Messner v. Demotte

82 N.E.2d 900, 119 Ind. App. 273, 1948 Ind. App. LEXIS 210
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 1948
DocketNo. 17,761.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 82 N.E.2d 900 (Messner v. Demotte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Messner v. Demotte, 82 N.E.2d 900, 119 Ind. App. 273, 1948 Ind. App. LEXIS 210 (Ind. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinions

*275 Draper, J.

This action involves the right of the estate of Ollie Richereek to receive a portion of a trust fund established by the Last Will and Testament of William C. Smith, a wealthy bachelor who died testate in 1911 in Warren County. The trial court held in favor of the estate.

Clause 43 of the will is the only one in which we are interested. It provides that nine of Smith’s nieces and nephews, one of whom was Ollie Richereek, should share the income from a trust fund during their lives, and at the death of any of them the portion of the fund from which that one had derived the income should go to his or her children, but in case any should die without children alive, then such share should vest in the other beneficiaries and be held in trust by the trustee as herein provided.

The clause reads as follows: *

“All the rest and residue of my estate, real and personal, after being converted into cash remaining after the execution of the foregoing provisions of this will, and the final settlement of my estate, I now devise and bequeath to my executor herein named, to be by him held in trust for the use and benefit of my nieces and nephews, named as follows : Mary J. Lewis, Ollie Richereek, Ren Julian, William Julian, John Julian, Isaac Julian, Samuel D. Messner, Clark L. Messner, and Grace Darling Callahan, share and share alike. The said trustee shall invest said funds for the benefit of said named beneficiaries, and, from time to time, as the same matures, he shall pay the net income thereof to the respective beneficiaries so long as they shall each live, and, at the death of any of said parties, the principal of the fund due such deceased shall be paid to the children of such deceased beneficiary, and in case any one shall die without children alive, then the share held for such one shall *276 vest in the other beneficiaries, to be held in trust by said trustee as here provided, excepting that on the death of the said Samuel D. Messner the portion of said fund held for him shall be by such trustee paid to his brother, Clark L. Messner, or, if he be then dead, to his children then surviving.”

Ren Julian died in 1915 without wife or children or descendents of children and no question arose. In 1929 Charles v. McAdams, then trustee, filed a suit in the Warren Circuit Court making all present appellants (or those whom they represent) parties defendant, wherein he sought instructions concerning an action which had been instituted against him as such trustee for the recovery of an assessment growing out of the failure of a bank, some of the stock of which was among the assets of the trust, and in said complaint he also requested a construction of clause 43 of the will in the following particular:

“Whether the title to the principal of the trust fund vested at the time of the death of the testator in the child or children of the initial beneficiary who were living at the time of the death of the testator, and whether the title to the principal of such fund vested in such child or children as may be born to the initial beneficiaries after the death of the testator and so vested in such child or children at the time of their respective births, or, will the principal of the trust fund vest only in such child or children of the initial beneficiaries named in the will who may be living at the time of the death respectively of such initial beneficiaries.”

A part of the decree rendered pursuant to the hearing on that complaint or petition reads as follows:

“That the principal of the trust fund, and the several shares thereof, created by said clause and as constituted by the court and now held by the plaintiff as such trustee, all as alleged in the com *277 plaint, did, at the death of said testator, vest in such of the children respectively of the said Mary J. Lewis, Ollie Richcreek, Ren Julian, William Julian, John Julian, Isaac Julian, Clark L. Messner, and Grace Darling Callahan, as were then in being and in such children of said respective named parties as shall have been born to any of such named parties after the death of the testator and in such children of said respective named parties as may hereafter be born to any of such named parties and that the use and enjoyment of the principal of such fund by such children is by such clause postponed until the death of their respective named parents.”

In 1933 Mary J. Lewis, one of the primary beneficiaries, died, and John M. DeMotte, successor trustee, filed a complaint or petition in the Warren Circuit Court, to which petition all primary and secondary beneficiaries of the trust created under clause 43 of said will, including all of the appellants in the present action and all others who could possibly have any interest in said trust, were made parties defendant. In that petition the trustee sought advice in connection with the fact that he was threatened with another suit because of the ownership of stock in another closed bank, and he therein also alleged the death of Mary J. Lewis and the fact that Mary J. Lewis had died leaving seven living children and a deceased son who left surviving him his widow and three children. He therein further alleged as follows:

“That your petitioner believes that the legal construction of said clause should be that upon the death of either of said initial beneficiaries, the interest so held should pass to the respective children of such deceased initial beneficiary, to be by the said children held as their own property forever, and that such clause should also receive a construction which will provide and decree that as to each of said initial beneficiaries they hold a life *278 estate only or a right to receive the profits thereof during their respective lives and that the title to said respective shares, upon the death of the said testator, William C. Smith, vested in the children then living of each of said respective initial beneficaries and in such children as may thereafter have been born.”

And he further alleged:

“And all of the defendants are made parties hereto to answer and show cause, why said Clause 43 of said will should not be construed as herein prayed.”

Following the hearing on that petition the court made findings which read in part as follows:

“The court further finds that the proper, legal and effective construction of said Clause 43 of said will, and the true intent, purpose and meaning of said clause is as follows:
“1. That the said Mary J. Lewis, Ollie Rich-creek, Ren Julian, William Julian, John Julian, Isaac Julian, Grace Darling Callahan and Clark L. Messner, were to and did, at the death of the said testator, each take an estate and interest, share and share alike in said trust funds, each as primary or initial beneficiary of said trust fund, the interest and profits derived from said trust fund, to be by each of them, together with Samuel D.

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Messner v. Demotte
82 N.E.2d 900 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 N.E.2d 900, 119 Ind. App. 273, 1948 Ind. App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/messner-v-demotte-indctapp-1948.