Fairleigh v. Fidelity National Bank & Trust Co.

73 S.W.2d 248, 335 Mo. 360, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 413
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 12, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 248 (Fairleigh v. Fidelity National Bank & 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
Fairleigh v. Fidelity National Bank & Trust Co., 73 S.W.2d 248, 335 Mo. 360, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 413 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed at September Term, 1933, April 19, 1934; motion for rehearing filed; motion overruled at May Term, June 12, 1934. This is a suit in equity brought by the beneficiary in a testamentary trust against the trustee. Plaintiff, Emily K. Fairleigh, is a daughter of Richard H. Keith, deceased. It is alleged that by his will Richard H. Keith "bequeathed and conveyed" a certain share in his estate in trust to the defendant as trustee and directed that such part of his estate "be invested by defendant as sole trustee in safe securities and the income thereof be paid at convenient periods to the said Emily K. Fairleigh;" that on or about July 8, 1913, and as a part of said trust estate, defendant as such trustee received certain shares of stock of the Central Coal Coke Company; that said shares of stock "were not at any time on or after July 8, 1913, safe securities, and defendant instead of selling said stock and reinvesting the proceeds thereof in safe securities, as it was the duty of said trustee to do . . . has kept and is keeping said stock on hand in total disregard of its obligation as trustee and the market value of said stock after July 8, 1913, has greatly depreciated and the income therefrom . . . has not equaled the income which would have been derived from safe securities if said stock had been sold and the proceeds invested has not equaled the income which would have been derived form in safe securities." The prayer of the bill is that "defendant be required to dispose of" said shares of stock "to the best advantage . . . account for depreciation in value of the principal and loss *Page 363 of income . . . and that so much of the proceeds of the sale and recovery . . . as may be principal be invested in safe securities . . . and so much thereof as may be income be ordered paid to the plaintiff Emily K. Fairleigh." The answer is that defendant "did at all times fully perform its duties and obligations as Trustee under the will . . . and at all times acted in strict conformity to the terms thereof" and further that in continuing to hold said shares of stock it acted "at the special instance and request of the plaintiff, Emily K. Fairleigh; that said plaintiff fully acquiesced therein and is estopped to complain thereof."

The testator was a resident of Jackson County. Defendant at all times located at Kansas City, Missouri, was originally incorporated as The Fidelity Trust Company under the laws of this State relating to trust companies but at a later time, not shown by the evidence, was converted into a National Bank, under the acts of Congress, but qualified, and with the right, to act as trustee under the laws of this State. We shall hereinafter frequently refer to defendant merely as the trust company. The cause was tried in the Circuit Court of Jackson County. The finding and judgment of the chancellor was for defendant and plaintiffs appeal.

Richard H. Keith entered the coal business in 1871; later a partnership composed of Richard H. Keith and W.C. Perry was formed, the firm name being Keith Perry. In 1893 the partnership business was incorporated under the name of Central Coal Coke Company. Keith was the first president of the Central Coal Coke Company and continued in that position until his death in 1903. The Central Coal Coke Company had a capital stock of $7,000,000. It owned 66,000 acres of coal lands and mined and sold coal; it also owned a large acreage of timber lands in Louisiana and Texas and engaged on an extensive scale in the manufacture and sale of lumber. The annual production of the company was about four million tons of coal and 160,000,000, to 170,000,000 feet of lumber. Keith seems to have been eminently successful in the business field and while the evidence does not show the extent and value of the property composing the Keith estate at the time of his death enough appears here and there in the record to indicate that he possessed large and valuable property interests. It appears that he owned a large number of the shares of stock of the Central Coal Coke Company (the number thereof or per cent is not shown). We note that it was developed that he owned one-third of the stock of another corporation, the Louisiana Texas Lumber Company, which was also engaged in the lumber business. It also appears that he owned an undivided one-half interest in the Keith-Perry Building in Kansas City. The value of that interest is not shown but some years after Keith's death his heirs purchased the other undivided one-half interest in that property at a valuation of $250,000. A property designated as *Page 364 the Keith homestead was a part of the estate. It is apparent too that at the time of his death Keith had some considerable amount of cash on hand and other investments, in addition to those mentioned, in the form of bonds and corporate stocks. With this general summary indicating the form and nature of the property holdings of the testator, both at the time the will involved was executed and at the time of his death, we submit an abstract of the will:

Paragraph 1. Revokes "all former wills."

Paragraph 2. Directs all just debts be paid.

Paragraph 3. Bequeaths $10,000 to Laura Lee, a Niece.

(By codicil bequeaths $20,000 to his sister, Virginia Lee.)

Paragraph 4. Bequeaths all household furniture, horses, carriages and vehicles to his wife, also a sum of money "which added to such life insurance as she may collect on my life shall make the sum of $25,000."

Paragraph 5. (As amended by codicil) bequeaths $10,000 in trust to his brother Robert Keith "to be used by him as he may see fit for the benefit of my brothers, James E. Keith and William T. Keith. Such trustee is by me hereby vested with the power and discretion to make such use and disposition of said sum of money for the purposes aforesaid as he may see fit," etc.

Paragraph 6. Bequeaths to the Fidelity Trust Company (this defendant) and its successors "the sum of $50,000 in cash or in interest bearing securities of the value of $50,000, in trust for the benefit of my son Robert Lee Keith. . . . Said Fidelity Trust Company, as such trustee, shall invest said sum of money in sound securities bearing the highest rate of interest such investment will yield and shall pay to my son Robert Lee Keith, in monthly installments, such part or all of the interest earned by the principal sum . . . as the trustee in its discretion shall deem proper."

(This paragraph proceeds at some length as to the final disposition of this trust property, etc.) It is later specified that this son, Robert Lee Keith "shall not be entitled to nor receive any part of the estate except as provided" in this paragraph.

Paragraph 7 (immediately involved in this suit) devises, bequeaths and conveys "all the rest and residue of the property of which I may die possessed, real, personal and mixed . . . unto my son, Charles S. Keith and to said Fidelity Trust Company" (this defendant) "as joint tenants, and unto their successors hereinafter provided for . . . in trust for the following purposes: To hold, possess, manage, preserve and keep invested the same until my youngest child living shall be twenty five years of age." Then follow directions as to the disposition or distribution of the "entire net income" from the residuary estate during the period until the youngest child shall attain the age of twenty-five. Continuing this *Page 365

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W.2d 248, 335 Mo. 360, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairleigh-v-fidelity-national-bank-trust-co-mo-1934.