Thompson v. Thompson

210 S.W.2d 545, 307 Ky. 255, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 1034
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 12, 1947
StatusPublished

This text of 210 S.W.2d 545 (Thompson v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Thompson, 210 S.W.2d 545, 307 Ky. 255, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 1034 (Ky. 1947).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

The case has its origin in a petition filed by the widow of Paul E. Thompson, Sr., and guardian of her two children, against Chester O. Thompson, a brother of her deceased husband, and Paul E. Thompson, Jr., her son who had reached his legal majority. It was *256 charged that in 1932 Paul E. Thompson, Sr., transferred to his brother Chester O. Thompson, 9,275 shares of stock in the Hart Manufacturing Company, in trust, to be held after disposition of certain claims against him for the benefit of his wife and children. It was also charged in substance and effect that the defendant, Chester O. Thompson, had mismanaged the trust and failed to properly account for the income; and, further, that upon threat of suit for a settlement he had fraudulently undertaken to transfer the trust to Paul E. Thompson, Jr. The petition prayed that the trust be declared void and one-half of the corpus distributed to the plaintiff, as widow, and one-sixth to each of the plaintiff’s two children. Disclosure, accounting and recovery of certain sums of money were also sought.

The answer admitted the creation of a trust for the stock described, but stated that it was as a pledge to secure repayment of money advanced by Chester O. Thompson to the Hart Manufacturing Company and Paul E. Thompson, Sr., and when that purpose had been satisfied the stock was to be held for the use and benefit of the three children of Paul E. Thompson, Sr., the wife or widow being excluded.

The deposition of Chester O. Thompson was taken as on cross examination and later in his own behalf, as was some other proof. All of it established the trust for the purposes stated in the answer.

Thereafter, in April, 1942, the widow caused an administrator of her deceased husband’s estate to qualify and institute a separate suit. It was alleged that the stock had been pledged to secure Chester O. Thompson against loss, but at the death of Paul E. Thompson, Sr., nothing was owing the "pledgee and that the trust was to be administered and managed as a part of the estate of the decedent. The defendant was charged with having fraudulently imposed upon and misrepresented the transaction to his brother’s widow and children in several specified respects. The alleged attempted transfer of the trust to Paul E. Thompson, Jr., was stated. Judgment for the voidance of the trust, restitution o-f the stock, and accounting and recovery of a total of $255,000 was- prayed.

The material difference in the two suits, which were *257 eventually consolidated and proceeded under the style of the later one, is that the first sought recovery by the widow and two children individually and the other by the estate of the decedent. A motion by the plaintiffs to dismiss the first action, except in so far as it affected the administrator’s suit, was never acted upon.

The background of the transaction is the failure of the National Bank of Kentucky in November, 1930. The receiver of the bank filed an intervening petition and sought to have the stock subjected to the satisfaction of a balance due on a note owed by Paul E. Thompson, Sr.

There is much detail in the evidence, which took .a wide range. It will be seen, however, that the real and ultimate issue is whether the trust after the indemnity purpose had ceased was for the benefit of the three children or was for the widow and three children, for the estate of the decedent is not otherwise concerned.

We leap over other evidence and the deductions from it to say that Paul E. Thompson sought the financial aid of his brother at the time the bank closed. His company was in hard straits. He suffered a stroke which paralyzed his body below the waist two months later. Shortly afterward he agreed to turn over the stock to his brother. He died in January, 1933. Chester O. Thompson assumed the management of the company and it prospered. The widow married in August, 1938. In an effort at harmony, at the request of Paul E. Thompson, Jr., the eldest son, Chester O. Thompson undertook to transfer the trust to him by a formal writing, executed in 1939. Before the determination of this ease, all the stock had been sold under authority of the court and without objection by the plaintiffs. They then sought to recover the proceeds. The statement in appellees’ brief is not challenged that Paul E. Thompson, , Jr., had filed a suit for settlement of his acts as trustee and paid into court cash and securities amounting to $107,234.70 for his sister, and $113,594.39 for his brother.

Disposition may be made, first, of the appeal of the receiver of the National Bank of Kentucky. The court held his claim barred by limitations. It had been asserted more than ten years after the receiver had knowl *258 edge of the transfer of the stock. The ruling would seem to be propór; but whether under conditions which the receiver here contends for made it improper or not, the fact that the trial court and we find that the trust was personal to the three children and not made in defraud of the receiver or anybody else, likewise defeats recovery.

The question is purely one of fact. The legality of the trust per se is- no longer in issue. Citation of cases dealing with fraud and fraudulent transactions-are not necessary. The vehemence which the appellants add to their efforts to bring the case within a class where-vicious fraud was found to exist, under the application, of several cases, has no place here. On the contrary, the record reveals great benefaction throughout. To-, review the volume of testimony in detail is likewise unnecessary. The essential and most material and significant are enough.

The story is that Paul E. Thompson, Sr., started out with the Hart Manufacturing Company as a clerk without capital. In the course of time he acquired ownership of the controlling interest in the company and became its president. "When the National Bank of Kentucky was closed November 17, 1930, the company owed, it $147,000, directly or as endorser of discounted paper. A substantial sum of bonds of the company were also-outstanding. Thompson personally owed the bank a. note of about $17,000 for stock he had purchased in. Banco Kentucky. Chester O. Thompson was a man of means, living in Chattanooga. . Much disturbed, Paul called his brother and told him of his financial trouble and his inability to obtain help from other banks. At his request his brother agreed to stand by him. He-advanced $15,000 in February, 1931, and considerable sums from time to time thereafter. After Paul E. Thompson suffered the paralytic stroke, he continued to supervise the affairs of his company from his horneas best he could. This was in the midst of the financial depression of that era, and the business of the company had become very poor. Chester O. Thompson conducted a money lending company under the name of Chattanooga Finance Company. He owned five-sixths and a, sister one-sixth in the firm. The advancements and. *259 loans were made by that company. During 1931, they amounted to as much as $40,000. Paul E. Thompson was personal surety or guarantor.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 S.W.2d 545, 307 Ky. 255, 1947 Ky. LEXIS 1034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-thompson-kyctapphigh-1947.