McMillan v. Barnard Free Skin & Cancer Hospital

264 S.W. 410, 304 Mo. 635, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 688
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 410 (McMillan v. Barnard Free Skin & Cancer Hospital) 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
McMillan v. Barnard Free Skin & Cancer Hospital, 264 S.W. 410, 304 Mo. 635, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 688 (Mo. 1924).

Opinions

*640 GRAVES, C. J.

-Plaintiffs are the trustees of a trust estate created by the last will and testament of the late George D. Barnard of the city of St. Louis. Barnard died May 31, 1915, leaving an estate estimated at $2,000,000. He left no children. His will made provision for his wife, but she elected to take under the law and not under the will. The administration of the estate closed long since, and the trust estate created by the will is now, and from 1917 has been, in the hands of a board of trustees created by the will. As said, this board of trustees constituted the plaintiffs herein. The defendants constitute all the beneficiaries in this trust estate. ■ The board of trustees, having reached a point where they could not pay all the annuities out of the income of the estate for the year ending May 31, 1922, *641 brought this suit for the interpretation of the will, or rather certain portions of the will. The residuary benficiary of the estate is the Barnard Free Skin & Cancer Hospital, which is an institution (purely charitable) established by Mr. Barnard. The will provided for. the creation of a “reserve fund” to be raised by taking $10,000 or less each year from the net income of the trust estate. When the annuities became due for the year 1922, there was $50,000 in this trust fund. By the term annuities, we include all payments to be made out of the income of the estate, whether they be annual, semiannual or monthly. These charges upon the net income of the estate amounted to $22,650, in 1922, and the trustees had but $9729.13 with which to pay, unless they had power to go to this reserve fund. The trial court in its decree ruled as follows on this disputed question:

“The court doth further find that it was the intention of testator in creating each and all the annuities mentioned in testator’s will to provide for the payment of each and every annuity without priority or preference one over the other in respect to the annual amount received by each annuitant by reason of the fact that in some instances testator provided that said annuities should be paid ‘annually,’ ‘semi-annually,’ ‘monthly’ or ‘per month;’ and that said testator, by the eleventh clause of his will, in providing that in the event of a deficit of income in any one year the income should be prorated among annuitants, intended that all annuitants should be placed upon the same basis and participate ratably in any funds available for distribution.
“The court doth further find that in and by the twelfth clause of testator’s will testator directed the trustee of said trust estate to establish a ‘reserve fund’ as therein provided, and that in and by said twelfth clause specifically limited the use to which said reserve fund may be placed, as follows:
“ ‘The reserve fund may be used by the board of trustees for the purpose of meeting unexpected expenses, *642 and should there be any year in which the income shall be insufficient to pay the monthly or annual bequests for that particular year, the same may be met and paid out of this reserve fund, and this may be repeated as often as it occurs, and any depletion so occasioned in said reserve fund may be made up as is hereinabove authorized. ’
“The court doth further find that at the end of the fiscal year ending May 31, 1922, said reserve fund amounted to fifty thousand dollars; that the amount payable on account of all bequests and annuities mentioned in testator’s will for the year ending May 31, 1922, was $22,650, but that the total income received during said fiscal year, available for the payment of said annuities or bequests, was only $9,729.13, leaving a deficit for said fiscal year between the amount of annuities then payable and the amount of income applicable thereto of $12,-820.87. The court doth further find that it was the intention of testator in establishing said reserve fund to assure all the various beneficiaries of the trust, established by said testator’s will} the payment of their respective annuities in full in the event there should be a deficit in any particular year, provided, further, that, in the judgment of said trustees, said reserve fund was not needed for the payment of ‘unexpected expenses’ during such year, or reasonably anticipated for the ensuing year. ’ ’

Prom, this portion of the decree the Barnard Free Skin & Cancer Hospital has appealed. It is the only appellant which completed an appeal. Portions of certain named paragraphs in the will become pertinent. One of our learned Commissioners has culled these out, thus:

Paragraph 11 reads:
“In case the* annual income from the trust estate herein, created under Clause Nine of this, my last will and testament, should be insufficient to pay all of the annual bequests in full, after the payment of the two thousand dollars per month to my wife, then the balance of *643 such annual income for that particular year shall be distributed pro rata among the other beneficiaries to whom annual payments are made, but any deficiency in such annual payment in any particular year shall not be made good out of the income of any succeeding* year; and providing further that none of the payments from the income of said trust estate shall begin until the expiration of one year from and after my death, excepting payments to my wife of the two thousand dollars per month, which shall date and begin from the date of my death, being payable monthly each month from and after the date of my death.”

Paragraph 12 reads in part:

“All the rest and residue* of the income from my estate received by the said trustees, and not required for the payment of specific, annual or monthly bequests for that particular year, saving and excepting a certain reserve fund, provisions for which are hereinafter made, shall be paid to the Barnard Free Skin & Cancer Hospital, of St. Louis, Missouri, for the support and maintenance of said hospital, and, when necessary, for all repairs, taxes and expenses in connection with the maintenance of said hospital and the keeping of the same in thorough condition, and, if deemed advisable by the board of trustees, a portion of said income may be used for the extension and enlargement of said hospital, provided, however, that not over five thousand dollars in any one year of said income is to be used in what is known as ‘research work’ or applied to what is known as the ‘research department.’ ”

Here follow minute directions in the event the present charter of the hospital should be extended or a new corporation should be incorporated under the same name for the same purpose, covering* nearly four pages of the abstract. The paragraph concludes:

“I desire that the board of trustees shall establish what shall be known as a ‘reserve fund’ and that this reserve fund shall be established in the following man *644

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 410, 304 Mo. 635, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmillan-v-barnard-free-skin-cancer-hospital-mo-1924.