Lyter v. Vestal

196 S.W.2d 769, 355 Mo. 457, 2 A.L.R. 2d 1375, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 468
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 9, 1946
DocketNo. 39697.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 196 S.W.2d 769 (Lyter v. Vestal) 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
Lyter v. Vestal, 196 S.W.2d 769, 355 Mo. 457, 2 A.L.R. 2d 1375, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 468 (Mo. 1946).

Opinions

Action for a declaratory judgment. Plaintiffs, testator's widow and daughter, trustees and beneficiaries, seek a construction of the [770] will, and a declaration that the widow be allowed $15,000 for "maintenance, comfort and general welfare" from the corpus of a trust estate created by the will of Dr. J. Curtis Lyter, deceased. The trial court rendered a declaratory judgment adverse to plaintiffs, who have perfected this appeal.

Dr. Lyter, testator, by his will made July 7, 1933, bequeathed and devised to his wife, Mildred Lyter, plaintiff (appellant), his household and office furnishings, his personal belongings, certain of his leasehold or license interests, and his residence property in St. Louis. He directed the payment of all inheritance taxes out of his personal estate, so that the various beneficiaries would receive their interests discharged of such taxes. The residue (of value about $223,000) of testator's estate was vested in trust in his wife; in his daughter, Martha (now Martha C.L. Engler), plaintiff (appellant); and in Security National Bank Savings and Trust Company of St. Louis, defendant (respondent), hereinafter referred to as Trust Company. The net income of the trust estate was to be paid, one half to testator's wife; and one half to his daughter, Martha, and any other child or children who survived testator. Further particular provisions were made relating to the apportionment and payment of the income among and to his wife, his child or children, and the descendants of deceased children in various eventualities of being and survivorship so long as his wife or a child should live. During the minority of his child or children, the share of income of each minor child was to be paid to his wife to be used by her, *Page 460 in her own discretion, to the use and benefit of such child during minority, the better to enable his wife to provide for the support, maintenance and education of such child (or children). The testator made careful directions concerning a child's or children's (or their descendants') income until the child or children should reach the age of thirty years. After a child had reached the age of twenty-one years and until such child reached the age of thirty years, the child's income was to be set aside to the use of the child. And until the child reached the age of twenty-five years, only $500 monthly was to be paid to the child in the event the child's income exceeded such sum. After the child attained the age of twenty-five years and until such child reached the age of thirty years, the child was to be paid only $1000 monthly in the event the child's portion of income exceeded such sum. The excess, if any, of the child's income over the provided maximum monthly payments was to be held, invested and reinvested by the trustees until the child reached the age of thirty years, or until the child married (if married before the age of thirty years), when the trustees were to pay the excess, accumulations and profits to the child, and thereafter the child was to be paid the full amount of such child's proportional monthly income. The testator was strict in specifying the class of securities in which his trustees should invest and reinvest; and provided that the respective beneficiaries should not have the power to sell, assign, pledge, encumber or anticipate their interests in the income or principal of the trust estate. It was provided that, upon the death of testator's widow and of his last surviving child, the trust should terminate and the sum of $25,000 should be paid to testator's sister, Mary E. Vestal, defendant (respondent), providing she survived the termination of the trust; and the balance and residue of such trust estate (including the sum of $25,000, if Mary E. Vestal did not so survive) should be paid, per stirpes, to the "surviving child or children of my said child or children or their descendants," or, if none, that portion of the trust estate remaining should be paid to the Board of Curators of the University of Missouri, defendant-respondent herein, to be invested and expended for the improvement and benefit of the Medical Department of the University.

The final subparagraph of the fifth paragraph of the will is here fully quoted,

"The Trustees in the exercise of their discretion, and upon the written request of my wife, in the event of any emergency, which in the discretion of the Trustees exists, shall have the right to withdraw installments of principal and pay them over to my said wife from time to time for the maintenance, comfort, and general welfare of herself and any minor child or children of mine, and for the education of any of my children under the age of Twenty-one (21) years. The necessity and propriety of such withdrawals, and the *Page 461 amount thereof shall [771] be determined by the Trustees and their determination shall be final. After the death of my said wife such withdrawals may be made, in like manner, upon the written request of my daughter, Martha."

Dr. Lyter died October 9, 1937. He was survived by his widow, and by his daughter and only child, Martha. The daughter attained her majority April 26, 1940, and was married in September of that year. No child had been born to the daughter's marriage at the conclusion of the trial of the cause, February 26, 1943. Testator's widow made written request, July 6, 1942, for an advancement of $15,000 out of the principal of the trust estate for the purpose of "payment of income tax, medical and hospital bills, general household expenses, and other necessary expenses for my maintenance, comfort and general welfare, as those terms are used in said will."

Plaintiffs petitioned a decree construing the will, and a judgment declaring that, (1) within the meaning of the will, an "emergency" exists; (2) independently of the existence of any "emergency," the plaintiff widow is now entitled to receive, under the will, an advancement of $15,000 out of the principal for her proper maintenance, comfort and general welfare; (3) such advancement is within the purpose, intent and meaning of the will and the trustees should be directed to make such an advancement; and (4) whenever the trustees, in their sole discretion, make an advancement out of the principal to the plaintiff widow for her maintenance, comfort and general welfare, the necessity and propriety of any such advancement are, by the terms of the will, final and are not subject to question by any beneficiary.

The corporate trustee, Trust Company, defendant, filed answer and cross bill alleging that a question had arisen as to whether an "emergency" exists as that term is used in the will, whereby the trustees may at this time properly pay $15,000 out of the principal of the estate. Trust Company further alleged that the written request of the widow, plaintiff, had given rise to various and conflicting interpretations, and asked the court for advice and information as to the proper interpretation of the will and as to the respective rights and interests of the several parties in and to the trust estate. Board of Curators answered, admitting itself to be a contingent beneficiary under the will; and, disclaiming sufficient knowledge as to other matters alleged in the petition and cross bill, raised the general issue in order to put plaintiff and Trust Company to strict proof thereof.

Having heard the evidence and having been advised in the premises, the trial court declared,

"1. Action of the Trustees in the exercise of their discretion under the will must always be subject to judicial review for possible abuse of discretion . . . *Page 462

"2.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.W.2d 769, 355 Mo. 457, 2 A.L.R. 2d 1375, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyter-v-vestal-mo-1946.