St. Louis Trust Co. v. Rudolph

37 S.W. 519, 136 Mo. 169, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 317
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 37 S.W. 519 (St. Louis Trust Co. v. Rudolph) 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
St. Louis Trust Co. v. Rudolph, 37 S.W. 519, 136 Mo. 169, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 317 (Mo. 1896).

Opinion

Maoearlane, J.

The administrator with the will annexed of Wiley Rudolph sues Charles M. Rudolph, a son of deceased, for money loaned during the life of the former. The petition was in eleven counts. The tenth and eleventh counts were dismissed; on six of the remaining counts there were verdicts and judgments [172]*172for defendant. The ninth count was on a duebill given by defendant to deceased. On this count there was a judgment for plaintiff of which! no complaint is made on this appeal. The third count of the petition charges that “on the twenty-first day of August, 1889, said Wiley Budolph lent said defendant the sum of $4,500, which said defendant promised to repay him on demand, with interest from date at the rate of six per cent per annum, that defendant failed to pay,” etc. The answer to this count is a general denial.

On a trial the court sitting as a jury found for plaintiff on the ninth count for $273.83 and on the third count for $2,635 and judgment was rendered against defendant for $2,908.83. Defendant appealed.

On the trial plaintiff introduced a check on a bank of Memphis, Tennessee, for $4,500, dated August 21, 1889, drawn by Wiley Budolph payable to defendant and indorsed by him. It was admitted that the money was paid on this check.

The evidence shows that defendant is the son of Wiley Budolph, deceased, and prior to August, 1889, had been in the employ of the Cunningham Carriage Company of St. Louis at a salary of $200 per month. From letters of defendant, introduced in evidence, it appeared that as early as June 6, 1889, he wished to engage in a more permanent business and had already investigated the affairs of a manufacturing corporation engaged in business at Belleville, Illinois, with a view of buying an interest therein and securing a permanent situation. On that day he wrote his father that he had agreed to purchase $5,000 of the stock of this corporation and requested him to come at once to St. Louis.

On the third of August, 1889, defendant wrote his father stating that the trade had been concluded and asking him to send a check for $5,000 by the fifteenth of that month in order that he might close the matter [173]*173up. On the first of October, 1^89, he wrote from Belle-ville saying that everything was running satisfactorily but he could tell nothing definite about the business for two or three months.

It was shown that a certificate for fifty shares of the stock in said corporation was issued to defendant, which was afterwards indorsed in blank by him. The same shares were sold by deceased to E. W. Wallace in January, 1891, for $1,750 cash, and the assumption of a debt of $700, owing by deceased as surety for the corporation.

A deed from deceased to defendant dated July 12, 1887, conveying to the latter certain real estate was read in evidence by plaintiff. This deed recited that it was made “by way of advance to equal advances heretofore made.”

There can be no dispute, under the evidence, that defendant received from his father the check for $1,500, and that the money was paid to him. But the simple fact of one man putting money into the hands of another does not make the transaction, prima facie, a loan of the amount. Indeed in case a parent turns money over to a child the presumption is that it was intended as an advancement or a gift rather than as a loan. Gerding v. Walter, 29 Mo. 426; Gunn v. Thruston, 130 Mo. 345.

Before plaintiff was therefore entitled to recover it was incumbent on him to introduce evidence tending to prove that the money, received by defendant from his father, was intended as a loan. Defendant insists that this was not done and the controlling question is whether the evidence tended to prove a loan of the money.

At the request of defendant the court gave declarations of law to the effect that the burden was on plaintiff to prove that, at the time Wiley Eudolph [174]*174delivered the cheek to defendant, he intended that the amount should be repaid to him, and that it was not intended by the parties that it should be a gift, or advancement to defendant, or that it should be invested for deceased.

These declarations were as favorable as defendant could consistently ask and if error was committed on this branch of the case it was in submitting any question of fact to the court, and in not declaring, as a matter of law, as requested by defendant, that there was no evidence tending to prove that the money was intended as a loan.

On the third of August defendant wrote from Omaha, Nebraska, to his father, then in Philadelphia, announcing that he had concluded the purchase of fifty shares of the stock and requesting that he send, by the fifteenth of that month, a check or draft for $5,000 with which to make payment. The check for $4,500 was dated August 21, and was indorsed by defendant. In a subsequent letter defendant called the attention of his father to the fact that he had borrowed $500 from a third party to complete the payment. From these facts .the natural inference is drawn that the money was received by defendant to be used in the purchase of the stock.

The stock was purchased and the certificate was issued to defendant, who was made an officer of the corporation. In another letter defendant says that he is receiving $100 per month as compensation for his services, and would also be entitled to the dividends on the stock. From these facts the inference may be drawn that defendant purchased the stock for himself, and not for his father, and that the money was obtained, and used, for that purpose. These facts, however, are not inconsistent with the idea that the money was intended as an advancement or gift. It is [175]*175a well established rule of law that if a parent makes a substantial provision “for his son’s establishment in life, as by setting him up in business or in his profession, the presumption of an advancement arises.” 1 Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law [2 Ed.], 768, and cases cited in note.

The facts established by the evidence, up to and including the purchase of the stock, do not rebut the presumption that the money advanced was intended as a provision for setting defendant up in business. Do the subsequent dealings between the parties tend to prove a different intention ?

The purchase was made between August 21, 1889, and October 1, 1889, for we have a letter from defendant of the latter date which shows that he was then engaged in business as an officer of the corporation. The evidence sheds no further light on the question until some time in January, 1891. At that date we find the certificate of the stock, indorsed by the defendant, in the hands of his father who was claiming its ownership. The evidence shows that previous to that, the date not shown, the father had indorsed the note of the corporation for $700. In January, 1891, deceased sold the stock for $1,750 in cash, the purchaser assuming the payment of the note. Beyond this the evidence gives us no information.

Thus it is shown that the investment was not profitable, and that deceased became the owner of the depreciated stock. When and under what circumstances it came into his hands, and what it was then worth, does not appear from the evidence. The .court from all the evidence found that the money was loaned to defendant and the stock was taken back in part payment thereof.

There was admitted in evidence a letter from deceased addressed to defendant, dated July 27, 1888, [176]

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W. 519, 136 Mo. 169, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-trust-co-v-rudolph-mo-1896.