Cockrell v. First National Bank of Kansas City

211 S.W.2d 475, 357 Mo. 894, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 699
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 12, 1948
DocketNo. 40485.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 211 S.W.2d 475 (Cockrell v. First National Bank of Kansas City) 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
Cockrell v. First National Bank of Kansas City, 211 S.W.2d 475, 357 Mo. 894, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 699 (Mo. 1948).

Opinions

This is a suit wherein plaintiffs ask for a judicial construction of the last will and testament of Thomas L. Cockrell, deceased. Plaintiffs are beneficiaries under the will and defendants are the executors and trustees named in the will and a number of them are also beneficiaries. The trial court entered a decree from which the executors and trustees, but not the beneficiaries, appealed.

First we will describe the parties plaintiffs and defendants. The plaintiffs are Charles C. Cockrell and Francis Marion Cockrell, half-brothers of the testator, and Thomas Marion Cockrell and Ella Etta Cockrell Zierdt, nephew and niece of the testator and children of plaintiff, Francis Marion Cockrell. The defendants named are The First National Bank of Kansas City, Nannie S. House and John J. Cockrell, trustees under the will. John J. Cockrell, also a half-brother of the testator, and M.W. Borders, Jr. were named defendants as they are the executors under the will. Ella M. Cockrell, widow of the testator; John J. Cockrell and Helen Louise Hampton, adopted daughter of John J. Cockrell were named as defendants, the first two being beneficiaries and the last named a contingent beneficiary under the will. The testator and his wife had no children.

The estate, as inventoried, was valued at over $600,000. Among the assets was a paper box factory owned individually by the testator. The trustees were given full power to continue the operation of this factory in the same manner as the testator had been doing. Testator's brothers held key positions in this business, receiving salaries, but they had no financial interest therein. By the will the testator, aside from a few special bequests, devised and bequeathed title to all of his property to the trustees. In addition to giving them full power to operate the box factory he imposed upon them other duties which we will discuss later.

By Article XI, paragraph (a) of the will the testator provided that,

"So long as my said wife, ELLA M. COCKRELL, shall live and shall not remarry, my said Trustees shall pay and distribute to her out of the net income of and from the Trust Estate, the sum of Six Hundred Dollars ($600.00) per month; provided that, if, at any time during the period while such payments are being made to my said wife, ELLA M. COCKRELL, as herein directed, by reason of illness, accident or other misfortune, or if any emergency should arise, or if for any reason whatsoever in the uncontrolled and absolute discretion of my said Trustees further funds should be necessary for the comfortable maintenance and support of my said wife, then my said Trustees are authorized and directed to pay to her, either out of the net income or principal of the Trust Estate and in addition to *Page 899 the provision hereinbefore made for my said wife, such sum or sums as my said Trustees in their absolute and sole opinion shall deem proper, . . ."

Testator also provided that his wife should, so long as she should live and not remarry, have the free use of the residence property; the taxes, repairs, etc., to be paid by the trustees. Paragraph (a) concludes as follows:

"Prior to the death or remarriage of my said wife, ELLA M. COCKRELL, any income [477] from the Trust Estate not distributed to my said wife shall be treated as income, and not as principal, by my said Trustees."

By a codicil the provision of $600 per month was reduced to $500. Also, by the same codicil $150,000 was set aside to be invested in government bonds to be held by the trustees for the sole purpose of insuring the payments to be made to the widow. It was in evidence that at the time of the trial the trustees were paying the widow $20,000 per year in place of the $500 per month. The evidence also disclosed that from March, 1945 to March, 1946, the estate had a net income of approximately $160,000. All parties are agreed that the trustees were empowered by the will to provide for the widow and to increase the monthly payments whenever in their judgment such action was deemed necessary. The question giving rise to this lawsuit is, what are the trustees to do with the surplus net income remaining after payments to the widow have been made?

Plaintiffs contend that it should be distributed among certain persons designated in the will, while the trustees contend that such net income should be retained until the remarriage or death of the widow and then distributed to such named persons. The principal provisions of the will relied on read as follows:

"(b) Upon the death or remarriage of my said wife, ELLA M. COCKRELL, I authorize and direct my said Trustees to pay and distribute the net income from the Trust Estate then accrued or accumulated and then undistributed to the following named persons in the proportions set opposite their respective names, and thereafter I authorize and direct my said Trustees to pay the net income from the Trust Estate not less frequently than quarter-annually to the following named persons in the proportions set opposite their respective names, to-wit:

"JOHN J. COCKRELL 30% GEORGE F. COCKRELL 20% CHARLES C. COCKRELL 20% THOMAS MARION COCKRELL 7½% ELLA ETTA COCKRELL 7½% FRANCIS MARION COCKRELL 15%

In case of the death of GEORGE F. COCKRELL, whether or not he leaves surviving issue, or in case of the death of any of the other *Page 900 foregoing named persons prior to the death of myself or prior to the death or remarriage of my said wife, ELLA M. COCKRELL, or prior to the termination of the Trust herein created without leaving issue, the share or shares of such person or persons in and to the Trust Estate shall be divided among the then survivors of the six (6) persons hereinabove named, and the issue of any of the six (6) persons hereinabove named, who may have theretofore died, with the exception of . . ."

Following this the will provides certain exceptions and also provides:

"In case of the death of any of the six (6) persons above named, with the exception of GEORGE F. COCKRELL, prior to my death or prior to the death or remarriage of my said wife, ELLA M. COCKRELL, or prior to the termination of the Trust herein created, leaving issue, as herein defined, I authorize and direct my said Trustees to make payments and distributions to such surviving issue, share and share alike, per stirpes and not per capita, of the share of the deceased parent of such surviving issue, . . ."

One of the six named in the will as beneficiaries, that is, George F. Cockrell, died after the execution of the will but before the testator's death. Another paragraph in the will, which may have a bearing on the issues presented, reads as follows:

"(1) The `net income' derived from the Trust Estate, or from any part of the Trust Estate, shall be the income left after deducting all charges, disbursements and expenditures authorized hereunder or by law, in connection with the administration of the Trust Estate, or share or portion of the same, provided the Trustees shall have, in their discretion, charged these items to income instead of principal, as hereinabove set out. This is a trust primarily for maintenance, and I direct that the payments from net income derived from the Trust Estate be paid to the beneficiary or beneficiaries beginning from the date of my death."

Plaintiffs relied strongly on the latter portion of this paragraph.

[1] This case was well briefed by appellants and respondents, both as to the [478] law and to the facts. Many cases from this and other states were cited and reviewed. However, there is not much dispute as to the law applicable in the construction of wills.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W.2d 475, 357 Mo. 894, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cockrell-v-first-national-bank-of-kansas-city-mo-1948.