Gosney v. Costigan

33 S.W.2d 947, 326 Mo. 1215, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 758
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 33 S.W.2d 947 (Gosney v. Costigan) 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
Gosney v. Costigan, 33 S.W.2d 947, 326 Mo. 1215, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 758 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*1219 BLAIR, P. J.

This is an equitable action by one trustee to require his co-trustee to restore to the trust estate certain bonds alleged to have been improperly appropriated from such estate, or for judgment in favor of the estate in lieu thereof. A third trustee was made a party defendant. Trustees of two closely related organizations were afterward brought in as defendants. The trial court found for defendants and denied all prayers for removal of trustees. From such decree plaintiff has appealed.

The pleadings should first be noticed briefly. The following facts appear from the allegations of the petition. Sarepta W. Noyes, to whom we will usually refer as testatrix, died in Los Angeles, California, December 13, 1923. Her will was filed in the Probate Court of Buchanan County, January 4, 1924, and was duly probated January 14, 1924. By the fifth clause of her will she gave the residue of her estate to the plaintiff, the defendant Costigan and John D. Richardson, as trustees for the benefit of Noyes Hospital of St. Joseph and the Home for Little Wanderers of St. Joseph. For convenience, we will usually refer to the parties by their surnames. Costigan and Richardson were named as executors of said will. Richardson died very soon after the death of testatrix and before her will was probated, and Costigan was afterwards appointed as sole executor. Under the provisions of the will Gosney and Costigan afterward agreed upon and appointed Burnes National Bank of St. Joseph as trustee to succeed Richardson. The petition named Costigan and said bank as defendants, and alleged that testatrix owned five Fourth 4^4% United States Liberty bonds, of the par value of $10,000 each, at the time of her death, and that Costigan took possession of said bonds after her death, refused to account therefor to the estate and appropriated the same to his own use.

The answer of Costigan admitted that he was executor of the estate of testatrix and one of the trustees under her will, and that provisions five and seven of the will, which created the trust and provided for the provisional appointing of executors, were correctly set forth in the petition; that testatrix died December 13, 1923, and denied all other allegations of the petition.

*1220 In its separate answer Burnes National Bank admitted that it was one of the trustees under the will, of which Oostigan and Gosney were co-trustees. It alleged that it had made full investigation of Gosney’s claim that Oostigan had appropriated $50,000 in bonds belonging to the estate, that it had taken advice of counsel and had reached the conclusion that Costigan was the rightful owner of said bonds. Nevertheless, it prayed the court to require strict proof as to the ownership of said bonds, and asked it to enter such judgment as the law and the evidence warranted.

Upon motion of the bank, it and E. D. Plummer, as trustees of Noyes Hospital, and Marmaduke B. Morton and Charles B. Farish, as trustees of the Home for Little Wanderers, were made parties defendant. Said motion alleged that Charles W. Noyes, deceased husband of testatrix, had by his will created a trust fund of approximately $500,000 for the benefit of said hospital and said home; and further alleged that testatrix left approximately $500,000 in trust, the income from which was to be used by her trustees for the maintenance of said hospital and home, and that the trustees of those institutions for that reason were interested in the funds of testatrix and were necessary and proper parties to this action.

After said motion was sustained, the trustees of the hospital and the home filed separate answers. It is unnecessary to set out more than the substance of such answers. Both alleged the investigation made by the respective trustees concerning the claim of Gosney that Costigan had misappropriated $50,000 in bonds belonging to the estate, and that they had reached the conclusion that the estate was not the owner thereof at the death of testatrix. Both answers alleged the confidence of the trustees in the ability and integrity of Costigan and prayed that he be retained as trustee and asked the removal of Gosney as trustee under the will of testatrix.

The replies of Gosney to the several answers need not be noticed further than to say that they denied the allegations of such answers and particularly allegations concerning the qualifications of all of the other trustees and the allegations concerning the unfitness of Gosney to serve as trustee and prayed the removal of all the other trustees.

In his lifetime Charles W. Noyes was a resident of St. Joseph and was engaged in the manufacture and jobbing of shoes and probably in other business activities. He was successful in business and acquired a substantial fortune. He retired from active business several years before his death in 1912, leaving testatrix as his widow. During the later years of Mr. Noyes’ life, he and testatrix spent most of their time in California, retaining large business interests in St. Joseph. Both maintained their legal residence in Missouri. As appears from the evidence and as alleged in the petition, Mr. Noyes *1221 made provision in liis will for a trust for the erection and maintenance of the Noyes Hospital and for the maintenance of the Home of the Little Wanderers of St. Joseph. To testatrix Mr. Noyes gave his holdings in Eichardson 13ry Goods Company and Noyes-Norman Shoe Company, both of St. Joseph. She evidently was heartily in accord with her husband’s disposition of his estate and made similar disposition of her own fortune.

All but one of the Noyes children died in infancy. Gosney had married the only surviving daughter. She lived only a year or so after her marriage and died without leaving issue. Hence, there were no surviving children or grandchildren when testatrix died. Gosney remarried about seven years after his first wife died. A third marriage occurred about the time of or soon after the death of testatrix.

Gosney retained the confidence and esteem of testatrix and her husband in a large degree throughout all these years. He had lived in Pasadena, California, for many years, but frequently visited Mr. and Mrs. Noyes and was often consulted by them concerning their business affairs. He appears to have been a man of extensive business affairs. He testified concerning his connection with many important business enterprises, as well as his interest in civic and charitable organizations. He testified that his own fortune was at least equal to the combined fortunes of testatrix and her husband and that he had no personal interest in either estate. He had been a practicing lawyer for a number of years and formerly lived in St. Joseph. There is not a word in this record indicating that Gosney was other than a conscientious and high-minded man of splendid character and attainments and sincerely devoted to what he considered the best interests of the trusts established out of the estates of testatrix and her husband and to his duty as trustee under the will of testatrix.

The record does not disclose Costigan’s financial worth, but that he was a man of large affairs and important responsibilities does appear. He was a nephew of Mr. Norman, the former partner of Charles W. Noyes, and was an employee of Mr. Noyes in his manufacturing and jobbing business for many years before his death. After the death of Mr. Norman and the retirement of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.W.2d 947, 326 Mo. 1215, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gosney-v-costigan-mo-1930.