Zorensky v. Wellston Clothing Co.

223 S.W.2d 851, 1949 Mo. App. LEXIS 493
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 18, 1949
DocketNo. 27704.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 223 S.W.2d 851 (Zorensky v. Wellston Clothing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zorensky v. Wellston Clothing Co., 223 S.W.2d 851, 1949 Mo. App. LEXIS 493 (Mo. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinions

[1] This is a proceeding to determine the ownership of certain shares of corporate stock as between plaintiff, Morris Zorensky, and his sister, defendant Mollie Morrison. From a judgment and decree in plaintiff's favor, defendant Mollie Morrison has duly perfected her appeal to this court.

[2] The question at issue is primarily one of fact.

[3] The central figure in the controversy is one Louis Zorensky, who died in August, 1945.

[4] Originally Louis Zorensky had been engaged in the men's retail clothing business at 2600 Franklin Avenue, in the City of St. Louis, in partnership with his brother, Hyman Zorensky, under the name of Zorensky Brothers.

[5] In 1927 or thereabouts one Louis Morrison married Mollie Zorensky, the sister of Louis and Hyman, and about a year later went to work for the two brothers at the Franklin Avenue address.

[6] In 1935 Louis and Hyman dissolved their partnership, following which Louis went into business alone at 5964 Easton Avenue, in the City of St. Louis. However he still carried on his business under the name of Zorensky Brothers, and his brother-in-law, Louis Morrison, went along with him and continued in his employ at the new location.

[7] So things remained until April, 1940, when Louis Zorensky had his business incorporated under the name of Wellston Clothing Company, with a paid-up capital stock of $22,200 represented by 222 shares of a par value of $100 each. The sum of $22,200 comprised the value of the assets of the business that Louis Zorensky had conducted at the premises since 1935. The persons acting as incorporators were Louis Zorensky, Morris Zorensky, and Louis Morrison. Certificate No. 1 for 144 shares was issued to Louis Zorensky, and Certificate No. 3 for 14 shares was issued to Louis Morrison in payment of a bonus of $1,400 due him at the time of the incorporation of *Page 853 the company. Certificate No. 2 for the remaining 64 shares was issued in the name of plaintiff, Morris Zorensky; and it is such block of stock that is the subject matter of the present controversy, with Morris Zorensky contending that he was at all times the owner of the stock as the certificate indicated on its face, and with Mollie Morrison insisting that she was the actual owner of the stock, and that the certificate had been issued in the name of Morris Zorensky as straw party or trustee for her. The details of the incorporation were handled by Mr. Sam Kessler, an accountant and member of the local bar, who has since represented the company as its attorney.

[8] In February, 1943, Louis Zorensky transferred 15 of his shares of stock to Louis Morrison, and the following year he transferred 25 shares to Mollie Morrison, leaving him owning 104 shares at the time of his death in August, 1945. Thereafter both Morris Zorensky and Mollie Morrison sought to purchase the stock belonging to the estate of Louis Zorensky; and on October 2, 1945, pursuant to authority obtained from the probate court, such 104 shares were sold to Mollie Morrison for $9,000 by Gussie Zorensky, the widow of Louis Zorensky, and the administratrix of his estate.

[9] At the time of the incorporation of the company all of the stock certificates were turned over to Kessler for safekeeping in his safe deposit box. The company, it seems, had no safe deposit box of its own. During the period of the operation of the company it was the practice for Kessler to write up the minutes, whereupon Morrison, as secretary of the company, would take the minutes to Morris Zorensky's place of business to obtain Morris' signature. Morris Zorensky had no actual part in the business of the company, but was engaged with his wife, Fannie Zorensky, in the operation of a cigar store at Ninth and St. Charles Streets in downtown St. Louis. At some time during this period Morris Zorensky's blank indorsement was placed on the back of Certificate No. 2, and the certificate then returned to Kessler's office. There seems to be no question that the signature was actually that of Morris Zorensky, although he denied any knowledge of such indorsement, and disclaimed any intention to have indorsed the certificate. On October 5, 1945, two months after Louis Zorensky's death, the three then stockholders, Mollie Morrison, Louis Morrison, and Morris Zorensky, met in Kessler's office in regard to the affairs of the company. Also present were Mr. Morris Shenker, an attorney, who represented Morris Zorensky, and Kessler, who was acting on behalf of the Morrisons. In the course of the meeting Certificate No. 2 was turned over by Kessler to Morris Zorensky, who later, upon Shenker's advice erased what purported to be his blank indorsement upon it.

[10] So far we have only stated the facts about which there is no dispute. Matters in controversy are reserved for a subsequent portion of the opinion where it will be necessary to weigh conflicting claims in arriving at the ultimate decision in the case.

[11] On July 16, 1946, Morris Zorensky instituted this proceeding by filing a petition in which, after setting out the issuance of Certificate No. 2 in his name and his election as a director of the company, he alleged that the defendants, Wellston Clothing Company, Mollie Morrison, and Louis Morrison, were claiming that the equitable ownership of the 64 shares of stock represented by such certificate was in Mollie Morrison, and were refusing to recognize him as an actual stockholder or to permit him to participate in the affairs of the company. He further alleged that such action on the part of the defendants was not only preventing him from exercising and enjoying his rights and privileges as the owner of the stock, but was also casting a cloud upon his title, all to his irreparable injury, for which he had no adequate remedy at law. His prayer was that the court adjudge and decree that full legal and equitable title to the 64 shares of stock was vested in him free and clear of the claims of defendants, and that the court enjoin the individual defendants from refusing to permit him to exercise all of his rights and privileges as the owner of such 64 shares of stock in the defendant corporation. *Page 854

[12] In their answer, defendants admitted that Morris Zorensky had at all times been shown of record to be the owner of the 64 shares of stock, but denied that he had ever been the actual or beneficial owner of the same, and alleged instead that Mollie Morrison was the true owner.

[13] Further answering, and by way of what she denominated her individual counter-claim, defendant Mollie Morrison alleged that she had at all times been the actual and beneficial owner of the stock; that the shares had been placed of record in the name of Morris Zorensky merely as a matter of convenience and accommodation; that at the time of the issuance of the stock, Certificate No. 2, which had been issued in the name of Morris Zorensky, had been immediately indorsed by him in blank and its possession surrendered; that on October 5, 1945, by fraudulently representing that he was purchasing said shares of stock, Morris Zorensky had obtained possession of Certificate No. 2, and had since refused to surrender possession of the same; and that Morris Zorensky's possession of the certificate cast a cloud on her title and made it impossible for her to have the company issue a certificate for said shares in her own name. Wherefore Mollie Morrison prayed that the court adjudge and decree that full legal and equitable title to the 64 shares of stock was vested in her free and clear of any claim on the part of Morris Zorensky, and that the court issue an order directing Morris Zorensky to surrender possession of the certificate to her.

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W.2d 851, 1949 Mo. App. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zorensky-v-wellston-clothing-co-moctapp-1949.