Therrien v. Mercantile-Commerce Bank & Trust Co.

227 S.W.2d 708, 360 Mo. 149, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 576
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 13, 1950
Docket41290
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 227 S.W.2d 708 (Therrien v. Mercantile-Commerce Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Therrien v. Mercantile-Commerce Bank & Trust Co., 227 S.W.2d 708, 360 Mo. 149, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 576 (Mo. 1950).

Opinion

*151 ELLISON, J.

This case comes to the writer on reassignment. The ultimate legal question involved on this appeal is whether the trial court erred in making a final order sustaining the motion of the defendant-respondent Trust Company as trustee of May Scullin de Gheest, deceased, to dismiss the plaintiff-appellant’s suit in equity against it for $60,000 on the ground that his petition failed to state a cause of action upon which relief could be granted, the motion having been filed under Laws Mo. 1943, Sec. 59, p. 374, Sec. 62, p. 375; §§ 847.59, 847.62 Mo. R. S. A. The ultimate factual-legal question is whether the trust of which the respondent was trustee was revoked pro tanto by the pleaded facts hereinafter narrated.

The appellant’s claim, as pleaded in his petition, was for the $60,000, based on five bank checks, three for $10,000 each and two for $15,000 each, all except one dated October 24, 1944, and that remaining one [for $10,000] being dated December 15, 1944. The checks were the Trust Company’s ordinary printed counter checks, payable to the order of (no payee named), and drawn against it as a banking institution, and not as trustee or against any trust fund or account. All were signed by the said May Scullin de Gheest.

In each instance, and apparently contemporaneously with the issuance of the several checks, the payor also issued a letter of corresponding date, which w.as likewise addressed to the respondent Trust Company in its character as a banking institution, and not as trustee, advising it that she had “drawn on my (her) account” the sum designated, and requesting that the Trust Company “place and keep in escrow” a corresponding amount so that the checks would be duly met on presentation, even in case of her death.

All these checks and letters were attached to appellant’s petition as exhibits, and thereby became a part thereof. Laws Mo. 1943, Sec. 44, p. 371; § 847.44 Mo. R. S. A. Appellant contends they had the effect of withdrawing from the trust fund of which respondent was trustee the sums specified in the checks and letters, and of pledging those amounts to the payment of the checks.

The further facts pleaded in the petition with respect to the trust [actually two trusts are involved] were as follows. The appellant is a resident of Montreal, P. Q., Canada, and the trustee of an express trust [oral, apparently] in favor of Roger Laboureix of Paris, France, under which he holds the five cheeks in suit as such trustee. The other aforesaid trust of which the respondent Trust Company is trustee, was in writing, and ereatd by May Scullin de Gheest on November 8, 1935. Her heirs were the beneficiaries therein, but their names and addresses were unknown to appellant, and they were impleaded as unknown de *152 fendants and served with process by publication. AVhen Mrs. de Gheest died, the petition does not state. The amount of the assets held in trust by the respondent Trust Company is not pleaded, but it is alleged that'it exceeded the amount of the appellant’s claim..

The petition alleges appellant’s trust arose as follows. On October 24, 1944, the said Roger Laboureix, appellant’s trustor, gave Mrs. de Gheest a good ánd valuable consideration in French currency, in return for which she negotiated to him the first four checks in suit. Nearly two months later, on December 15, 1944, he gave her an additional consideration in French currency, in return for which she negotiated to him the last cheek in suit. In order to subject [or “revoke”] the trust of which the Trust Company is trustee :to the payment of the checks she further executed the five letters marked as exhibits. Demand on the respondent trustee for the payment of the checks was ,not made by appellant until March, 1947, and apparently the suit was filed about a year later.

The de Gheest trust, of which the respondent 'Trustee is trustee, provided in part as follows:

“FIRST: The Trustee shall collect the income from said trust estate and shall pay the net income derived from the trust estate in quarterly or other convenient installments to the Donor for and during the period of her natural life. The Trustee shall also pay so much of the principal to the Donor as she may, in writing, at any'time request.
* # * »
‘ ‘ SIXTH: The Donor reserves the right at any time by instrument, in writing, signed by the Donor, and delivered to the Trustee, to alter, amend or modify in whole, or in part, the trust herein created, provided, that the duties, powers, compensation and liability of the Trustee shall not be changed without its written consent, or to revoke the said trust in its entirety with full power to direct the Trustee as to the distribution of the trust fund. ’ ’

Appellant’s petition further alleges that for a long time prior to December 15, 1944 [which was the date of the last check and letter, supra] the respondent Trust Company “had retained in the trust account of May Scullin de Gheest the proceeds of the principal of the trust and had not paid over to May Scullin de Gheest the income derived therefrom. ’ ’ This was an admission that all the funds of the trust were carried in a trust account, and that none of them were carried in an open checking account subject to. checks drawn on the Trust Company as a banking institution, and not as trustee.

The “full transcript of the record” brought up by appellant contains only the appellant’s petition,.heretofore summarized; the respondent Trust Company’s motion to dismiss on the ground that the *153 petition failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted; the trial court’s order sustaining respondent’s-motion, and allowing appellant ten days within which to file an amended petition; and the trial court’s final order dismissing appellant’s suit; which recited'that the appellant refused to plead further and elected to stand on-his original-petition. This is followed by an entry showing the filing-of-the-appehlant’s notice of appeal to this court.

' On the ultimate question in the case,- as to 'whether the trial chancellor erred in dismissing the appellant’s suit on the ground that his petition failed to state a claim upon which relief could be 'granted, the facts should be kept in mind: that the suit was brought in equity, recognizing the situation was such that the ordinary principles of-statutory or common law would be inadequate; that appellant was granted leave to amend his petition but refused to do so; and that- the case had its origin in obscure facts arising in a remote environment,- which made especially applicable the rule that ‘ ‘ The safety of the trust' fund is the first care of the law, and on this depends every rule- which ’has been made for the conduct of trustees.” 65 C. J., p. 651, § 519. In other words the respondent trustee and the trial chancellor were justified in holding the appellant to adequate pleading and proof of the essential facts.

As stated in the beginning, the ultimate factual-legal question was whether the trustor, May Seullin de G-heest intended by the five checks and accompanying letters to revoke the trust to the extent of the $60,000, as she had a right to do under the 6th clause of the trust

agreement. If such was not her intention she. must have thought the-

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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W.2d 708, 360 Mo. 149, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/therrien-v-mercantile-commerce-bank-trust-co-mo-1950.