Kingston v. St. Louis Union Trust Co.

154 S.W.2d 39, 348 Mo. 448, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 432
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 25, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 154 S.W.2d 39 (Kingston v. St. Louis Union 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
Kingston v. St. Louis Union Trust Co., 154 S.W.2d 39, 348 Mo. 448, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 432 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

Appellants, plaintiffs nisi, filed this suit seeking the construction and interpretation of the last will and testament of Eliza McMillan, who died in the year 1915. The trial court, after a hearing, dismissed plaintiffs' petition, whereupon an appeal was taken.

Eliza McMillan executed the will in question on May 15, 1914, less than a year before she died. The will covers twenty pages of the abstract of the record. The clauses involved in this suit will be hereinafter set forth. Many of the provisions of the will are not in controversy, but it will be necessary to give a synopsis thereof, which we will attempt to do as briefly as possible. The estate was valued at over $2,000,000. By the second clause of the will the testatrix bequeathed certain property to her son and daughter-in-law. By clause three a number of special bequests were made, and the fourth clause contained instructions with reference to bequests made in the previous clauses. By the fifth clause the testatrix devised and bequeathed certain property, which was designated in her will as her estate, to William K. Bixby and the St. Louis Union Trust Company, or the survivor of them, in trust for certain purposes outlined in the latter provisions of the will. The trustees were vested with full power of management; also with authority to sell and convey any of the property and to reinvest the funds in securities they believed most advantageous to the estate. The trustees were directed, among other things, to pay life annuities, in amounts ranging from $50 to $250 per month, to fifty or more persons specifically named in the will. These persons lived in England, Canada and the United States. The trustees were also instructed to pay certain sums each month to a number of persons and charitable institutions, the payments to continue for a period of twenty years. Then followed the clauses which gave birth to this lawsuit. They read as follows:

"Upon the death of any of the said beneficiaries, except Charles Northrup, Norah Kingston Lawrence, Grace Ashbaugh, Dr. John J. Kingston, William Kingston, Florence Northrup, Eula Mabee, and Mrs. Jennie Cavers or in case of her death her stepdaughters Lynne and Jean, the amounts theretofore payable to them hereunder shall be added to the corpus or principal of the estate, for the benefit of my *Page 454 residuary legatees, as hereinafter provided. If, however, either the said Norah Kingston Lawrence, Charles Northrup, Grace Ashbaugh, Dr. John J. Kingston, William Kingston, Florence Northrup, Eula Mabee or Mrs. Jennie Cavers or either of her said daughters, shall die during the continuance of this trust, leaving children or other descendants surviving them, such children or other descendants shall take their respective parent's share of said net income, per stirpes and not per capita.

"After the expiration of the period of twenty years from the date of my death and after the deaths of Josephine Warfield McMillan, Kate Fisher McCool, Hattie Caldwell, Madame Gustave Tonnot, Emily Westwood Lewis, Mary Lee Cadwell Davis, Paul Cadwell, Mary L. Dillon, Elizabeth Westwood, Mary Westwood Lee, Nellie McConnell, Minnie McConnell, Harriet Perkins, Mrs. A.P.T. de Haas, Lynne Cavers, Jean Cavers, Anna Peterson, Ellen Laughlin, Julia McConnell, Mabel Duane and her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Dyer, Mrs. Cassie Adair, Mrs. Mary Goodwin, Miss Rebecca McMillan, Charles M. Prynne and his wife, E.L. Chute, Louisa M. Maury, Ellie Hankinson, Emily S. Jenkins, Margaret K. Beasley, Cassie M. Villa, Elizabeth G. Saunders, Lizzie Carroll, Mrs. Gertrude Webber, Harriet Sawyer Achorn, Harriet A. Sawyer, Edith M. Moses, Virginia Moses, Hattie Caldwell, Miss Ella Davock, James E. Chute, Emily Nelson, Margaret J. Nelson and Mary Dorgan, this trust shall cease and the property then composing the trust estate, together with the then unexpended or undivided income therefrom, shall be distributed equally, share and share alike, among, and paid to, the said Charles Northrup, Norah Kingston Lawrence, Grace Ashbaugh, Dr. John J. Kingston, William Kingston, Florence Northrup, Eula Mabee and Jennie Cavers or her said daughters, and their respective descendants, if any shall have died leaving other descendants surviving, per stirpes and not per capita; provided, that Mrs. Mary E. Kingston shall succeed to and take the interest of Dr. John J. Kingston in said income and afterwards in said principal."

The evidence disclosed that at the time of the trial many of the life annuitants had [41] died, and that more than twenty years had elapsed since the creation of the trust. In 1916, annuities in the amount of $70,905 were paid. This was the largest amount ever paid in any one year in annuities. There was a gradual decrease in these payments, due to the death of annuitants, and in the year 1937 the amount paid was $37,320. In the year 1918 the trustees received their greatest income which amounted to $130,785. The total income was always above $64,000 with the exception of one year. If any further facts become necessary for determination of the questions presented we will state them in the course of the opinion.

The parties to the suit are, plaintiff: James V. Frank, administrator cum testamento annexo of the estates of William F. Kingston, *Page 455 deceased; Florence Northrup, deceased and Mary E. Kingston, deceased; Florence Northrup McLeod; Eula Mabee; Grace Ashbaugh; Norah Kingston Lawrence; Lynne Cavers and Jean Cavers. It will be noted that plaintiffs consist of all the persons named in the residuary clause (with the exception of Jennie Cavers) or their legal representatives. These plaintiffs were relatives of the testatrix.

The defendants in the case are: The St. Louis Union Trust Company, the surviving trustee; all of the life annuitants and the children or descendants of plaintiffs. The minor children were represented in the case by a guardian ad litem who filed an answer in their behalf and briefed the case for them in this court. The adult descendants of plaintiffs, named as defendants, filed answers in which they consented that the relief prayed for in plaintiffs' petition be granted.

Plaintiffs insist that they were given a vested remainder in the corpus of the estate with the right of enjoyment or possession thereof at the termination of the trust. Plaintiffs also insist that they should be paid now, before the termination of the trust, such sums as would have been paid to the life annuitants had they lived. In other words, in the year 1916 the total sum required to pay the annuities was $70,905. In the year 1937 only $37,320 were required to discharge this obligation. Plaintiffs contend that the trustees should, under the terms of the will, pay to them each year the difference between the amount required to pay the annuities and the sum total of all the annuities provided for by the will. Plaintiffs also asked the court, in case it should hold that the trustees were not authorized to do this by the terms of the will, to terminate the trust insofar as to permit the trustees to pay such sums to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs say that the trust as to the fund representing the accumulation of lapsed annuities is a dry trust, and since all of the vested remaindermen agree and request to have the trust terminated the court should grant that request. The case was exceedingly well briefed by all parties to this suit. They agree to a great extent as to the law governing the case. They sharply disagree on the question of whether plaintiffs were, by the terms of the will, given a vested or a contingent remainder. They also disagree on the question of the existence of a dry trust as to that portion of the income from the corpus of the estate represented by the accumulation of lapsed annuities.

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.W.2d 39, 348 Mo. 448, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kingston-v-st-louis-union-trust-co-mo-1941.