State Ex Rel. Madden v. Sartorius

163 S.W.2d 987, 349 Mo. 1054, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 442
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 28, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 163 S.W.2d 987 (State Ex Rel. Madden v. Sartorius) 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
State Ex Rel. Madden v. Sartorius, 163 S.W.2d 987, 349 Mo. 1054, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 442 (Mo. 1942).

Opinion

LEEDT, J.

In this proceeding, relator seeks to compel the respondent judge to grant three appeals, one from the final judgment and decree of June 19, 1941, and two from supplementary orders made after and in aid of said final judgment and decree in the case of St. Louis Union Trust Company and Allen C. Orrick, as successor trustees, etc., v. Clarke et al., No. 23,694-C, referred to in the com *1067 panion cases. For the general facts in relation to said cause, see the statement thereof, under heading “General Facts,” found in the opinion in the companion causes numbered 37,871 and 37,872. [State ex rel. Yale University v. Sartorius, 349 Mo. 1039, 163 S. W. (2d) 981.]

Pursuant to a motion of plaintiff-trustees, the relator herein was ordered made a party defendant in said cause and required to answer the trustees’ petition by setting forth any claim of right he might have, as administrator, to the property in question. In obedience to said order, relator, as such defendant, filed an answer and cross bill wherein he set up alternative claims, under one of which he would be entitled to all of the personal property held by the plaintiff-trustees, and under the other, one-half thereof. Without undertaking to set out the details, it may be said that, in substance, these cláims, as in the Yale University case, were based upon contentions with respect to the effect of the deed of settlement of 1877 and the subsequent division in 1885 of the trust property into three equal parts (instead of four, Virginia, the mother, having died in the interim), and involve the validity of the provisions of the deed of 1885 limiting the remainder interests in the trust property after the death of Hazlett to his heirs; so that, as the administrator contends, either one-half or all the property (depending on which theory the court might adopt),, upon the death of Hazlett, became the property of his estate and subject to distribution under the laws of descent and distribution, and not as vested remainder interests as found by the decree. The judgment and decree denied relator’s claim, and dismissed his cross bill with prejudice, following which he took appropriate steps to appeal, culminating in the filing of a statutory affidavit therefor, which was denied.

A great many propositions are urged in the 184-page brief of respondent, as well as in those of amici curiae. The case turns on the question of whether the administrator is a party aggrieved, within the meaning of Section 1184, R. S. ’39 [Mo. R. S. A., sec. 1184] so as to be entitled to an appeal, and this may be determined without developing all of the many questions tendered by the briefs.

We are of the opinion that the denial -of the administrator’s claim of right to either half or all of the personal property in the possession of the trustees undoubtedly makes him- an aggrieved party under the doctrine of the Yale University case, unless it can be said that the circumstances presently to be noticed alter the situation. Of these briefly: No money or property has come into the possession of the administrator, and it is not contended that the estate consists of assets other than those sought to be recovered from the trustees. It appears that only two demands were presented against the probate estate, both of which were allowed, one for funeral expenses, and the other for additional Federal income taxes for certain years. On the *1068 trustees’ motion- in the circuit court, the respondent ordered said claims paid out of the trust funds in their possession, and this has been done. The time for presenting claims has expired. But it further-app ears-that the relator-administrator has been notified by the United States Internal Revenue Department of the tentative determination of the net value of the Estate of Hazlett in an amount in excess of Two Million Dollars, and the liability of the estate for the payment to the United States of estate taxes in the. sum of $582,019.58^ subject to reduction in the sum of $107,140.96 if payments . in that amount should be made to the State of Missouri on account of estate and inheritance taxes. Presumptively, at least, the same persons found by the decree take, and in the same proportions, either as remaindermen under the trust instruments, or as distributees under the statutes of descent and distribution.

On this state of facts, it is contended, with some degree.of plausibility, that the administrator may not array himself against the heirs, and thus seek, on appeal, to establish a tax liability, as a basis for administering the property, which, under the decree as rendered, does not exist-. But, as pointed out above, the heirs claim the property, and under the- decree take, as remaindermen, and not as distributees under the' statutes of descent and distribution. In their status as remaindermen.their claims are antagonistic to the estate, at least, to the extent of tax liability of .the estate,, and hence the administrator does not represent them in such claimed status. In this respect the same principle would seem to apply as in those instances where, prior to an order of distribution, property is claimed by one or more heirs or distributees to the exclusion of the estate, in which situation it could hardly be doubted:that the administrator would have the right of appeal.

Respondent and the heirs rely upon a line of cases dealing -with family settlements, where property is not required for the payment of debts, and the estate is not administered. [Richardson v. Cole, 160 Mo. 372, 61 S. W. 182, Todd, Admr., v. James, 157 Mo. App. 416, 138 S. W. 929; Johnston v. Johnston, 173 Mo. 91, 73 S. W. 202; McCracken v. McCaslin, 50 Mo. App. 85; Bell v. Farmers’ & Traders’ Bank, 188 Mo. App. 383, 174 S. W. 196.] Richardson v. Cole is typical wher.e it was said the court “will not require an heir to pay over money to an administrator when such administrator has no-debt to pay, nor any, use. to make of it connected with the estate, merely that he may retain it for his own benefit, or be paid his costs and. commissions.”.. (Italics ours.) These cases apply a well-recognized rule under their particular facts, but we do not regard them as controlling. Bell v. Farmers’ & Traders’ Bank, supra, is stressed. It involved a somewhat analogous question under the former collateral inheritance tax law. The .public ’ administrator brought suit against a bank to recover the aiiiount of a deposit made by the deceased, *1069 which the bank subsequently paid to thé heirs under a family settlement. Beeovery was denied, but the court pointed out that it did not have the effect of allowing the distributees to avoid payment of the tax, because it was not a debt, nor a cla-im, against the estate as such, but attached to the property and interest therein, passing to the individual heirs, and the statute made ample provision for collection thereof by a civil action. There the heirs took under the statutes of descent and distribution — quite a different question from the one here presented; and there the individual interests were liable under that statute, but not so here if the decree stands. Of course, in a contest between the administrator and the taxing authorities as to the liability of the estate for taxes, the administrator would not be aggrieved by a judgment absolving the estate, but again that is not the situation presented in this case. The non-liability for taxes is merely one of the effects flowing from the decree.

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163 S.W.2d 987, 349 Mo. 1054, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-madden-v-sartorius-mo-1942.