Scullin v. Clark

242 S.W.2d 542, 29 A.L.R. 2d 1024
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 10, 1951
Docket42382
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 242 S.W.2d 542 (Scullin v. Clark) 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
Scullin v. Clark, 242 S.W.2d 542, 29 A.L.R. 2d 1024 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

242 S.W.2d 542 (1951)

SCULLIN
v.
CLARK et al.

No. 42382.

Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 1.

September 10, 1951.
Motion for Rehearing or to Transfer to Denied October 8, 1951.

*543 Harry A. Frank, Edward C. Schneider, St. Louis, for appellant.

Paul Bakewell, Jr., St. Louis (Bakewell, Bakewell & Cramer, St. Louis, of counsel), for Lenore Scullin Clark, Stella Wade Warren and their respective descendants, respondents.

R. Walston Chubb, Philip A. Maxeiner, St. Louis (Lewis, Rice, Tucker, Allen & Chubb, St. Louis, of counsel), for respondents, May Scullin Green and Eugenia Scullin Bagnell, and their respective successors in interest.

Motion for Rehearing or to Transfer to Court en Banc Denied October 8, 1951.

LOZIER, Commissioner.

Plaintiff sued for the construction of a will, for an accounting, and for an apportionment, as between corpus and income, of certain stocks and cash items received by the trustees of a testamentary trust. Her petition was dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. She appealed. The appeal is properly here because of the amount involved.

The primary question is: Can the personal representative of a deceased co trustee, who was also a life beneficiary, maintain an action for deceased's share of funds which (during deceased's lifetime and co-trusteeship, and with deceased's concurrence as such co-trustee and his approval, acquiescence and ratification as such beneficiary) were added to the trust corpus instead of being distributed to the life beneficiaries as income?

John Scullin died in 1920. His will was duly probated and thereafter his estate was delivered to the trustees of a testamentary trust. Harry Scullin, John Scullin's son, was one of the trustees designated in the will and served until his death. The present trustees are the Mercantile-Commerce Bank & Trust Co., successor trustee since 1929, Thomas C. Hennings, successor trustee since 1938, and Lenore Madeline Clark, Harry Scullin's sister, successor trustee to Harry Scullin.

The beneficiaries of the trust estate of John Scullin were: Harry Scullin, his son; Lenore Madeline Clark and May Eunice De'Gheest, his daughters; Stella Scullin, widow of a predeceased son; and their respective descendants. During Harry Scullin's lifetime, he, his two sisters and his sister-in-law, were each to receive one fourth of the net income. Mrs. De'Gheest died in 1945. Harry Scullin died in 1947. Mrs. Clark and Mrs. Stella Scullin survive.

Plaintiff-appellant, Bernice W. Scullin, is the widow of Harry Scullin. Her petition shows that she sued as co-executrix of Harry Scullin's estate and not as sole residuary legatee under his will, as appears in the petition's caption. Defendants

Mercantile-Commerce Bank & Trust Co. (herein called the Trust Co.), Hennings and Mrs. Clark were joined as trustees. Mrs. Clark was also joined as a beneficiary. The Trust Co. was also joined as co-executor of Harry Scullin's estate and, also, as executor of Mrs. De'Gheest's estate. The petition alleged that final settlement in *544 these two probate estates could not be made until the issues involved had been judicially determined.

Twenty individual defendants were joined as beneficiaries. Each was said to have a vested or a contingent beneficial interest, either for life or in remainder. Some were joined as representatives of a particular class as well as in their own right.

All of the individual defendants moved to dismiss the petition, as did the Trust Co. as executor of Mrs. De'Gheest's estate. Neither of the three trustees nor the Trust Co. as co-executor of Harry Scullin's estate either joined in the motion to dismiss or filed any other pleading.

The petition alleged: "That prior to the death of the plaintiff's husband, Harry Scullin, and during the administration of said trust estate, various questions and doubts have arisen with and among the trustees, as to whether under the terms and provisions of the will of John Scullin and under the facts and circumstances of certain financial transactions as hereinafter set forth, certain monies, proceeds and profits, which were received by the trustees, constitute, in law and in equity, part of the income of said trust estate, or part of the corpus of said trust estate; that during the lifetime of said Harry Scullin, he as a trustee and beneficiary, endeavored to have said questions and doubts settled by a judicial determination thereof, and at one time said Harry Scullin was instrumental in having a proceedings, Cause No. 72539-C then pending in Division No. 2 of this circuit court, filed, in which proceedings the defendant, Lenore Madeline Clark was the plaintiff; that after said proceedings was filed and an amended petition filed in said cause setting forth a number of the problems, questions and doubts (hereafter referred to in the following specifications), at Mrs. Clark's insistence, said proceedings was dismissed without prejudice and no judicial determination was secured; that thereafter the trustees of the John Scullin estate again desired said problems and issues to be determined by the court and engaged an attorney, J. Porter Henry, Esquire, to file said proceedings on behalf of the trustees of the John Scullin estate; that the defendant, Mrs. Clark, again objected to the filing of said proceedings and there has been no judicial determination of said problems and questions; that since the death of the former life tenant beneficiaries, May Eunice De'Gheest and Harry Scullin, it is necessary and proper that these questions, problems, issues and doubts as to the apportionment of certain monies and proceeds to corpus or to income, be judicially determined so that said estates of said respective former life tenants may be properly paid such amounts of income that may be found by the court to be due to said life tenant beneficiaries."

Plaintiff further alleged that: she had "requested the trustees to make proper distribution to said Harry Scullin's estate of the amount which in fact and in law should be income to said trust estate * * * but said trustees have refused to do so"; the papers and documents of the estate were in the possession of the Trust Co.; she had requested of the trustees "certain information concerning various transactions and some of the requested information has been disclosed to plaintiff as hereinafter set forth"; but she had no knowledge that "the following specifications include all such transactions"; she was entitled to a "discovery of the records, accounts, minutes, papers and books of said trust estate in the possession of said trustees and each of them, and to an accounting of the income of said trust estate which during the lifetime of her husband, Harry Scullin, should have properly been paid to him and is now due and owing to his estate." She then set out, upon information and belief, seven "specifications" as "some of the items and transactions on which there are questions and doubts as to the apportionment of proceeds and money whether to income or to corpus of said trust estate."

All of the specifications related to actions taken by the trustees when Harry Scullin was both a co-trustee and a life beneficiary entitled to one-fourth of the net income. Each of the first five specifications recited the trustees' receipt of *545 stock in a new (merged or reorganized) corporation in exchange for preferred stock of an old corporation, and in settlement and discharge of arrearage in dividends on the old stock. The total of such claimed arrearage was $83,723.52. In one instance, the trustees still own the new stocks.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 S.W.2d 542, 29 A.L.R. 2d 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scullin-v-clark-mo-1951.