Lawson v. Cunningham

204 S.W. 1100, 275 Mo. 128, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 28, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 1100 (Lawson v. Cunningham) 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
Lawson v. Cunningham, 204 S.W. 1100, 275 Mo. 128, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 62 (Mo. 1918).

Opinions

FARIS, J.

This is an action to determine title to certain real estate situate in Boone County, Missouri. Upon a trial by the court the finding and judgment were for defendants, and plaintiffs in the conventional way thereupon appealed.

The land in dispute is situate in the heart of the City of Columbia, and is a part of an eighteen-acre tract conveyed by one John J. Jacobs, to William C. Shields, trasteé, -on the 10th day of October, 1864, under the circumstances below set forth. In the year 1857, one Curtis Field, Sr., residing in Madison County, in the State of Kentucky, executed his will, and thereafter in the year. 1863 departed this life. The only provision of this will with which we are here com cerned is one which created a trust fund for his daughter. The provision 'so creating said fund read thus:

[136]*136“I devise to my son, J. H. Field, as trustee for my daughter, Lucy B. Shields, ten thousand dollars, which I wish him to invest in some safe stock or in any way he may think best and to pay over for the use of my daughter Lucy the yearly profits which it may produce, but' the principal to remain for the use of her children in case my daughter Lucy dies leaving no children, in that event the money to return and be equally divided between my sons, John H. Field, Curtis Field and Thompson Field, or their heirs.”

At the time of the death of said Curtis Field, the daughter, as the clause quoted foreshadows, was intermarried with one William C. Shields, and was residing in Columbia, Missouri. The trustee named in said trust fund clause refused to act. Shortly thereafter such proceedings were had in the circuit court of Madison County, Kentucky, as resulted ■ in the appointment of the husband of Lucy B. Shields, the said William C. Shields, as substituted trustee. After giving bond, which was approved by the Madison County Circuit Court, there was paid over to him on the 18th day of April, 1864, the full sum of the trust fund mentioned.

Shortly after the trust fund was paid into the hands of the substituted trustee, William C. Shields, he purchased from the said John J. Jacobs, in consideration of $6000, of said fund, the tract of land in controversy. This land consisted at the time of eighteen acres, and from it the parcel in controversy was carved. There were also carved from this tract twenty-seven other lots, now worth, with the improvements thereon, from three hundred and fifty thousand to four hundred thous- and dollars. Of the twenty-eight lots, seventeen have been quit-claimed by plaintiffs to the claimants or to the occupants thereof, leaving, with th¿ parcel here in dispute, only eleven lots involved in this action or in the result thereof. The deed ran to William C. Shields, as trustee, and, omitting formal parts, and certificates, which are conventional, read thus:

[137]*137“Know all men by these presents that whereas Curtis Field, late of Madison County, Kentucky, by his last will and testament dated March 10th, 1857, duly probated and recorded in said county of Madison, devised to J. II. Field as trustee for his daughter Lucy B. Shields ten thousand dollars which said trustee was by said will directed to invest in stock or in any way that he, said trustee, might think best, and to pay over for the use of said Lucy B. Shields the yearly profits which it may produce, but the principal to remain for the use of the children of said Lucy; with the further provision in said will that ‘in ease my daughter Lucy died leaving no children the money to return and be equally divided between my sons John H. Field, Custis Field & Thompson Field, or their heirs’;

“And whereas said John H. Field having failed to qualify as trustee, William C. Shields has been appointed by the circuit court of Madison county aforesaid, and has duly qualified as trustee for said Lucy B. Shields, under the will of said Curtis Field, dec’d. and has, in pursuance of the provisions of said will, invested the sum of six thousand dollars, part of bequest and devise aforesaid for the benefit of said Lucy B. Shields, in the real estate hereinafter described;

“Now therefore, we, John J. Jacobs and Jane W. Jacobs, his wife, in consideration of the premises and of the sum. of six thousand dollars, to us in hand paid by William C. Shields, trustee as aforesaid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby bargain sell and convey unto said William C. Shields, trustee as aforesaid, the following real estate lying in Boone County, Missouri, to-wit:

“Part of the Northeast quarter of Section thirteen (13), Township Forty-eight (48), Range Thirteen (13), Beginning at a point two hundred (200) links west of a stone, the quarter section corner ón the west boundary of Section 18, Township 48, Range 12, and running thence west 8.10 chains; thence north 10.10 chains to a stone, the southwest corner of a lot desig[138]*138nated on the plat of the town of Columbia as Lot No. Seven (7); thence north along the west boundary of said Lot No. 7, and part of the west boundary of Lot No.' 8, 12.25 chains to the northwest corner of said Shield’s land hereby conveyed; thence east along the line between the land hereby conveyed and those of G. H. Matthews 8.10 chains; thence south 22.35 chains to the beginning, containing 18.01 acres, be the same more or less.

‘ ‘ To have and to hold the same with all the rights, privileges and appurtenances, thereto belonging or in any wise appertaining, unto said William C. Shields, trustee as aforesaid, for the use of said Lucy B. Shields during her life, and at her death the same to' descend to and vest in the heirs of the body of said Lucy B. Shields, provided that if said Lucy B. Shields die leaving no children, then said real estate to vest in and be equally divided between John H. Field, Curtis Field, Thompson Field, or their heirs; And provided further, that it shal] be competent for said William G. Shields, as such trustee, and for any future trustee, successor of said Shields, who may be thereto requested by said Lucy B. Shields, at any time, to sell and convey the above described real estate, and re-invest the proceeds thereof according to the directions of the will of said Curtis Field, dec’d.

“In testimony whereof we, said Jacobs and wife, hereto set our hands and affix our seals on this tenth day of October A. D. 1864.”

Following the purchase of the above land (which we shall hereinafter refer to as the “Jacobs land,” for brevity and to distinguish it from another tract in the case), Lucy B. Shields, and her husband, William C. Shields, the trustee, resided together thereon until the death of William C. Shields, in July, 1865. Upon the death of William C. Shields, the circuit court of Madison County, Kentucky, appointed James S. Rollins, as trustee. He refused to act, and thereupon the Kentucky court appointed Curtis Field, Jr., as trustee, [139]*139who duly qualified and took over the management of the trust fund.

In 1869, Curtis Field, the second substituted trustee, presented a petition to the circuit court of Madison County, Kentucky, praying for the approval of the sale of the Jacobs land. The Kentucky court thereupon made an order approving' the sale thereof and ordering Curtis Field, as trustee, to execute a deed of conveyance therefor, and it was accordingly sold and conveyed by said trustee to one Elijah A. More, for the sum of $12,000, by deed bearing date July 1, 1869, in which Lucy B. Shields, as cestui que trust, joined.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 1100, 275 Mo. 128, 1918 Mo. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawson-v-cunningham-mo-1918.