Mississippi Valley Trust Co. v. Buder

47 F.2d 507, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3491
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 5, 1931
DocketNo. 8944
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 47 F.2d 507 (Mississippi Valley Trust Co. v. Buder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mississippi Valley Trust Co. v. Buder, 47 F.2d 507, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3491 (8th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

MUNGER, District Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court refusing to remove from office two trustees who have managed a large amount of property for many years under an appointment of them as such trustees made by Sophie Pranz. Motions for the removal were filed in a suit pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri. The nature of this suit and many of the essential facts are sufficiently disclosed in opinions which have heretofore been filed in this court in appeals from orders in the suit. See Franz v. Buder (C. C. A.) 11 F.(2d) 854; Franz v. Franz (C. C. A.) 15 F.(2d) 797; Buder v. Franz (C. C. A.) 27 F.(2d) 101; Franz v. Buder (C. C. A.) 34 F.(2d) 353; Franz v. Buder (C. C. A.) 38 F.(2d) 605.

The appellant is the Mississippi Valley Trust Company as administrator, e. t. a. in Missouri, of the estates of Walter G. Pranz and of Ernst H. Pranz. The appellant’s motions were filed on September 18, 1928, and asked the removal of the two trustees (1) for failure to give bond ordered by the Circuit Court of Appeals; (2) for failure and refusal to furnish the statement and account required by a prior decree; and (3) because “said trustees have been and are guilty of the divers breaches of trust disclosed by the record and proceedings in this cause.” The effect of the failure to give a bond has heretofore been determined. Franz v. Buder (C. C. A.) 34 F.(2d) 353. After'the mandate of this court in pursuance of the decision in that case, the trustees filed in the lower court a statement and account prepared by public accountants who endeavored to make the account in accordance with the directions in the opinion in that ease. The appellant’s motions were then submitted to the court upon the second and third grounds of the motion, and at that time evidence was offered on behalf of both the appellant and the trustees. The court' overruled' the appellant’s motions.

The appeal in this ease was taken on March 29,1930. Mrs. Sophie Pranz, the life tenant, died on April 14, 1930. A motion was filed in this court on June 5, 1930, made on behalf of many of the defendants in the original ease, appellees here, to dismiss this appeal. The motion was submitted to this court, and it was urged in support of it that the death of the life tenant left nothing more to be done than to distribute the trust property among the remaining beneficiaries in accordance with the conveyance and declaration of trust and the decisions by this court interpreting' it,. and that, because of her death, only moot questions were presented by this appeal.. The motion was overruled by this court. The trustees, as appellees, again urge that no actual controversy is before this court, and that the appeal should be dismissed because of the death of the -life tenant. The refusal to dismiss the appeal did not undertake to reserve any further decision of the questions presented, and must be regarded as a determination that the appeal is properly before this court for a decision upon the assignments of error.

A guardian ad litem for some infant defendants participated in the hearing in the trial court upon the motion made by the appellant. The guardian did not file any motion asking for the removal of the trustees, nor was any appeal from the final order taken by him, but he has filed a brief as amicus curias, supporting the claims of the appellant. Consideration has been given to the arguments thus presented, but the only appeal which is before this court for decision is, as has been stated, that of the Mississippi Valley Trust Company, as administrator.

Coming to the grounds for removal of the trustees presented to the trial court, it was alleged by appellant that the trustees made a false plea in answers filed in this ease because they allege in those answers that in 1905, long after the death of Ehrhardt D. Pranz, a corporation was formed under the laws -of Missouri entitled the E. D. Pranz Estate, and the vfidow and each of the ten children of Ehrhardt D. Pranz conveyed to this corporation all their interests in all of the real estate which was owned by Ehr-hardt D. Franz at the time of his death and received in return therefor shares of stock in the corporation; that each of the children accepted this stock with the understanding that it was in full satisfaction of his or her remainder interest, if any, under the will of Ehrhardt D. Pranz. Appellant says that no testimony has been offered in jus-[509]*509tifieation of these pleas, hut, as the appellant filed the motion for the removal of the trustees, it was incumbent upon it to support its motion by proof. The appellees claim that this portion of the answer meant that the shares of stock in tho Ehrhardt D. Franz corporation were received in satisfaction of the recipient’s share in the real estate only. There seems to have been no evidence tending to show tho purpose or moaning of these conveyances of the real estate or of the acceptance of the shares of stock. There was no evidence to show whether or not there was any written contract or whether or not there was some oral agreement as to the effect of the acceptance of these shares of stock. There is some ambiguity in this portion of the answer, but, immediately following it, it is alleged that long afterwards, in 1920, the child of Ehrhardt D. Franz whose conduct is in question, received from the trustees property of the value of $90,000 with the understanding that it should constitute an advancement on account of the remainder interest under the will of Ehrhardt D. Franz. This recognition of a remainder interest, and the payment of an advancement upon it is more consistent with the interpretation of the preceding portion of the answer as relating only to a release of claims as to the real estate only than to an interpretation that it was a release of all claims of every nature in the estate. This alleged ground of removal does not appear to be established by the proofs in the ease. The appellant also alleged that the trustees should have been removed from office because, in testimony which bad been given by the trustee, Buder, in prior hearings in this case, he bad admitted that in 1913 and in 1920, he had drawn supplemental agreements to the original trust agreement, which had been signed by the widow and by or for some of the children of Ehrhardt D. Franz, and that in those agreements he had endeavored to use a phraseology that would express a denial or release of any further claim by the signers to any share as remaindermen. The trustee Buder frankly admitted that this was his purpose at that time, hut explains that at those dates it was at least a matter of doubt whether the shares of stock which had been received as stock dividends did not belong to the life tenant as income, rather than to the remaindermen, as corpus of the estate; that there had been decisions in several cases in the state court at St. Louis, Mo., wherein it had been decided that such shares were income of such a life tenant", and that the appellate courts of Missouri had not held otherwise; that it had not then been determined that these questions would be settled by rules adopted in the courts of the United States rather than by the rules adopted in the state courts; and that the agreements expressed the trustees’ own opinions, as well as the opinions of many of the remaindermen. This explanation is challenged by the appellant on many grounds: That the trustee Buder should have known of the rule adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States as to the ownership of such stock dividends; that he should not have relied upon his judgment, but should have applied for the advice of a court ;o that a prior decree of the state court in St.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 F.2d 507, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-valley-trust-co-v-buder-ca8-1931.