Thatcher v. St. Louis

76 S.W.2d 677, 335 Mo. 1130, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 338
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 15, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 76 S.W.2d 677 (Thatcher v. St. Louis) 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
Thatcher v. St. Louis, 76 S.W.2d 677, 335 Mo. 1130, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 338 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed at May Term, 1934, July 17, 1934; motion for rehearing filed; motion overruled at September Term, November 15, 1934. This is an action in equity to terminate a trust, created by the will of Judge Bryan Mullanphy, executed in August, 1849, on the ground that "the purpose of said trust has long since wholly failed." By answer and cross-bill the city of St. Louis and the Attorney-General of Missouri asked for an interpretation of the will and for instructions to the trustee. Judge Mullanphy's will was as follows:

"I, Bryan Mullanphy, do make and declare the following to be my last will and testament: *Page 1136

"One equal undivided third of all my property, real, personal, and mixed, I leave to the City of St. Louis, in the State of Missouri, in trust, to be and constitute a fund to furnish relief to all poor immigrants and travelers coming to St. Louis on their way, bona fide, to settle in the West.

"I do appoint Felix Coste and Peter G. Camden executors of this, my last will and testament, and of any other will or executory devise that I may leave. All and any such document will be found to be olograph, all in my own handwriting.

"In testimony whereof, witness my hand and seal.

"(Witnesses' signatures) Bryan Mullanphy (Seal)."

The court found and decreed that the heirs at law of Judge Mullanphy, who brought the suit or who were defendants or interveners therein, had no right, title or interest in the trust fund and dismissed their bill; that the city of St. Louis is the testamentary trustee in possession of and administering the trust fund; and stated its findings and directions further as follows:

"3. That the number of immigrants and travelers provided for by the will of said testator is not so large as in former years and has steadily and greatly diminished, but in the opinion of the Court it is not likely to cease altogether; that the total net income of the trust estate is no longer needed for the specific purpose designated by testator; that there are from time to time found within the limits of said City of St. Louis numbers of persons, including travelers, strangers and some immigrants who are helpless and without assistance, who need charitable aid and deserve it, persons who are traveling in various directions other than west, and persons who are traveling west who do not intend to settle there, who become stranded in the City of St. Louis and are in need of charitable aid and assistance. And the Court doth order and decree that the surplus income, beyond what may be necessary to properly provide for the persons designated by said testator, shall be used for the purpose of furnishing relief to poor immigrants and travelers generally in the City of St. Louis in need and distress, and found to be worthy of assistance; preference at all times to be given to immigrants and travelers coming within the designation of the will, as aforesaid.

"4. That the said City of St. Louis, as trustee, and the Board of Commissioners of the Bryan Mullanphy Emigrant and Travelers' Relief Fund be, and hereby are, authorized to co-operate with the various travelers' aid societies existing throughout the United States, and with the National Association of Travelers' Aid Societies, in furnishing relief and assistance to all poor immigrants and travelers who are found worthy of assistance within the City of St. Louis and its environs.

"5. That whenever due authority shall have been given by ordinance by the Board of Aldermen and the Mayor of the City of St. *Page 1137 Louis, then said City of St. Louis, as trustee, and the said Board of Commissioners shall have the power to erect a building for the administration of the relief and assistance aforesaid, at which building the general headquarters of the said. Board of Commissioners may be maintained, and at which building food and lodging may be furnished and hospital beds may be supplied, and medical care and attention given, to all poor immigrants and travelers."

The court further required annual reports and taxed the costs against plaintiffs. This will has been before this court on five previous occasions. [Chambers v. St. Louis, 29 Mo. 543; St. Louis v. Wenneker, 145 Mo. 230, 47 S.W. 105; St. Louis v. Crow, Atty-Genl., 171 Mo. 272, 71 S.W. 132; St. Louis v. McAllister, Atty.-Genl., 281 Mo. 26, 218 S.W. 312, and St. Louis v. McAllister, Atty.-Genl., 302 Mo. 152, 257 S.W. 425.] This will has attracted attention all over this country because of historical interest in the circumstances of its execution and because of striking changes, in the conditions it was intended to alleviate, so soon after the death of the testator. The evidence in this case is in fact the epic story of the expansion, settlement and development of the vast wilderness, acquired by the thirteen sparsely settled original colonies, into our great nation of today, with more than a hundred and twenty million people living between the Atlantic and the Pacific. This evidence included, in addition to the personal recollections of old residents of St. Louis, the following historical works: "`St. Louis, the Fourth City, 1764-1909,' by Walter D. Stevens; `History of the Development of Missouri, and Particularly of St. Louis,' edited by Marshall S. Snow; `A History of Missouri,' by Eugene Morrow Violette; `The Chronicles of America,' Volume 25, entitled `The Forty-Niners,' and Volume 26, entitled `The Passing of the Frontier.' Encyclopedia Britannica, Volume 22, title, `United States of America,' Volume 15, title `Migration,' Volume 16, title, `Oregon,' Volume 4, title, `California,' Volume 16, title, `New Mexico.'"

Judge Mullanphy's will was made during stirring times, at the beginning of the greatest era of this country's expansion. During the early forties, St. Louis was a frontier post. Missouri was the western edge of civilization. The rest of the Louisiana Purchase territory, to the west and northwest, was the home of the Indian and the buffalo. During those years, this great expanse of vacant western territory was greatly increased by the addition of new lands and the frontiers of our country were pushed beyond the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean. Texas was annexed in 1845. Oregon was added by the boundary settlement with England in 1846. People began to move into these new lands. Then came the Mexican War and its termination brought to us the Southwest and California. Early in 1848 gold was discovered and that fall the whole world knew of it. *Page 1138 At the time Judge Mullanphy made his will, the surge of one hundred thousand Forty-Niners to the California gold fields was at its height. The unsuccessful European revolutions of 1848 had banished many peoples from their native lands, who were also seeking new homes. There were no railroads reaching the Mississippi but steamboats came up the river from New Orleans with people from the Atlantic states and from Europe. Others came from the East by way of the Ohio. St. Louis was the outfitting point for those who went overland by the Oregon and Santa Fe trails, which were then the only practicable routes. There was testimony that in June, 1849, two months before this will was made, there were great numbers of adventurers, immigrants, travelers and settlers stranded in St.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.W.2d 677, 335 Mo. 1130, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thatcher-v-st-louis-mo-1934.