St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Haag

432 S.W.2d 354, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 844
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 14, 1968
DocketNo. 52937
StatusPublished

This text of 432 S.W.2d 354 (St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Haag) 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
St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Haag, 432 S.W.2d 354, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 844 (Mo. 1968).

Opinions

BARRETT, Commissioner.

This is a suit by one trustee, St. Louis Union Trust Company, to surcharge and remove its cotrustee, Erna Bacon Haag, for her alleged personal breach of duty as a trustee. The court entered a judgment removing Mrs. Haag as a cotrustee of her husband’s estate, surcharged her $57,031.00 and she has appealed.

The background circumstances are that in March 1941 Parrish G. Haag executed a will and on November 26, 1952, executed a codicil in which he transferred the remainder of his estate to St. Louis Union Trust Company and his wife, Erna Bacon Haag, as trustees of Trust Fund A. It is not necessary to detail the terms of this trust or of Trust Fund B, it is sufficient to say that Mr. Haag’s primary concern and purpose was to provide for his wife. Mr. Haag’s will was admitted to probate in November 1954 and the plaintiff and the defendant entered upon the performance of their duties as trustees. It was established by the pleadings, interrogatories and admissions that one of the assets of Parrish G. Haag’s estate, perhaps the principal asset, was 14½ shares of stock out of a total of 22½ shares of stock in Haag Land Company of Poplar Bluff and these shares, admittedly, were held by the trustees. In addition, the widow and a trustee, Ema Bacon Haag, was president of the corporation, Haag Land Company, her daughter was a vice-president and her son Fred B. Haag was secretary-treasurer. In its petition here St. Louis Union Trust Company alleges that its cotrustee, Erna Bacon Haag, breached her duties as trustee of her husband’s trust by permitting funds of Haag Land Company to be withdrawn by “her fellow director and fellow officer” Fred B. Haag as evidenced by a series of unsecured notes executed by him over the years at two and four percent interest — totaling approximately $29,000.00. It was alleged that Mrs. Haag permitted the son, Fred, to buy and sell real estate to Haag Land Company for his personal profit. On September 14, 1954 P. G. Haag and his wife Erna executed a demand note to the Haag Land Company for $9000.00 and now her cotrustee alleges that she has permitted this note “to remain unpaid beyond the statute of limitations.” St. Louis Union Trust Company claims that it did not learn of Fred B. Haag’s indebtedness to the corporation until December 31, 1964. In any event for all these and other items plus interest amounting to thousands of dollars Mrs. Haag has been surcharged.

Further in background of the appeal, this is a resume of the trial and disposition of the cause: The petition of St. Louis Union Trust Company against its cotrustee was filed on October 20, 1965. By January 1966 the defendant, Mrs. Haag, filed her answer in which she admitted the first ten allegations of the petition, pleaded that whatever she may have done in the affairs of Haag Land Company were done as the principal officer of the corporation, that her actions as trustee were authorized by the [356]*356will and that her cotrustee was guilty of laches. On April 1, 1966, plaintiff filed a series of interrogatories and on the same date a request for an admission of certain facts. June 11, 1966, defendant admitted the first thirteen items, one of which was the execution of the fifteen notes by Fred to Haag Land Company without security. On July 21, 1966 there was a hearing upon the indicated petition and answer, and again certain of the admissions were read into the record, the corporate organization of Haag Land Company, the will of Parrish Haag, the qualification of the trustees and their holding of the 14½ shares of stock and finally the answers to interrogatories. The only witness called was an accountant who as of December 31, 1964, prepared “a financial statement” of Haag Land Company. At the conclusion of this hearing the court stated that it was “going to decree that an accounting be made” by the accountant and he was given thirty days in which to complete the task, after which the court said: “We can then agree upon a date to resume this hearing.”

Thereafter, on February 11, 1967, St. Louis Union Trust Company filed a “Motion” requesting of the court an order upon Mrs. Haag to pay the trust estate $57,031.00 “being the loss sustained by the said trust estate because of unlawful and illegal withdrawals from Haag Land Company * * * done and permitted by Erna Bacon Haag” while acting as trustee of the trust and a director of the corporation. In this motion the trustee again asked for Mrs. Haag’s removal and for a further “investigation” of the corporation by the accountant. In this motion plaintiff again asserted a claim for unsecured loans, interest and the failure to pay the $9000.00 note and interest. Counsel for plaintiff then announced that “we have asked for several items of relief, and I would like to put on some evidence to support these various matters.” Counsel said, “Really, the most of this is in the record, but, rather than have this Court, or any other Court, be required to weed through and try to find this, I think it might be more orderly if I would offer these things in evidence so that the Court can be considering what we think at least supports our motion.” Whereupon, over defendant’s objections, plaintiff’s counsel offered in evidence its original petition, the defendant’s answer, the interrogatories, the defendant’s admissions and the correspondence between plaintiff and defendant in which plaintiff requested certain information “and facts relating to transactions in the (trust) account.” Counsel then explained how from the audit and the number of shares held by the trustees, 14½ out of 22½, it arrived at its surcharge figure of $57,031.00. Following this procedure there was a lengthy colloquy between court and counsel as to what occurred in the trial and what the court could and could not do upon the record before it. On February 27, 1967, upon the plaintiff’s motion of February 11, 1967, the court found the ownership of the 14½ shares of Haag Land Company in the trustees and concluded “It is the judgment of the Court that by permitting the withdrawals of Fred B. Haag from Haag Land Company and by reason of her note to said corporation Erna Bacon Haag has wasted and dissipated assets of the trust and that including interest she is obligated to the trust in the sum of * * * $57,031.00.” Accordingly the court entered judgment and removed Mrs. Haag as co-trustee.

Upon this record and appeal Mrs. Haag has briefed and argued the propositions that whatever she did in connection with Haag Land Company was done in her capacity as chief corporate officer with authority of its board of directors, that her actions as cotrustee were all expressly authorized by her husband’s will and that plaintiff was guilty of laches. On the other hand St. Louis Union Trust Company has briefed the question of its duty as a co-trustee to institute this action and to compel its cotrustee to account without joinder of the corporation involved, Haag Land Company. The substance of plaintiff’s claim is stated in the first sentence of its points and authorities: “Erna B. Haag, as cotrustee of the estate of Parrish G. Haag, [357]

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Bluebook (online)
432 S.W.2d 354, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-union-trust-co-v-haag-mo-1968.