Platt v. Huegel

32 S.W.2d 605, 326 Mo. 776, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 717
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 18, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 32 S.W.2d 605 (Platt v. Huegel) 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
Platt v. Huegel, 32 S.W.2d 605, 326 Mo. 776, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 717 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*781 GANTT, P. J.

Suit by the children of Joseph A. Huegel and the administrator of his estate against the defendant, his second wife, to recover 1246 shares of capital stock of the Central Hotel Company, a corporation. Huegel, the owner, transferred the stock to defendant.

The petition was in one count. Therein it was charged that the transfer was procured by the fraud and undue influence of defendant, and plaintiffs prayed for cancellation of the transfer. At the close of all the evidence, plaintiffs asked leave to amend the petition by adding another count in which they charged that the transfer to defendant was for a particular purpose; that said purpose failed; that she held said stock in trust for the use and benefit of Joseph A. Huegel, his personal representative and heirs-at-law, and prayed that defendant be declared a trustee, holding the stock for the benefit' of the estate of her husband. The court permitted the amendment, and defendant filed general denials to "both counts of the amended petition. Both before and after the amendment, the eóurt made offers to defendant of further time to produce testimony and prepare for trial under the second count. The- offers were declined. She does not assign error on the amendment. However, a statement *782 of the fact of amendment and when made may be necessary to an understanding of questions for consideration.

On submission the court found Mary M. Huegel to be the widow of Joseph A. Huegel; that Joseph A. Huegel during his lifetime was the owner of said stock of the value of $100,000; that the transfer of said stock by Huegel to the defendant was for the purpose of aiding the financing of extensions and additions to the hotel, which were never made; that the plans therefor were abandoned; that the purpose for which said stock was conveyed had failed; that 3245 shares of said stock were transferred to and are held by the defendant as trustee for the use and benefit of Joseph A. Huegel, and that the defendant is the owner of said stock in trust for the use and benefit of the estate of said Huegel.

After so finding, the court decreed that the transfer of said stock by Joseph A. Huegel to Mary M. Huegel was in trust for his use and benefit; that she now holds said stock in trust for the use and benefit of his estate; decreed cancellation of the transfer and vested the title to the stock in Chester A. Platt, Administrator Pendente Lite of the estate of Joseph A. Huegel. Defendant appealed.

The second count proceeds on the theory of an express trust of personal property and the failure of said trust from which a trust results. This is permissible, for a resulting trust may arise from the failure of an express trust. [Sanford v. Van Pelt, 314 Mo. 175, l. c. 203, 282 S. W. 1022; 26 R. C. L. p. 1216.] And “an express trust may be proved not only by express declarations but also by circumstances from which its existence may be inferred, and to this end evidence of the acts and declarations, either oral or written, of the parties, as well as the surrounding circumstances, may be admitted and considered.” [39 Cyc. 80; Faulds v. Dillon (Mich.), 204 N. W. 733, 735; Williamson v. Yager, 34 Am. St. Rep. 216, note.]

On the merits plaintiffs contend the transfer was in trust for the sole purpose of aiding the company to procure a loan to cover the construction of a new hotel building. Defendant contends the transfer was a gift.

An outline of the facts leading to the transfer follows:

The capital stock of the Central Hotel .Company consisted of 3250 shares of paid up stock of the par value of $100 per share, of which Joseph A. Huegel owned 1247 shares. It was a family corporation and the company conducted a hotel at the corner of High and Jefferson streets in Jefferson City, Missouri. On June 1, 1906, bonds were issued by the company in the sum of $40,000, secured by a first mortgage on the east part of the lot on which the building was located. The proceeds of the bonds were used to build an addition to the north end of the building and along Jefferson Street. New furniture and decorations increased the indebtedness. The business *783 prospered and the net earnings were used to reduce the indebtedness. Huegel was then a director of a bank in Jefferson City and had an excellent credit. His first wife died on February 18, 1914, and when he was sixty-five years of age. She left surviving her six adult sons and one adult daughter.

On July 9, 1915, Huegel married the defendant, a widow, thirty-five- years of age. . The business continued as before the marriage and held its own during the war. But against the advice of the company’s bankers, and about the year 1917, a Pagoda Garden was installed in the basement of the building with borrowed money and at a cost of $3500. This was a failure and abandoned. About this time (it does not appear if before or after the installation of the Pagoda Garden) they built an addition to the west side of the building at a cost of $30,000. Money was borrowed for this purpose and additional indebtedness incurred for furniture and decorations. It was this venture that forced Huegel’s resignation as a director of the hank and injured his credit.

Thereafter the indebtedness continued to increase. The company was unable to-pay current expenses and two of the sons advanced money to pay interest. Meantime, and in 1920, prohibition closed the saloon in the hotel, which tended to reduce the earnings. Conferences with creditors, including the bondholders, finally resulted in an issue of bonds in the sum of $110,000, secured by a mortgage on the real estate and personal property of the company. These bonds were used to pay the original bonds and other indebtedness. Thereafter, just when does not appear, Mr. and Mrs. Huegel concluded that a new hotel building was necessary to the success of the business. They fixed $450,000 as the amount needed to pay the bonds and the cost of a new building.

In 1922 Mrs. Huegel asked Mr. Priest, an attorney in St. Louis, to aid them in procuring a loan for this purpose. Priest submitted the matter to' the Van Raalte Investment Company. They informed him that Huegel’s age made the loan undesirable, for the reason he could not procure life insurance as additional security, and for the further reason his age might interfere with a continuity of management. The company suggested that the stock owned by Huegel “be transferred into Mrs. Huegel’s name.” Huegel was so informed. This was the origin of the plan to transfer the stock. The effort to procure the loan from the Van Raalte Investment Company was a failure. Thereafter Mr. and Mrs. Huegel had conferences extending over a period of years with architects presenting plans and specifications for a new building and with persons representing loan companies. Mrs. Huegel during this period was urging a new' building and was active in these conferences. About this time Mr. Huegel came to believe that the local banks were insisting on the payment of his indebtedness to them in an effort to take from him *784 the hotel property. There was no foundation for this belief.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W.2d 605, 326 Mo. 776, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platt-v-huegel-mo-1930.