Little v. Mettee

93 S.W.2d 1000, 338 Mo. 1223, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 607
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 23, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 93 S.W.2d 1000 (Little v. Mettee) 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
Little v. Mettee, 93 S.W.2d 1000, 338 Mo. 1223, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 607 (Mo. 1936).

Opinions

This is a suit in equity to establish and enforce what plaintiff denominates as a resulting trust in a one-fourth interest in certain real estate, situate in Jackson County, Missouri, and particularly described in the bill. The suit was filed and heard in the Circuit Court of Jackson County and the finding and decree of the chancellor being for defendants the plaintiff has appealed. We can better approach and develop the determinative issues by first stating the facts in evidence.

Joseph M. Little, the plaintiff, and Robert Parke Mettee, Birdie May Mettee and Harriett W. Aydelotte, formerly Harriett W. Mettee, defendants, are grandchildren of Harriett W. Wilson, deceased, and the children of Mary Wilson Little, also deceased, who was a daughter of Harriett W. Wilson. The mother of plaintiff and defendants was twice married. Her first marriage was with a man named Mettee and the three defendants are the children born of that marriage; the second marriage was with a man named Little and the plaintiff, appellant here, is the only child born of that marriage. On December 9, 1892, Harriett W. Wilson, the grandmother of plaintiff and defendants, executed a will. At that time her husband, Robert T. Wilson, and two daughters, Kate M. Drury and Mary W. Little, formerly Mary W. Mettee, the mother of plaintiff and defendants, were living. The three children of Mrs. Drury and plaintiff and defendants, the children of Mrs. Little formerly Mettee, were all of the grandchildren of Harriett W. Wilson. By her will Harriett W. Wilson devised and bequeathed her property and estate to trustees therein named and directed that an annuity for a *Page 1227 certain period be paid to her daughter Kate M. Drury with the proviso that it should cease in the event of her remarriage. She bequeathed the sum of $1000 to her daughter Mary W. Little, the mother of plaintiff and defendants, and the sum of $1000 to each of her grandchildren; plaintiff, defendants and the Drury children. Robert Wilson Drury, son of her daughter Kate M. Drury was the youngest of the Drury children. As to the term or period of the trust the will provided that when the minor grandson Robert Wilson Drury reached the age of majority the trustees should partition and distribute the "whole of my property, not otherwise disposed of, . . . to the children of my daughter, Kate M. Drury, and the children of my daughter, Mary W. Little, born of her marriage with Mettee who are surviving at the time of said partition and distribution, the said children of both daughters aforesaid to receive equal parts, share and share alike." This paragraph of the will also provided for the termination of the trust in the event the grandson, Robert Wilson Drury died before attaining majority but as that contingency did not occur it is not necessary to set out the provisions made therefor. It will be noted that under this will of December 9, 1892, the plaintiff herein, Joseph M. Little, only child born of his mother's second marriage, would receive only a legacy of $1000. He would not share in the partition or distribution of the property to be made by the trustees when Robert Wilson Drury attained majority. In that partition the children of Kate M. Drury and the children of Mary W. Little, plaintiff's mother, "born of her marriage with Mettee," who were living at the time of the partition were to share equally in the property but plaintiff was excluded from the partition by the provision limiting the beneficiaries to children of his mother "born of her marriage with Mettee." James F. Mister, an attorney who wrote the will, and Robert T. Wilson, testatrix's husband, were named as both executors and trustees. On February 10, 1897, her daughter Kate M. Drury having died in the meantime, Harriett W. Wilson executed a codicil to her will. This codicil was also written by testatrix's attorney James F. Mister and he and Robert T. Wilson her husband, the executors and trustees named in the will, were present in addition to the subscribing witnesses when she executed the codicil. Both the original will and the codicil were written by Attorney Mister in longhand and with ink. The codicil notes the change in the situation resulting from the death of the daughter Kate M. Drury and the marriage of Kate M. Drury's two daughters since the execution of the original will. By the first paragraph of the codicil a specific bequest of certain personal property is made "to the children of my daughter, Kate M. Drury (now deceased)" naming them. The second paragraph directs the trustees "to pay for the benefit or behalf of Robert *Page 1228 Wilson Drury" (son of Kate M. Drury, the deceased daughter) "and Joseph Little," this plaintiff, "during their minority such further sums as to my said trustees shall seem necessary and right in their best judgment and discretion." The third paragraph of the codicil increases "the bequest of my daughter Mary W. Little," plaintiff's mother, "from one thousand dollars to two thousand dollars; and also that to my granddaughter, Birdie Mettee," one of the defendants herein and plaintiff's half sister, "from one thousand dollars to two thousand dollars, because of kindness, attention and services rendered me during periods of sickness." The fourth paragraph makes two specific bequests of $1000 each to two relatives. The source of this suit is found in the next or fifth paragraph of the codicil. As first or originally written by Attorney Mister this paragraph read: "Because of special provisions herein made, and of the death of my daughter Kate M. Drury, and of the marriage of her daughters, I revoke the provisions made for her children in my will upon final distribution of my estate, and direct the whole of it to go to the children of my daughter, Mary W. Little, born of her marriage with Mettee and of her present marriage with Little." (Italics ours.) Whereas the original will excluded Joseph M. Little, the plaintiff from sharing in the final partition or distribution of the estate when made by the trustees this fifth paragraph of the codicil as originally written permits him to share equally with his half brother and two half sisters, each taking a one-fourth interest. But when presented for probate, approximately two months after the execution of the codicil, a continuous, heavy, black ink line had been drawn through the words we have italicized, supra: "and of her present marriage with Little." If those words be stricken from the fifth paragraph of the codicil, and treated as of no effect, it is readily apparent that plaintiff would not be entitled to share in the final distribution of the estate when made by the trustees and that the defendants, the three children born of the marriage of plaintiff's mother to Mettee, would take the property, each an undivided one-third interest therein. This suit was filed August 28, 1931, and tried in July, 1932. We digress here from our narration of events to note that Attorney Mister who wrote both the original will and the codicil and was present at the execution of each, retained the instrument in his custody until the death of the testatrix (according to the evidence on the part of the defendants), presented it for probate and served as an executor and trustee thereunder, died long prior to the commencement of this suit; that testatrix's husband died approximately a year after her death; and that none of the witnesses who attested the codicil could be produced at the trial of this suit. Therefore there was no direct evidence or explanation as to when the alteration was made in the *Page 1229 codicil and the line drawn through the words, "and of her present marriage with Little."

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W.2d 1000, 338 Mo. 1223, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-v-mettee-mo-1936.