Estey v. Commerce Trust Co.

64 S.W.2d 608, 333 Mo. 977, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 670
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 19, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 608 (Estey v. Commerce Trust Co.) 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
Estey v. Commerce Trust Co., 64 S.W.2d 608, 333 Mo. 977, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 670 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed at May Term. 1933, August 24, 1933; motion for rehearing filed; motion overruled at September Term, October 19, 1933. This is a suit to construe the will of James W. Weed, deceased, and more particularly to determine whether the income derived from the residuary estate during the time the estate was in the process of administration by the executor in the Probate Court of Jackson County, Missouri, should be paid to the life tenants for their support and maintenance or become part of the residuary estate, the income of which goes to the life tenants. The life tenants are the plaintiffs here and the Commerce Trust Company, who is both executor of the will and trustee of the residuary estate, is defendant, *Page 980 joined with certain persons who are interested in the remainder. When we speak of defendant, we mean Commerce Trust Company.

James W. Weed, whose will and estate gives rise to this controversy, died testate in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, on July 28, 1927, leaving an estate, mostly personal, of the approximate value of $138,000. The testator by his will, duly admitted to probate soon after his death, provided that his debts and funeral expenses be paid by his executor, made a few specific legacies of little value and as to which there is no controversy, and then disposed of practically his entire estate by this clause:

"Fifth. All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, whatsoever, real, personal and mixed, wherever situate and in whosesoever possession the same may be found, and whether the same be a present, future or contingent estate, I give, devise and bequeath to the Commerce Trust Company, a corporation of Kansas City, Missouri, to be by it held in trust with full power and authority." (Such power and authority being set forth in the clauses which follow.)

Large and almost unlimited authority is given to the trustee in handling the estate, retaining any property or securities owned by testator at his death, selling, conveying, loaning, investing and reinvesting the property of the estate, selling and purchasing bonds, notes and securities, etc., including these clauses:

"(g) To collect, receive and receipt for any and all income that may be derived from the property placed under the terms hereof or from the investment or reinvestment of the proceeds thereof, and to pay out of said income before any distribution, or out of the principal, if at any time it be necessary, all taxes and costs of administration, including reasonable compensation to the trustee for its services, and all costs and expenses, which in the discretion of the trustee may be necessary and/or advisable to incur for the preservation, maintenance and protection of the trust property. . . .

"(j) To make division or distribution of the trust estate as and when it is required under the provisions of this will, in kind — that is to say — in real estate, stocks, bonds, mortgages or other securities belonging to the trust estate, and such property so distributed shall be at such valuations as the trustee may establish therefor."

As to the disposition to be made of the income derived from the trust estate and the corpus of such estate on the termination of the trust, the will provides:

"Sixth. The income derived from the trust estate, together with the principal or corpus thereof, shall be held, handled, used, divided and distributed by the trustee as follows, to-wit:

"(a) The net income derived from my three houses, located at 3128, 3134 and 3136 Chelsea Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri, or from the proceeds of the sale of said houses, if the trustee shall sell one or *Page 981 more of said houses, shall be paid by the trustee to my daughter, Helen S. Estey, so long as she shall live, or should my said daughter desire to use any one of said houses as a home, she shall have the right to do so, and said trustee shall not sell said house used by her as a home so long as she chooses to use it as a home. Upon the death of my said daughter, the income from said houses shall be held, handled, used, divided, and distributed as hereinafter provided for the distribution of the remaining income from this trust estate.

"(b) The remainder of the income derived from the trust estate shall be divided into three equal parts; one of said parts shall be paid over and delivered to my daughter, Blanche McLaughlin, who now lives in Rupert, Idaho; one part shall be paid over and delivered to my daughter, Helen S. Estey, of Kansas City, Missouri; and one part shall be paid over and delivered to my daughter-in-law, Rena Weed, of Lawrence, Kansas." (Note: It is this clause of the will especially which gives rise to this controversy and which the court is called on to construe.)

The remaining portions of this provision of the will provide for the disposition of the income in case of the death of any one or more of these three life tenants, to the general effect that same shall be used to support and educate the children and lineal descendants of each, and the final distribution of the trust estate to be made to the lineal descendants of such life tenants when all three of the life tenants are dead and all their children are of the age of twenty-one. We are not attempting to state these provisions in detail or perhaps accurately, except when quoted, as they are not in controversy. The will then nominates and appoints the defendant Commerce Trust Company executor of the estate.

The record shows that the executor named qualified as such in the probate court, administered the estate and made final settlement of its administration on June 26, 1929, approximately twenty-two months after taking charge of the estate as executor. The executor then, in form at least, delivered the residue of the estate to itself as trustee, although the testator by his will gives, devises and bequeathes the rest, residue and remainder of the estate, other than the specific legacies, to the same person as trustee as is named executor, and the Commerce Trust Company was acting both as trustee and executor of the will during this period of administration.

All the facts of the case were agreed upon at the trial and no evidence was introduced otherwise by either party. The trial court made a formal finding of the facts, as agreed upon by the parties, to the effect that at the time the will was executed the three persons named as life tenants of the income of the estate bequeathed to the defendant as trustee, Helen S. Estey and Blanche McLaughlin, daughters of the testator, and Rena Weed, his daughter-in-law, were in indigent circumstances and largely dependent on the testator *Page 982 for the support of themselves and their children, two of them being then widows and one in ill health; that the testator for several years had extended financial assistance to them and was at all times concerned in their welfare.

The court further found that during the year immediately following the death of the testator there accrued as income from the trust estate the sum of $3800.55 and that under the law said income belonged to and was the property of the life tenants, Helen S. Estey, Rena Weed and Blanche McLaughlin; that during the remaining period of the administration there accrued as income on said trust estate the further sum of $3759.33 and that all of said income, together with interest at six per cent per annum, became the property of and belonged to said life tenants, and that plaintiffs were entitled to recover of and from the defendants, the executor and residuary legatees the sum of $7559.88, which, with interest, at the time the case was tried, amounted to $8566.68.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 608, 333 Mo. 977, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estey-v-commerce-trust-co-mo-1933.