Kennard v. Wiggins

160 S.W.2d 706, 349 Mo. 283, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 504
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 25, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 160 S.W.2d 706 (Kennard v. Wiggins) 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
Kennard v. Wiggins, 160 S.W.2d 706, 349 Mo. 283, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 504 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

This is an action in separate counts to have declared void, on the alleged grounds of fraud, mistake or accident, a paragraph in a decree construing a will; to determine title to real estate and to account for the rents and profits therefrom; and to have certain personal property transferred to plaintiff and to account for the income therefrom. The trial court found for plaintiff on all three counts and defendant appealed. The property concerned is of the value of "several hundred thousand dollars."

The background of this cause is the will (executed June 5, 1893) of John E. Liggett, who died November 23, 1897. Among others named in the will were testator's wife (who died May 15, 1909) and his three daughters, Ella L. Wiggins (Scott when will was executed), Dolly L. Kilpatrick, and Cora B. Fowler. A trust estate was created by the third clause of the will, and the husbands of the three daughters were the trustees. Trustee Scott died and thereafter Ella L. married Charles Wiggins, who became a trustee. The trust period expired April 4, 1916, and thereafter (May 15, 1920) suit to construe the will was filed by the three daughters, and joining as plaintiffs were the husbands of Ella L. Wiggins and Cora B. Fowler. Dolly L. Kilpatrick's husband was then dead. The defendants in the will construction [708] suit were all of the then living descendants of the testator, together with the respective husbands and wives of those who were married, and Charles Wiggins and John Fowler, husbands of Ella L. and Cora B., were made defendants in their capacity as trustees. At the time of the will construction suit Dolly L. Kilpatrick had a daughter, Mary Lois Perry (now Mary Lois McIntosh), and a minor granddaughter, under the age of 14 years, Elizabeth Liggett Scudder, daughter of a deceased daughter of Mrs. Kilpatrick. Elizabeth Liggett Scudder is now Elizabeth Liggett Kennard, plaintiff in the present case.

In the will construction suit the three daughters contended that, under the will, they took a fee interest instead of a life estate. The trial court held that they took a life estate only and they appealed to this court. On April 3, 1925, the judgment of the trial court was affirmed. [See Wiggins et al. v. Perry et al. (Mo. Sup.), 271 S.W. 815.] In the third clause of the will the testator devised to the trustees certain stock of the Liggett Realty Company.

"In trust, nevertheless, for the following uses and purposes, that is to say, to promptly pay over to my said wife, Elizabeth J. Liggett, for and during the term of her natural life, and in lieu of all dower in my estate, all rents, profits, earnings, income and dividends made and declared on my said stock of the said Liggett Realty Company, as and when the same shall at any time be received from said company by my said trustees.

"After the death of my said wife then my said stock of the Liggett Realty Company shall be further held by my said trustees under this trust for the sole benefit and behoof of my daughters, Dolly L. *Page 291 Kilpatrick, wife of said Claude Kilpatrick, Cora B. Fowler, wife of John Fowler, and Ella D. Scott, wife of said Mitchell Scott, to their sole and separate use, free and clear of an estate by courtesy, interest, or control of this said present or any future husband of them, or either of them, for and during the naturallives of my said daughters, in equal portions, share and sharealike, with remainder over as to the undivided share aforesaid,of each one, to the heirs of the body of each one of my saiddaughters as their absolute property, per stirpes and not percapita; but should any of my said daughters die without issuethen her portion of said Realty Company stock herein bequeathedto her for life shall go to the survivor and survivors of my saiddaughters in equal portions for life, with remainder over, as tosuch portion, to the heirs of the bodies of such as shall dieleaving issue of their bodies absolutely, share and share alike,per stirpes" (italics ours).

The decree in the will construction suit contained the following:

"And it is further adjudged and decreed by the court that upon the death of said Cora B. Fowler, said property (devised to Cora B.) shall go to and vest absolutely, per stirpes and not percapita in her then surviving issue, if any; but in default of such issue, then said property shall go as follows:

"If both her sisters Ella L. Wiggins and Dolly L. Kilpatrick,shall survive her, then an undivided one half interest in saidproperty shall go to and vest in each of said sisters for herlife, and on the death of either of them, the undivided one halfinterest therein of the one so dying shall go to and vest in thesurvivor for her life, and upon her death the whole of saidproperty shall go to and vest absolutely in the then survivingissue of said Ella L. Wiggins and Dolly L. Kilpatrick, share andshare alike, per stirpes and not per capita" (italics ours).

The italicized paragraph from the decree is the one in question. Plaintiff contends that the above italicized portion from the will is not susceptible of such construction and that such was brought about by fraud, accident, or mistake.

July 19, 1928, some three years after the will construction decree was affirmed, Cora B. Fowler died without issue; her two sisters, Ella L. Wiggins and Dolly L. Kilpatrick, survived her. And it is conceded that upon the death of Cora B. Fowler her 1/3 portion passed for life in equal portions (1/6) to each of her sisters. Dolly L. Kilpatrick died August 10, 1928, less than a month after the death of Cora B. Fowler. Dolly L. was survived by her sister, Ella L. Wiggins, and by her daughter, Mary Lois Perry, now Mary Lois McIntosh, and by her granddaughter, Elizabeth Liggett Scudder, now Elizabeth Liggett Kennard, plaintiff in this cause. Under the construction in the decree in the will construction suit, the 1/6 interest, passing for life to Dolly L. Kilpatrick upon the death of [709] Cora *Page 292 B. Fowler, passed for life to Ella L. Wiggins. Plaintiff, however, says that upon the death of her grandmother, Dolly L. Kilpatrick, if the will had been construed correctly, the 1/6 would have passed, in equal portions, to her and her aunt, Mary Lois Perry, now Mary Lois McIntosh, 1/12 to each.

Since shortly after the death of Dolly L. Kilpatrick, constant effort has been made to right the wrong alleged to have resulted by reason of the challenged paragraph in the will construction suit decree. June 29, 1929, Mary Lois McIntosh filed a suit at law in the federal court at St. Louis, to determine interest in the 1/12 undivided interest claimed by her. Judge Charles B. Faris, district Judge at that time, sustained the defense of resadjudicata. Appeal was taken to the United States circuit court of appeals, but no proper exceptions were preserved and on the record proper the judgment was affirmed. [See Perry v. Wiggins,57 F.2d 622.] March 21, 1931, Mary Lois McIntosh filed in the federal district court at St. Louis, a second suit, a suit in equity, the general purpose of which is about the same as the present suit. That suit is still pending. Also, on March 21, 1931, Elizabeth Liggett Kennard filed the present suit. March 31, 1933, the present plaintiff and Mary Lois McIntosh filed in the circuit court (St. Louis) a motion for an order nunc pro tunc in the will construction suit. The purpose of the nunc pro tunc

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W.2d 706, 349 Mo. 283, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennard-v-wiggins-mo-1941.