In order to properly -appreciate the evidence upon which the respondents rely to prove the terms of a trust as charged in their petition, which evidence consists alone in tbe testimony of witnesses as to the admissions alleged to have been made by Mrs. Weakley after her father's death, it is important that we should weigh it in the light of the circumstances which surround the case. The following is a fair history of the oa'se, taken from appellants’ statement:

“In 1894 the wholesale grocery firm of Steele & Walker and a corporation named the Midland Coffee Company failed, and severally ‘assigned their property for the benefit of their creditors to the defendant Armstrong B. Weakley and one W. W. Wheeler. Mr. Dudley M. Steele seems to have been practically the owner of the corporation as well as of the partnership, and his private fortune 'and credit -being of course involved with ithe latter he made at the same time a personal assignment to the same assignees. These proceedings were all in Buchanan county, Missouri, where Mr. Steele resided and the business was situated. Although the ’amount [113]*113of the property and indebtedness involved in these transactions is not stated in the record, there is enough to- show that it was very large. The formation of the defendant corporation, the stock of which is the subject of this suit, grew out of these assignments under the following circumstances:
“On the 8th day of August, 1894, the creditors of these insolvent concerns......made him a proposition in writing, providing that a corporation be formed under the laws of the State of Missouri of which he should be president with a salary of $5,000 per year. This corporation was to execute its notes-to each of the creditors of the several assignors for an amount to be ascertained by a schedule of percentages set forth in the proposition, divided into three equal amounts, payable in six, twelve and eighteen months, with interest at five per cent per annum. These notes were to be delivered to'the defendants John S. Lemon, S. O. Woodson and R. L. McDonald, constituted a committee on behalf of the creditors, clothed with extraordinary powers over the corporation and its directors and officers, and upon 'the execution and delivery of the notes the indebtedness was to'be assigned to the corporation.
“It was further provided that the corporation should cause 'all its capital stock, with 'the exception of one share to each of its directors, to be placed in the name of some person to be selected by the committee, on the books of the corporation, the ‘certificate to be endorsed and accompanied by irrevocable transfer in blank, and so delivered to the committee, and shall also cause to be delivered to the committee with the certificate, the irrevocable powers, of the proxies of the holders on said books to said committee, authorizing them 'and each of them to vote the stock at all stockholders’, meetings, so long as any of said notes remain unpaid, 'and shall provide by said contract to be made by the corporation that the stock shall be held by 'the committee as collateral for the payment of the notes, and that if default [114]*114be made in the payment of the- notes or any of them, or of the interest thereon, the committee may sell the stock, or so much thereof as may be necessary, at public auction in the city of St. Joseph, Missouri, first giving notice by twenty days’ publication in a newspaper published in the city of St. Joseph, and apply the proceeds to the payment of the notes unpaid and interest pro rata.’
“It was further provided that the committee should continue until all the notes to be given by the corporation should be paid, and that Then the committee shall transfer or cause to be transferred said stock to D. M. Steele or any other person or persons whom he may designate in writing addressed to said committee.’
“This corporation was organized in December, 1894, the entire property of the assigning concerns was turned over to it and it entered upon the performance of the unique object of its existence — the .payment of the debts represented by its notes out of the assigned property, and it was engaged in that business up to the time of the trial.
“Mr. "Weakley was allowed by the court $5,000 for his services as assignee, which he turned over to Mr. Steele to assist him in the liquidation of his indebtedness. He took Mr. Steele’s personal note for this which was never paid, Mr. Steele having nothing to pay it with.
“At the time the assignments were made there was a private banking firm doing business at Bellville, Republic county, Nansas, under the firm name of Davis, Steele & Company, which was placed in the hands of a receiver. Its liabilities were about $50,000 with assets sufficient to pay possibly 50 or 60 per cent.
“About $12,000 of these claims were presented to and allowed by the Missouri assignees, ‘and it was necessary to the acquisition of the assigned property by the corporation that these allowances be otherwise secured. The family homestead was the property of Mrs. Dudley M. Steele, who had [115]*115died between the time of the assignment and the settlement, •and this property had consequently passed tó Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W. 1055, 155 Mo. 109, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitts-v-weakley-mo-1900.