Trotter v. Minnis

136 S.W.2d 463, 199 Ark. 924, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1940
Docket4-5741
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 136 S.W.2d 463 (Trotter v. Minnis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trotter v. Minnis, 136 S.W.2d 463, 199 Ark. 924, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 43 (Ark. 1940).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This is a suit between the administrators, with the wills annexed, of the estates of Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Trotter, who were husband and wife, and involves a number of transactions between this married couple. Mr. Trotter owned at the time of his death property worth not less than $66,000, its inventory value, and Mrs. Trotter owned property of much smaller value. They had been married more than fifty years when Mrs. Trotter died July 10, 1936. No child had ever been born to them. There was no testimony to the effect that there had ever been any discord between them; indeed, the testimony is to the contrary, and is to the further effect that Mrs. Trotter,' by her frugality and industry, assisted her husband in the accumulation of his estate, Mr. Trotter inherited an estate worth $25,000, hut the remainder of his estate was accumulated during his married life. Mr. Trotter. became the president of the Standard Grocer Company, a wholesale grocery concern having its place of business in Stuttgart, Arkansas, and was the principal owner of its stock. Fletcher Minnis, a nephew of Mrs. Trotter, was a stockholder and employee of the grocery company, and his father was also a stockholder. Fletcher Minnis’ father was the associate of Mr. Trotter in another business operated under the name of Trotter & Minnis, which firm appears to have carried its account with a hank in Clarendon.

The grocer company, of which Mr. Trotter was president, borrowed the sum of $11,000 from the First State Bank of Stuttgart, and this note was indorsed by Trotter, Minnis, Sr., and another stockholder , of the grocery company. By payments thereon the note was reduced to $9,000, at which time the bank closed its doors. The note had been acquired by the Beconstruction Finance Corporation, and was sold, along with other assets of the bank, to Mr. T. J. Gay, who was represented in the transaction by J. B. Crowe.

Payment of the note was demanded by Crowe for Gay, and this case finds its inception in the transactions eventuating in its payment. Negotiations for the settlement of this note were conducted between Fletcher Minnis and Crowe. Minnis represented to Crowe, apparently with Trotter’s authority, that Trotter could and would pay the note if given some time by borrowing from his (Trotter’s) relatives, provided the note was discounted. Crowe agreed to accept $6,200 in payment of the note, and that sum was paid Crowe in full satisfaction of the note.

Mrs. Trotter, at the time, had a comparatively small savings account with the Peoples Bank of Stuttgart, which she carried in her own name. One of the questions of fact which will later be discussed was whether this accotmt was a joint account owned by Mrs. Trotter and her husband, or was owned by her individually.

Trotter had a personal account in excess of $1,000, and the grocer company had its own bank account, the amount thereof not being shown; but these two accounts combined were not sufficient to pay the grocer company. note owned by Gay. Trotter began calling in contain loans due him personally, and made deposits at the Peoples Bank until his balance there totaled $3,119. Additional' collections subsequently made by Trotter increased his cash assets to $14,509. He deposited $4,000 of this money with a bank in Carrolton, Missouri, operated by a relative of his. When his account reached the sum of $3,119 at the Peoples Bank, Trotter closed the account by checking out his entire balance. Just what lie did with this money and where he kept it is not clear, except that he deposited some cash in a safety box. It is obvious that Trotter was attempting to conceal it. He admitted as much, and explained that he did not want-Gay to know that he had this money lest it would be seized under a writ of garnishment and the negotiations for a discount of the Gay note would terminate.

Mrs. Trotter died testate. She named her nephew, Fletcher Minnis, as executor of the will, and devised to him her entire estate. Minnis filed an inventory of the estate, and listed certain shares of corporate stock. The inventory did not include Mrs. Trotter’s bank balance. He listed as debts of Mrs. Trotter two notes, one for the sum of $648.67, payable to the order of Mr. Trotter. The other note was for $250, and was payable to the order of Trotter & Minnis. This Minnis, as has been said, was the business associate of Trotter and the father of Fletcher Minnis.

An estrangement between Mr. Trotter and Fletcher Minnis arose over a trivial matter having no relation to their business affairs, which became permanent and acute. On October 16, 1936, three months after the death of his wife, Mr. Trotter filed suit against Minnis for the recovery of the corporate stocks which had been inventoried as the property of Mrs. Trotter, and on March 25, 1937, Minnis filed suit against Trotter for the sum of $5,000 alleged to have been loaned Mr. Trotter by his wife, and for the sum of $431.82 alleged to have been wrongfully withdrawn by Trotter from his wife’s bank account after her death.

We return to a consideration of this alleged $5,000 loan. After Fletcher Minnis had obtained a discount of the Gay note, reducing it to $6,200, there was deposited on May 24, 1934, to the credit of Mrs. Trotter’s account the sum of $5,000. This deposit consisted of $1,000 in cash and St. Louis exchange to the order of Mr. Trotter for $4,000 drawn by the bank of Carrolton, Missouri, where as has been stated, Mr. Trotter had previously deposited $4,000.

It is not disputed that all of this $5,000 belonged to Mr. Trotter and was his personal money. This deposit was not sufficient to pay the note, but a check had been drawn' by Minnis, Sr., against the account of Trotter & Minnis with the Clarendon bank in favor of Mr. Trotter for $1,200, and that check -was deposited to the personal account of Mr. Trotter with the Peoples Bank. These two deposits sufficed and were used by Trotter in payment of the Gay note. Trotter personally had no other obligation, and upon paying it,-he took a mortgage upon property owned by the grocer company, whose note he had indorsed and paid in the manner stated, to indemnify him for the payment of the note upon which his personal liability was that of an indorser. In paying this note Mr. Trotter used the check of his wife for $5,000 drawn by her in his favor against her account with the Peoples Bank. The insistence is that Trotter, in making the original deposit to his wife’s account of the $5,000, as herein stated, gave her that money, and that her check to his order for the same amount constituted a loan thereof to him.

It is conceded that upon making this $5,000 deposit by Mr. Trotter in the name of his wife, a presumption arose that he had given her that money. But that presumption is not conclusive, and may be shown to be untrue. Kline v. Ragland, 47 Ark. 111, 14 S. W. 474; Hannaford v. Dowdle, 75 Ark. 127, 86 S. W. 818; Della v. Della, 98 Ark. 540, 136 S. W. 927; Johnson v. Johnson, 115 Ark. 416, 171 S. W. 475; Gilbert v. Gilbert, 180 Ark. 596, 22 S. W. 2d 32; Wasson v. Dillard, 189 Ark. 546, 74 S. W. 2d 637.

We think the testimony rebuts the presumption of a gift, notwithstanding the fact that three witnesses testified that pending the negotiations for the discount of the Gay note, Mr. Trotter had stated that he would borrow the money from a relative with which to pay the note.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W.2d 463, 199 Ark. 924, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trotter-v-minnis-ark-1940.