St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Busch

145 S.W.2d 426, 346 Mo. 1237, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 470
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 11, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 145 S.W.2d 426 (St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Busch) 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 Union Trust Co. v. Busch, 145 S.W.2d 426, 346 Mo. 1237, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 470 (Mo. 1940).

Opinions

This cause is to determine the ownership of 1330 shares of stock in the Manufacturers' Railway Company in St. Louis. The respective claimants are the trustees of the trust estate created *Page 1240 by the will of Adolphus Busch, and a part of the beneficiaries on the one hand, and the August A. Busch estate on the other hand. The trial court found for defendants, that is, that Adolphus Busch gave the stock to his son, August A. Busch, and that it was owned by the August A. Busch estate. Motion for a new trial was overruled, and plaintiffs appealed.

The cause was filed by the St. Louis Union Trust Company and Charles Nagel as trustees of the trust estate, but Mr. Nagel died after the appeal was taken. Adolphus Busch, the alleged donor, died testate October 10, 1913, and August A. Busch, the alleged donee, died testate February 13, 1934. This cause was filed April 24, 1937. It is not necessary to deal with the pleadings or to set out by name those who are appellants and respondents. It is sufficient to say that those who contend that the stock belongs to the trust estate are appellants and all other parties are respondents, and we shall refer to the respective claimants as plaintiffs and defendants.

Plaintiffs, appellants here, contend that the evidence is not sufficient to support a gift inter vivos, and that, in any event, defendants' claim of such gift is barred by limitation, by laches, and by estoppel.

The Manufacturers' Railway Company was organized in 1887, and, in the beginning, was merely a switch track serving the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association. Adolphus Busch, from time to time, furnished money to the railway company, and the son, August A. Busch, devoted much of his time to the development of the railroad, and sometime prior to 1903, August visioned the development of the railroad into a terminal system to serve not only the Busch brewery, but other industries in South St. Louis, and such vision was finally realized, and was largely due to the efforts of August A. Busch. In a letter to his son, August, written in Germany, and dated July 31, 1911, Adolphus, speaking of the railroad, said:

"The cost of our terminal system will be very heavy. We shall have to pay big sums for real estate wherever we branch out; we shall have to have railroad guards on every cross street to avoid accidents and damages. Our general administration will be a costly one, our taxation will be high, and unless we get fair earnings it will be difficult to make the two ends meet. . . . Now, I am really a terminal enthusiast. I mean to say by that that I shall give you my full support in carrying out your railroad scheme, which you have led very intelligently so far and with untiring perseverence. . . . Naturally, Gussie, of that which we get I am going to give you a fair share, to which you are undoubtedly entitled. I want to make you satisfied and happy so your further zeal is animated and not diminished."

At the time the letter was written there were 250 shares of the railroad stock issued. Adolphus held 200 of these, and August held 38, and 12 were held by others. April 8, 1912, the railway company *Page 1241 declared a stock dividend of 1000 shares, and when proportionately distributed, Adolphus held 1000 shares, and August 190. April 30, 1912, the capital stock of the railway company was increased to 10,000 shares, per value of each $100. At that time the company, for money advanced from time to time, owed Adolphus some $900,000, evidenced by promissory notes. It was arranged that 8330 shares of the new stock would be issued to Adolphus for $833,000 credit on the railway company's notes. September 24, 1912, the new stock was issued, but instead of issuing 8330 shares to Adolphus, only 7000 shares were issued to him, and 1330 shares were issued to August. The 7000 shares were evidenced by stock certificate No. 53, and the 1330 shares were evidenced by stock certificate No. 54.

Otto H. Rassfeld, a witness for defendants, testified that he was secretary and treasurer of the Manufacturers' Railway Company from 1895 until 1920, and that after the increase of the capital stock to 10,000 shares, and just prior to a trip to Germany by Adolphus Busch, that Adolphus sent for him, and told him "the manner in which he wanted those 8300 (8330) shares divided. That was, he (Adolphus) was to get 7000 shares and 1330 shares were to be given to his son;" that Adolphus told him (before he, Adolphus, left for Europe) to deliver to August A., certificate No. 54 "With his compliments for his (August's) endeavors and activities in connection with the Manufacturers' Railroad," and that he (Rassfeld) issued certificate No. 54, and delivered it to August A. Busch, and that August A. Busch "signed for it in the stock certificate book."

On the books of the Manufacturers' Railway Company, the 1330 shares, since the date of issue, have been in the name of August A. Busch, and were, until his death, voted by him, or by his proxy, and since his death, have been voted by his executors. No dividend was paid on this stock prior to the death of August A. Busch, and the dividends paid since his death have been deposited by his executors "in a separate bank account and are held subject to the final termination of this litigation."

The offices of both Adolphus and August A. Busch were in the office building at the brewery, on the same floor and directly across a hall from each other, and, prior to the death of Adolphus, August had no safe in his office, and "when documents or papers or things of value came to him at Anheuser-Busch, prior to his father's death, August Busch would invariably ask some one with safe facilities to keep them for him; he frequently made such requests of Miss Berg, Adolphus Busch's secretary." Lilly Busch, widow of Adolphus, Edward A. Faust, a son-in-law, and Charles Nagel, an attorney, were the executors named in the will of Adolphus Busch. Daniel N. Kirby, of Nagel Kirby, counsel for the executors, testified that "Adolphus Busch had one or more safes in his office in the room occupied by him as president of the Anheuser-Busch Brewery Association; *Page 1242 following his (Adolphus') death Mr. Decker (associate counsel) and I had access to them and availed ourselves of that access in examining the contents of the safes in preparing the inventory, and Mr. Decker and I proceeded on the assumption that everything found in that safe belonged to Adolphus Busch; there were stock certificates in either or both of those safes of Adolphus Busch, standing in the name or issued in the name of August A. Busch, and if these certificates were already endorsed by August A. Busch, we assumed that they, being in Adolphus Busch's safe, were part of his estate; if they were not endorsed by August A. Busch, either Mr. Decker or myself had them endorsed by him; in such instances neither Mr. Decker nor I, to my knowledge, ever discussed with August A. Busch whether or not any of the stock represented by those certificates in his name was actually beneficially owned by him."

The Adolphus Busch inventory did not show in whose name any of the railway stock, listed as assets of the estate, stood on the books of the railway company. The executors turned over the railway stock, with various other properties, to the trustees of the trust estate, and the trustees (one of whom was August A. Busch) receipted (May 11, 1914) therefor, but the receipt merely gave the number of shares.

The trust estate "was large in terms of the number of items and the number of different securities," and the trustees employed (1914) George A.H. Mills as manager of the trust estate, and this estate was, for practical purposes, in the possession of Mills until the death of August A. Busch, February 13, 1934.

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Bluebook (online)
145 S.W.2d 426, 346 Mo. 1237, 1940 Mo. LEXIS 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-union-trust-co-v-busch-mo-1940.