Walsh v. Walsh

226 S.W. 236, 285 Mo. 181, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 226 S.W. 236 (Walsh v. Walsh) 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
Walsh v. Walsh, 226 S.W. 236, 285 Mo. 181, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 161 (Mo. 1920).

Opinions

Appeal from the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis. This is a suit in equity, filed February 7, 1917, by Julia M. Walsh, widow, and Edward J. Walsh, son, of Edward Walsh, Jr., and his sole heirs, against the above defendants, to recover a certain fund as upon an accounting from Julius S. Walsh, the Mississippi Valley Trust Company and Edward W. Humphreys, arising from the exchange by said Julius S. Walsh of 113 shares of the capital stock of the Mississippi Glass Company, a corporation of Missouri, having a capital stock of $100,000, divided into 1000 shares of the par value of $100 each, for 2833 1/3 shares, of the par value of $100 each, in a New York company of the same name, having a capital of $3,000,000. *Page 192

The charge in the petition is, that of this capital stock, Edward Walsh, Jr., at the time of his death, owned 446 shares and E.W. Humphreys 554 shares, including their share of 54 shares, which stood in the name of other parties and which plaintiffs call treasury stock. That said 113 shares of stock belonged to Edward Walsh, Jr., at the time of his death, which occurred the 30th day of June, 1901. That by fraud and conspiracy between defendants, the Mississippi Valley Trust Company, which was the administrator of the estate of said Edward Walsh, Jr., Julius S. Walsh, who was president of said trust company, and defendant Edward W. Humphreys, said 113 shares of stock were never inventoried nor accounted for by said trust company, as such administrator, but were wrongfully converted to the use of said Julius S. Walsh on or about the 8th day of February, 1902, and were in the year 1904 transferred to said New York company by said Julius S. Walsh in exchange for said 2833 1/3 shares of the capital stock in said New York company, who, since then, has received dividends on said New York stock amounting to $183,438. That all such stock in said New York company, and dividends so received, belong of right to the plaintiffs, but said Julius S. Walsh refuses to account for or pay same to the plaintiffs, but fraudulently persists in converting the same to his own use.

The prayer of the petition is, that the defendants Julius S. Walsh and Edward W. Humphreys and the Mississippi Valley Trust Company be required to make full restitution, and said Vierling, in whose name said stock stands in trust for said Julius S. Walsh and the New York company, be directed to transfer said 2833 1/3 shares to plaintiffs, and if this cannot be done, that plaintiffs have judgment against said Julius S. Walsh, Edward W. Humphreys and the Mississippi Valley Trust Company for the value of the shares of the New York company, which is not less than par, and for all dividends received by said defendants or either of them, together with interest and costs, and for general relief. *Page 193

The separate answers of defendants Julius S. Walsh, Edward W. Humphreys and said trust company denied the allegations of conversion, fraud and conspiracy, and set up that defendant Julius S. Walsh acquired said stock by virture of an oral agreement made between said Edward Walsh, Jr., Edward W. Humphreys and Julius S. Walsh in 1898, by which each of them became the owner of 333 1/3 shares, or one-third, of the capital stock of the Missouri company, which was all the shares owned by said Edward Walsh, Jr., at the time of his death, and which were duly inventoried and accounted for by defendant trust company as administrator. Also, in effect, set up the substantive facts shown in evidence by defendants, and pleaded that plaintiffs were estopped by their laches and lapse of time and defendant administrator's final settlement, as well as barred by the five and ten-year Statutes of Limitations.

The reply denied the new matter of the answers.

The other defendants filed a general denial.

The trial was commenced May 28, 1917, during the April term of said court, before Hon. Vital W. Garesche, Judge, and occupied more than two weeks of the time of the court.

The testimony is very voluminous. It would be wholly impossible to do more than set out a bare outline of its controlling features. The evidence shows that Julius S. Walsh and the deceased, Edward Walsh, Jr., were brothers, born and raised in St. Louis. Defendant Humphreys was their nephew, also born in St. Louis, but removed with his parents, when quite young, to New Jersey; but he and Edward Walsh, Jr., spent a large part of their school days together in the East. That the Mississippi Glass Company of Missouri was originally founded by George D. Humphreys, the brother of Solon Humphreys, who was the father of defendant Edward W. Humphreys. In 1876 said Solon Humphreys and John A. Walsh, a brother of Julius and Edward *Page 194 Walsh, Jr., became the owners of said company, each owning one-half of the stock thereof. That John A. Walsh died about 1882, and under an order of the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis made in his estate, of which Julius S. Walsh was the administrator, and by agreement with Solon Humphreys, Edward Walsh, Jr., and Edward W. Humphreys, in April, 1883, acquired all of the stock in the company in consideration of their paying all of the debts of the company — for all of which, John A. Walsh and said Solon Humphreys were liable as endorsers. It was understood from the beginning, so defendant Edward W. Humphreys testified, that one-half of the capital stock belonged to Edward Walsh, Jr., and the other half to Edward W. Humphreys, although 523 shares stood in the name of Edward W. Humphreys on the certificate book of the company and only 423 shares in the name of Edward Walsh, Jr., up to the time of his death — the remaining shares standing in the names of third parties as collateral security, or to qualify them as directors. The undisputed evidence also shows the loaning of money every few months, from 1891 to 1897, by Julius S. Walsh to Edward Walsh, Jr., and Edward W. Humphreys, for the company, and the taking of their notes therefor for $31,216.50, dated January 1, 1897, and $16,020, dated April 1, 1897, respectively, with an agreement attached to the larger note stating that it was secured by 300 shares of the capital stock of said company, valued at $35,000 and which agreement also gave the said Julius S. Wash an option to purchase said 300 shares of stock "at any time during the continuance of this loan and 30 days after its payment, for the face value of this note and accrued interest, the said option to be exercised in written notification." The $16,020 note was for money which Julius S. Walsh borrowed from the defendant trust company to loan to his brother and Humphreys, and was secured by collateral which Mrs. Humphreys, the mother of Edward W. Humphreys, loaned to them *Page 195 for the purpose. These notes were payable two years after the date. The defendant Edward W. Humphreys further testified that in the fall of 1898, Julius S. Walsh called the attention of both Edward Walsh, Jr., and said Humphreys to the fact that he had been informed by the book-keeper, Edwards, that certain large sums amounting to approximately $200,000 had some years before been placed to the credit of said Edward Walsh, Jr., and E.W. Humphreys, each, on the books of the company, which credits were not justified by the business and profits of the company, although no formal dividends had ever been declared by the company. That up to that time, said Humphreys had drawn cash from the company amounting to about $122,000, leaving him a credit of about $78,000, and said Edward Walsh, Jr., had drawn out about $57,000, leaving to his credit and owing him by the company, according to the books, the sum of $143,000. That Julius S.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W. 236, 285 Mo. 181, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-walsh-mo-1920.