Marshall v. St. Louis Union Trust Co.

236 S.W. 692, 209 Mo. App. 13, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 98
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 692 (Marshall v. St. Louis Union Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. St. Louis Union Trust Co., 236 S.W. 692, 209 Mo. App. 13, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 98 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

*17 COS, P. J.

The respondents filed suit in the circuit court of Scott county against appellants as trustees under the will of Benjamin F. Marshall, deceased, asking that they be required to file an annual accounting in said court. Appellants appeared and consented that a decree as asked should be entered which was done and they then filed their accounting. The respondents filed exceptions to the accounting which were heard by the court and overruled except as to three items which were sustained. The trustees have appealed to this court and seem to have abandoned one of the three items but insist that the court’s action was wrong as .to the other two.

The two items involved here are commissions claimed by the trustees by way of .compensation for their services and attorneys’ fees of $1000 paid by them to attorneys. The facts as far'as necessary to determine the matters involved here may be briefly stated as follows: Benjamin F. Marshall owned a large amount of both real and personal property. The real estate was located chiefly in Scott county and consisted of farms and town lots. His brother, Isaac Marshall, one of appellants, was employed by him to look after the real estate, secure tenants and collect rents and was paid therefor. Benjamin F. Marshall made a will in which he directed that his property be held and controlled by trustees therein naméd for a long- term of years as therein specified and made full provision for a disposition of the income from the property and for its final disposition by the trustees to the parties therein designated. He desired to make the St. Louis Hnion Trust Company and his brother, Isaac Marshall, joint trustees in his will but before executing the will went to see Mr. John F. Shepley, Vice-President of the Trust Company, and had a talk with him as to the expense of the administration by the trustees and their compensation. Afterward Mr. Shepley addressed to Mr. Marshall, the following letter:

*18 “Dear Mr. Marshall:

“In order to state fully the extent which the executors of your will and the trustees under its provisions will be entitled to compensation I make the following statement:

“The executors will receive for the adminstration of your estate, whether it lasts for one or more years, five per cent of the value of all personal property passing through their hands. The estate will then be turned over to the trustees, who will be entitled to receive five per cent upon the net income received by them during the life of the trust, and as its expiration when the principal of the estate shall be finally turned over to the persons ultimately entitled to it, they will be entitled to receive such additional compensation as the circuit court of the county in which the will is probated shall determine in an accounting between the trustees and the beneficiaries, not in any event exceeding five per cent of the value of the property turned over.

The conversion of land into personal property by the trustees will not in any degree affect their compensation unless the property or money received for the land shall produce a greater income than the land produced.

I desire in this connection to repeat my previous assurance to you that this company will divide equally with its co-executor all compensation received by them jointly, and will do the same with its co-trustee, and at the same time it will take charge of the property of the estate and do all the duties of both executors and both trustees except in so- far as its co-executor or co-trustee may ask or demand participation.”

The will was executed with the trust company and Isaac Marshall named as trustees but the will gave no directions as to the compensation to be paid the trustees. At his death Benjamin F. Marshall left as his widow Florence M. Marshall and as his heirs, the two minor children who aré plaintiffs in this action. He made provision for all of them in his will but the widow elected to take under the statute and brought a suit in partition *19 and made the two minors and the trustees parties defendant. In that suit, the trust company was appointed guardian ad litem for the minors. Answers were filed by the guardian ad litem and by the trustees. There was no controversy as to the title or rights of the parties. Commissioners were appointed and the widow’s interest set off to her. Report was filed and approved. The attorney for the widow who brought the suit was allowed and paid a fee of $3000. The trust company as guardian ad litem was allowed and paid $750.

In the account filed by the trustees they asked credit for their services a commission of five per cent on the amount of money received by them as income from the property, which commission at that rate amounted to $5897.24. The trial court held this to be too much and reduced it by $2541.18 which left it at $3356.06. They also asked credit for an attorney fee of $1000, paid Bryan, Williams & Cave, attorneys for representing them as trustees in the partition suit. The exceptions to this item was sustained and the credit therefor disallowed. These two items are the two involved here.

The respondents contend that the letter of Mr. Shepley above set out having been written for the purpose of placing in writing the verbal understanding and agreement between the testator and Mr. Shepley before the will was drawn amounted to a contract and while it may be proper to pay a trustee on a commission basis, yet Mr. Shepley had agreed for the trust company that the commission should be computed on the net income while in this case, the trustees had computed it on the gross income. Appellants contend that the letter is not a contract and that they are not bound by it as to the amount of their compensation. If this letter is to be regarded as a contract, if could in no event apply to Isaac Marshall, the other trustee who was not a party to it. Contracts between the trustee and cestui que trust fixing the amount of the compensation of the trustee for services are permissible and when honestly entered into will he recognized by the courts. [Ladd v. Piggott, 215 Mo. 361, 114 S. W. 984]

*20 When the trust instrument fixes the compensation to be paid to the trustee, he may, by accepting the trust, bind himself by the provision therein made for him and prevent his collecting a larger sum [Oppliger v. Sutton, 50 Mo. App. 439.]

We have been cited to no case, nor have we found one, holding that a trustee who is to handle farm property for a long term of years after the death of a testator, as is to be done in this case, is to be bound as to his compensation by a voluntary agreement made by him at the time the will is executed to work for a commission on the income from the property either net or gross. It is universally held that a trustee cannot be allowed to profit from the trust estate but the guiding star in fixing the amount of his compensation by the court is always reasonable compensation for the work done. [Kilpatrick v. Roberts, 278 Mo. 257, 212 S. W. 884.]

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 692, 209 Mo. App. 13, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-st-louis-union-trust-co-moctapp-1922.