May v. Marx

20 N.E.2d 359, 299 Ill. App. 442, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 745
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 29, 1939
DocketGen. No. 40,236
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 N.E.2d 359 (May v. Marx) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
May v. Marx, 20 N.E.2d 359, 299 Ill. App. 442, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 745 (Ill. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hebel

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes before this court upon an appeal by certain of the defendants, Wilbur D. May, Morton David May, Sarah Jane May Waldheim, David May II, and Blanche Rose May, together with Nancy May Straus, a minor, and Martin L. Straus III, a minor, from a decree entered in the circuit court of Cook county by the chancellor, construing two certain trust instruments and a certain letter and instructing the plaintiff trustees as to their several duties thereunder.

The proceeding was heard upon a complaint in equity instituted by the plaintiffs as trustees for the construction of a trust instrument executed by David May on October 10,1916, a supplementary trust instrument executed by David May, Florene May Marx and the trustees and dated November 16, 1921, and a letter executed by the same parties and dated October .., 1926. The prayer of this bill of complaint is that the court instruct the plaintiff trustees as to whether certain trust income which they had accumulated should be paid to Florene May Marx or should be retained, and whether future income of the trust should be paid to George Lauter, as trustee, and to Florene May Marx, or should be accumulated and retained,

The court after a hearing found and decreed that the legal effect of the- trust instruments of October 10, 1916, and November 16, 1921, and the letter of October .., 1926, was that Florene May Marx became entitled to have distributed to her or her assigns from time to time at reasonable intervals the entire net income which accrued after February 17, 1928, on one-fourth of the trust estate; that the legal effect of the assignments in trust of November 5, 1937, was such that George Lauter, as trustee, was entitled to receive the net income from the one-fourth trust estate which accrued after November 5, 1937, and which would accrue during* the lifetime of Florene May Marx and prior to February 17,1943, and ordered that the plaintiffs, as trustees:

1. Pay to Florene May Marx the accumulated income from said one-fourth (%) trust estate which accrued during* the period from February 17, 1928, to November 5, 1937;

2. Pay to George Lauter, as trustee, the net income from said one-fourth (%) trust estate which accrued after November 5, 1937, and which would accrue during the lifetime of Florene May Marx and prior to February 17, 1943;

3. Pay to Florene May Marx or her assigns all the net income from said one-fourth (%) trust estate which would accrue during her lifetime and the continuance of said trust after February 16, 1943.

The parties to this proceeding* are Eosa May, Morton J. May, Tom May, Samuel B. Butler and Nathan L. Dauby, trustees under the trust instruments.

The defendants, in addition to Florene May Marx, the principal beneficiary, and George Lauter, as trustee, her assign, are the more remote beneficiaries, as follows:

1. The minor children of Florene May Marx, Nancy May Straus and Martin L. Straus III, her only issue, who appeared in the trial court by their guardian ad litem;

2. Morton J. May, Tom May and Wilbur D. May, the sons of David May;

3. Martin L. Straus, former husband of Florene May Marx; and

4. Morton David May, et al., the issue of the sons of David May.

The pleadings are not questioned, and it also appears from the briefs that there is no dispute as to any of the facts.

The complaint states that the plaintiffs are trustees of a certain trust created by David May in St. Louis, Missouri, by an instrument dated October 10, 1916, which provided that the trust property should be held until Florene May Marx, daughter of David May, became 25 years of age or sooner married with the approval of her mother, Rosa May, at which time onefourtli of the trust estate should be paid to her, after which the income on the remainder should be paid to her until she became 45 years of age, when the remainder of the trust estate should be paid to her if the trustees believed wise; that a supplementary trust instrument executed by David May, Florene May Marx, and the trustees in St. Louis, Missouri, on November 16, 1921, provided that the entire trust fund then in the hands of the trustees should remain intact and undistributed except as therein provided, and said instrument provided further that the trust fund should be paid to Florene May Marx when she became 60 years of age, or, if the trustees deemed it wise and proper, at any time prior thereto and after she became 45 years of age, and that if Florene May Marx should die before the termination of the trust, the trust fund should be held in trust for her surviving issue, or, in default of such issue, should be paid to the sons of David May and their issue, per stirpes, and to Martin L. Straus; that a letter executed by David May, Florene May Marx, and the trustees on October .., 1926, provided that until Florene May Marx be 25 years of age, the income of the trust should be accumulated and treated as principal, and that after she became 25 years of age, the income should be paid to her currently; that Florene May Marx was born February 17, 1903, and married Martin L. Straus, with the consent of her mother, Rosa May, on May 19, 1921; that Nancy May Straus and Martin L. Straus III, minors, are the only issue of Florene May Marx, and that they are made defendants individually and as representatives of all who may become issue of Florene May Marx; that Morton J. May, Tom May, and Wilbur D. May, the only sons of David May, Morton David May and Sarah Jane May Waldheim, the only issue of Morton J. May, and David May II and Blanche Rose May, the only issue of Tom May, are made defendants individually and as representatives of all who may become issue of the sons of David May; that Martin L. Straus executed, on April 30, 1934, an instrument releasing and waiving all his rights under the trust instrument; that since February 17, 1928, the date on which Florene May Marx became 25 years of age, the plaintiffs have paid to her all income from three-fourths of the trust estate, but have retained and accumulated the income on the other one-fourth of said trust estate; that plaintiffs believe Florene May Marx or her assigns, is entitled to receive all income accrued after February 17, 1928, on said one-fourth of said trust estate, but that the other defendants claim or may claim some adverse interest; that plaintiffs are impartial and will pay said accumulated income or retain the same, as the court may direct; that on November 5-, 1937, Florene May Marx executed instruments assigning to each, George Lauter, as trustee for Nancy May Straus, and George Lauter, as trustee for Martin L. Straus III, one-half of the income on one-fonrth of said trust estate (as the same existed on February 17,1928), accruing after November 5, 1937, and prior to February 17, 1943; that plaintiffs believe George Lauter, as trustee, is entitled to receive said income for said period, but that the other defendants claim or may claim some adverse interest; that the plaintiffs are impartial and will pay all income accrued and to accrue on the said one-fourth trust estate, or accumulate the same as the court may direct.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.E.2d 359, 299 Ill. App. 442, 1939 Ill. App. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-marx-illappct-1939.