Estate of Bernheimer v. First National Bank

176 S.W.2d 15, 352 Mo. 91, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 539
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 6, 1943
DocketNos. 38602 and 38603.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 176 S.W.2d 15 (Estate of Bernheimer v. First National Bank) 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
Estate of Bernheimer v. First National Bank, 176 S.W.2d 15, 352 Mo. 91, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 539 (Mo. 1943).

Opinions

An action for a declaratory judgment instituted in the circuit court and an appeal from an order of the probate court involved identical problems and were, therefore, consolidated into this single cause. The object of the cause is to construe Bertha C. Bernheimer's will for the purpose of determining which bequest and provision [17] of the will she intended should bear the expense of the federal estate taxes, the state inheritance taxes and the expenses of administration in a sum in excess of $250,000.00, there being no express provision or direction in the will providing for the incidence of such payments in the contingency which has come to pass.

Mrs. Bernheimer was sixty-four years old when she died on December 18, 1937. She was suffering from a recurred cancer of the breast and had not been in good health for some time. Her husband died on September 7, 1937 at the age of seventy-nine years. Mrs. Bernheimer's will was being prepared by her lawyers while she was in the hospital and apparently was executed by her on the day of her husband's death. The property disposed of by her will consisted solely of personal property of the value of $1,296,507.69 composed of the following items: bonds, $1,204,900.15; stocks, $29,248.50; jewelry, $45,770.00; furs, $2,850.00 and cash (which includes the value of her husband's furniture), $14,539.04.

The will consists of an introduction, eleven separate parts and a codicil. We are concerned particularly with but two of the parts, IV and V. The other provisions of the will are of consequence only in so far as they may evince and indicate the testatrix' unexpressed intention with respect to parts IV and V. The introduction describes her family in this language: "the members of my immediate family being my beloved husband, Jerome H. Bernheimer, and my beloved son, Earle J. Bernheimer, — and I having no child or issue of any degree now living, either by blood or adoption, other than the said son." Part I and the codicil, "payable out of stocks and bonds hereinafter mentioned," provided for nine separate cash bequests ranging in amounts from $500.00 to $75,000.00 and totaling $112,500.00. There were gifts of $500.00, $1,000.00 and $2,000.00 to personal employees. There was a gift of $10,000.00 to Congregation B'Nai Jehudah for the *Page 101 upkeep of the I.E. Bernheimer Memorial and Temple B'Nai Jehudah. The $75,000.00 bequest was to the Menorah Hospital Association. Other parts of the will expressly provided that the gifts in part I were to be net — free and clear of all taxes and expenses. Parts II and III contemplated her husband and son both surviving her or the husband alone surviving. The greater portion of part V and parts VI and VII have to do with the trust created by the will. Parts VIII and IX dispose of the trust upon its termination and, under part VIII it goes to the living issue of her son and if her son has no living issue then two-thirds to the Menorah Hospital Association and one-third to the Congregation B'Nai Jehudah. In part XI her son and his partner, George K. Baum, are appointed her executors, however all executors' fees are to be paid the son.

The contingency which has come to pass and the part of the will now to be construed is as follows:

"Part IV.
"If my husband fails to survive me, then in such event allproperty owned by me at my death, of whatsoever kind andwheresoever situate, excepting, however, all stocks and bondsowned by me at my death, I give, devise and bequeath to my son, if he survives me; otherwise (that is, if both my husband and son fail to survive me) to go with my stocks and bonds to become a part of the trust hereinafter recited.

Part V.
Paragraph 1. If my husband fails to survive me but I am survived either by my son or by any issue of my son under forty (40) years of age (or both), all of the above excepted stocksand bonds owned by me, after payment of gifts payable therefrom,I give and bequeath in trust (for the benefit of my son andhis issue) to George K. Baum, The First National Bank of Kansas City, Missouri, and my said son, Earle J. Bernheimer, as Trustees . . .

Paragraph 4(i). Each beneficiary under and during the trust . . . shall be without ability, privilege or power to sell, transfer, assign, pledge, . . . alienate, anticipate or in any manner encumber or affect his beneficial or legal right, . . . in or to any income, principal or asset of the trust; . . .

Part VI.
The above last mentioned trust, . . . shall, if my son survives me, continue so long as my son shall live; . . .

Part VII.
Paragraph 1. During the trust period, all the net income ofthe trust shall be paid monthly so far as practicable and in any event each three (3) months (from date of my death) to myson, if and so long as he shall live, — . . . *Page 102 [18] Paragraph 3. In addition to net income, my son, upon written notice from him to the Trustees, shall during his lifebe entitled to draw and receive out of the corpus of the trust such sums as my son may desire, provided, however, that such payments to my son out of the corpus shall not exceed FifteenThousand Dollars ($15,000.00) in any one year."

As indicated, the contemplated events which have transpired up to now are that Mrs. Bernheimer's husband predeceased her and she is survived by her only son, Earle. Under part IV of his mother's will Earle is to receive "all property owned by me at my death, . . . excepting, however, all stocks and bonds." This bequest to Earle consists of the jewelry, the furs and cash, all of which totals in value $63,159.04. The most valuable single item in this bequest is Mrs. Bernheimer's oriental pearl necklace valued at $23,750.00. In addition under part XI he is to receive the executors' fees. And, under part V he is to receive the income from the trust for life and also has the privilege of withdrawing the sum of $15,000.00 a year from the corpus of the trust. The trustees of the trust under part V are to receive "all the above excepted stocks and bonds" totaling in value $1,234,148.65. Upon the termination of the trust period, Earle's life, (as matters stand at this time) the corpus of the trust will be divided between Menorah Hospital Association and Congregation B'Nai Jehudah. Mrs. Bernheimer's estate has been administered and the executors are ready to pay over the funds in their hands in accordance with the provisions of the will and finally close the estate except for the problems involved in this appeal.

Federal estate taxes in the sum of $93,172.62 and Missouri inheritance taxes in the sum of $42,981.78 were assessed against the estate. In addition there have been expenses of administration in the sum of $53,845.60. The question for determination is which bequests and provisions Mrs. Bernheimer intended should bear these expenses.

Except for the Missouri inheritance tax of $977.52 on the property bequeathed directly to Earle (and that item and its incidence is not now in question) the probate court was of the view that the taxes and expenses in a sum approximating $260,000.00 were to be paid, as between the beneficiaries and parts IV and V of the will, from the stocks and bonds comprising the principal of the trust.

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.W.2d 15, 352 Mo. 91, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-bernheimer-v-first-national-bank-mo-1943.