Mavrakos v. Papadimitriou

331 S.W.2d 161, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 596
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1960
DocketNo. 30318
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 331 S.W.2d 161 (Mavrakos v. Papadimitriou) 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
Mavrakos v. Papadimitriou, 331 S.W.2d 161, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 596 (Mo. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Judge.

This is a suit for a declaratory judgment to construe certain provisions of the will of Nicholas Papadimitriou who died in the City of St. Louis on August 11, 1956. The suit was brought by John Mavrakos and James T. Gianladis, executors named in the will and duly appointed as such by the Probate Court. Said will is as follows:

“This is my last will and testament— made of sound mind and of my own free desire.
“I appoint as Administrators of my estate the following parties: (Without Bond)
“John Mavrakos St. Louis, Mo.
“James T. Gianladis St. Louis, Mo.
“After all my debts have been paid,

I bequeath:

“St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church
St. Louis, Missouri $300.00
“Greek Archdioces, New York, N. Y. $200.00
“½ of my remaining estate to be equally divided as follows:
“Soterion Papademetriou (my brother) Valtesinico, Gortinias, Greece (or his children)
“Christitsa Anagnostopoulou, Valtesinico, Gortinias, Greece.
“Remaining half of my estate to be equally divided among my nieces and nephews as follows:
“Children of my deceased sister, Kanela Panagiotokopoulou.
“Haralampon S. Papademetriou, Athens, Greece.
“As of today my estate is comprised of the following:
“Bank Account- — Mercantile Commerce . Bank and Trust Co., St. Louis, Mo.
“Bank Account — St. Louis Bank, St. Louis, Mo.
“Stock — The United Piece Dye Works —New York.
“U. S. Government Bonds — St. Louis, Mo.
“My entire estate to be liquidated and divided as above.
“Signed,
“Nicholas Papadimitriou or “Nick Pappas.
“Witnessed this 6th day of May, 1952.
"Emma S. Briscoe
“Jim L. Gianladis.”

The object of the suit was to obtain a construction of the provision of the residuary clause of the will in three respects, the petition alleging:

■ “10. That the residuary clause of said Will, and more particularly the following language:
“Soterion Papademetriou (my brother) Valtesinico, Gortinias, Greece (or his children)
is ambiguous, equivocal and uncertain in that the intention of the testator is uncertain in respect to whether the testator desired the executors to pay one-[163]*163quarter (⅛) of the remaining estate to the testator’s brother, Soterion Papa-dimitriou, a/k/a Soterion Papademe-triou, and if he be dead, then to his children; or whether he intended to give the executors the option of paying one-quarter (¼) of the estate to either Soterion Papadimitriou or his children.
“11. That the residuary clause of said Will, and more particularly the following language:
“Remaining half of my estate to be equally divided among my nieces and nephews as follows:
“Children of my deceased sister, Kanela Panagiotokopoulou.
“Haralampon S. Papademetriou, Athens, Greece.
is ambiguous, equivocal and uncertain in that a confusion of names exists; that there are two Haralampon Papa-dimitriou’s: Haralampon S. Papadimi-triou, the son of Soterion Papadimi-triou, who lives in Valtesinico, Gortin-ias, Greece, and Haralampon Theodore Papadimitriou, the son of the testator’s deceased brother Theodore, who lives in Athens, Greece.”

The petition further alleged that the last mentioned clause was further “ambiguous, equivocal and uncertain in that it does not state whether the legatees of the remaining half, or second portion, of the estate are to take per capita or per stirpes.”

The trial court held that the words “or his children” in the first part of the residuary clause were words of substitution to avoid a lapse should testator’s brother, Soterion, predecease testator; and that, since Soterion survived the death of the testator, he took a one-fourth share of the residuary estate absolutely. The court also found that in the second part of the residuary clause testator intended a per stirpes distribution of the remaining half of the residue, giving one-fourth of the residuary estate to Haralampon T. Papadimitriou of Athens, Greece, and the remaining one-quarter of the residuary estate to the living children and children of the deceased children of Kanela Panagiotokopoulou.

Two of the three living children of Kanela, and all the children of her two deceased children, have appealed. The other parties adversely affected by the decision have not appealed. The only issue on this appeal is whether the court erred in ruling that the testator intended a per stirpes distribution to Haralampon T. Papadimi-triou and the children of Kanela Panagioto-kopoulou.

Testator had two brothers, Soterion and Theodore, and two sisters, Christitsa Anagnostopoulou and Kanela Panagiotoko-poulou. Theodore died in 1912. Soterion and Christitsa survived the testator. Ka-nela had five children: Anggeliki Ioannou Panagiotokopoulou; Ioannin Ioannou Pan-agiotokopoulou; Helene Petros Katzigi-anne; Panagiotis John Panagiotokopoulou; and Ifigenia Photios Papageorgiou. Pana-giotis and Ifigenia predeceased testator, but each left minor children who survived the testator. Panagiotis’s children are Evan-gelos, Georgiou, and Stavrola. Ifigenia’s children are Kanela Photios and Ioannin Photios Papageorgiou.

Mrs. Emma S. Briscoe, a co-worker with testator, typed the will in question. The testator did not first write the will in longhand, but told Mrs. Briscoe approximately what he wanted. She then prepared a rough draft, which testator checked. She then prepared the final draft, which testator executed as his last will. Mrs. Briscoe punctuated the will and arranged the paragraphs. The words “equally to be divided among,” appearing in the residuary clause, were inserted at the direction of the testator. There was no lawyer or other person present when the will was being prepared.

Haralampon T. Papadimitriou was a nephew of testator, being the only son of testator’s brother Haralampon Papadimi-triou who died in 1912. Haralampon T. Papadimitriou, the nephew, was a resident [164]*164of Athens, Greece, where he was a professor of literature in High Schools. He was born in 1911, and had resided in Athens since 1928. Testator corresponded with his brother Soterion, and his nephew Hara-lampon T. Papadimitriou. He always referred to his nephew Haralampon T. as the “professor,” and talked frequently about him. The nephew would write to testator often, as much as once or twice a week. Testator talked to Mr. Gianladis, one of the executors, about his sister Kanela who was dead. He also talked about Kanela’s children. Testator sent his nephew Haralam-pon T. $300 a year while he was at the university, and afterwards $70 a year.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
331 S.W.2d 161, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mavrakos-v-papadimitriou-moctapp-1960.