Pollack v. Pollack

251 S.W. 715, 212 Mo. App. 233, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 101
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 251 S.W. 715 (Pollack v. Pollack) 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
Pollack v. Pollack, 251 S.W. 715, 212 Mo. App. 233, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 101 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

This appeal is from an order of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, made in a proceeding in equity pending in said court, upon the intervening petition of the respondent, trustee in bankruptcy of the appellant Joseph Pollack, directing that certain trust funds, then in the hands of the clerk of said court, be paid to said trustee.

The facts in the case, so far as they are pertinent here, summarized from the agreed statement of the facts, are these:

It appears that Mary Pollack instituted the main proceeding against Joseph Pollack et al., by filing a petition in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis in which she averred that certain personal property, of the value of eighteen thousand dollars, was deposited in the vaults of the St. Louis Safe Deposit and Savings Bank in the city of St. Louis, in the names of Joseph Pollack, Phillip Pollack, Samuel Winter and Henry Pollack, as trustees for her, and as renters of said safe. Said petition further averred that said trustees had conspired together for the *Page 239 purpose of hindering and preventing the plaintiff from obtaining the possession and use of said property, and concluded with a prayer for a termination of said trust and for possession of said property as her absolute property. In this proceeding, issues were joined and a decree was entered on March 6, 1899, which contained, among other matters, the following:

"And the court having fully considered the evidence, doth find, that the ten bonds of one thousand dollars each, with coupons attached, issued by the city of Greenville, Texas, and the cashier's check issued by the St. Louis National Bank, dated December 7, 1896, for the sum of eight thousand dollars, payable on demand to the order of Phillip Pollack, and by him endorsed in blank, mentioned in the pleadings, together constitute the capital of a trust fund, which was on the 1st of June, 1891, set aside and appointed by the defendant, Phillip Pollack, upon the following express trusts: The entire annual income and increase of said trust fund was appointed and appropriated by said Phillip Pollack to the use and for the support of his mother, the plaintiff, Mary Pollack, for the term and period of her natural life; the capital of said trust fund remaining at the death of said Mary Pollack, was appointed and appropriated by said Phillip Pollack to be divided and distributed to Harrietta Freefield, Lilly Drukker, Hannah Goodman, Lotta Hart, Martin Pollack, Phillip Pollack, Henry Pollack, Charles Pollack and Joseph Pollack, the children of said Mary Pollack, in equal shares and in full title discharge of said trust. And the court doth further find that said trust was upon the further condition, that the said Mary Pollack should receive a reasonable and comfortable support from said fund and that if the necessity should arise and the income at any time prove to be insufficient, that then resort might be had to the capital of said trust fund to supply such deficiency. That said trust fund was at the commencement of this suit and is now deposited in a safe-deposit box in the vault of the defendant, the St. Louis Safe Deposit and Savings Bank, in the names of *Page 240 defendants, Phillip Pollack, Samuel Winter, Henry Pollack and Joseph Pollack, as trustees for plaintiff, and custodians of said box, and its contents."

"The court further finds from the evidence that the plaintiff, Mary Pollack, has failed in establishing the right and title claimed by her, to the possession of said fund as her absolute property, and that she is not entitled to the relief prayed for in her amended petition."

"It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that said trust in said capital fund of eighteen thousands dollars and the income thereof, be established and confirmed, for the uses, to the persons, and upon the terms hereinabove found and declared. That the defendants Phillip Pollack, Samuel Winter, Henry Pollack and Joseph Pollack be discharged and removed from their office as trustees of said fund and shall recover nothing for their services as trustees. That the St. Louis Trust Company be and is hereby appointed sole trustee of said trust, to take possession of and hold said trust under the direction of this court, and to preserve, manage invest, reinvest, collect, account for and pay over the income and principal thereof at the times to the persons and in the proportions and provided for in this decree."

"That said St. Louis Trust Company as trustee shall take into its possession and hold the ten bonds for one thousand dollars each, with coupons attached, issued by the city of Greenville, Texas, together with said cashier's check for eight thousand dollars, as the principal of said trust fund; that said trustee shall collect and invest and keep invested said sum of eight thousand dollars upon good security, and shall collect and pay over to the plaintiff, Mary Pollack, taking her receipt therefor, the entire net income from said bonds and money, in monthly installments of not less than seventy-five dollars each, payable on the first day of each calendar month, as long as she shall live. If at any time the net income from said trust fund shall be insufficient to pay said monthly payments as they fall due, then said trustee may take from and pay over to said Mary Pollack such sum from the *Page 241 principal fund as may be necessary to make up the deficiency of income."

"The court reserves the right upon motion in this cause of the plaintiff or of the trustee from time to time to order the payment of such further sums to plaintiff out of the principal of said trust estate as the court may deem necessary to pay for plaintiff's necessaries, maintenance and support, and such order shall be made upon such notice to the parties interested in the fund as the court may require."

"Upon the death of the said Mary Pollack said trustee is ordered and directed to pay the expenses of her last illness and funeral, and also to expend a reasonable sum, not exceeding two hundred dollars, for a monument at her grave, and is then ordered and directed to pay over the balance of the principal fund, and unexpended income, if any, to the defendants, Phillip Pollack, Henry Pollack, Joseph Pollack, Charles Pollack, Martin Pollack, Hannah Goodman, Lotte Hart, Harrietta Freefield and Lilly Drukker, or their heirs or legal representatives, in equal shares, discharged of this trust, and said trustee may sell any securities on hand for such purpose."

Thereafter, the trustee appointed in and by the aforesaid decree took charge of the corpus of said trust and proceeded to administer the same.

On July 1, 1907, the appellant, Joseph Pollack, was, on his voluntary petition, adjudicated a bankrupt in the district court of the United States for the Eastern Division of the Eastern Judicial District of Missouri. In his sworn statement of his property, which he filed in said bankruptcy proceeding, he did not list or schedule and made no mention of his interest in the trust fund and estate established by the said decree of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis.

On June 2, 1908, the bankrupt estate was closed and the then trustee in bankruptcy discharged without administering upon the bankrupt's interest in said fund. Thereafter on July 6, 1913, Mary Pollack, the life tenant under aforesaid decree, died. *Page 242

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 715, 212 Mo. App. 233, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollack-v-pollack-moctapp-1923.