Wiegand v. Woerner

134 S.W. 596, 155 Mo. App. 227, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 217
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 24, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 134 S.W. 596 (Wiegand v. Woerner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiegand v. Woerner, 134 S.W. 596, 155 Mo. App. 227, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 217 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

(after stating the facts).— First: Although counsel for the respective parties, with the exception of the learned counsel representing Mrs. Anna Rubelmann, have devoted most of their very elaborate briefs and arguments to the consideration of the question of allowance to the trustees of commission, and as to whether Mr. Woerner, by reason of occupying the position of executor of the will of Mrs. Rosalie Wiegand, in claiming this fund from himself and his co-trustee, has forfeited his right as trustee and should be removed as such, the material and underlying question in the case arises over the proper construction of the fourth clause or item of the will of George Wiegand.

Two questions arise on this: First. How much are the trustees appointed under that clause entitled to deduct from the capital to pay the amount claimed to fall due between the death of George Wiegand and the death of his wife Rosalie, assuming that the annuity created by the trust is apportionable? Second. Is the annuity apportionable at all?

Taking up the first proposition, it is clear from the evidence in the case that down to' the 8th day of July, 1908, the fund was in the hands, not of the trustees but of Mrs. Rosalie Wiegand herself, as executrix of her husband’s will. The only period that the fund had been in the hands of the trustees during the lifetime of Mrs. Wiegand was between the 8th and the 24th of July, a period of sixteen days. It is a very singular line of argument that holds the trustees, as such, liable to the estate of Mrs. Wiegand for interest on the trust fund [245]*245when in her hands and before it came into their possession. Their title to it may revert back to the date of the death of the testator who created the fund; their responsibility for its investment and safe' keeping conld only attach from the time they received it. As the annuitant may die before the payment falls due and so lose it, she takes no vested interest in it; all she takes is the right to enforce payment of the annuity when it falls due, with the right to hold the trustees to their trust. [Kearney v. Cruikshank, 117 N. Y. 95.] If Mrs. Wiegand, as executrix, had not chosen to turn over the fund until a year after the issue of her letters testamentary it may have been within her right under the law so to have chosen. But she could then have been compelled to turn over certainly the capital fund. We do not consider or pass upon this. On the theory of the trustees and of the executor of Mrs. Wiegand, if she had held out the fund from the trustees for the year, immediately at the end of the year turning it over to them, they would have been forced to have turned back to her $5000, with the result that they would only in fact have received as of the trust fund $95,000, instead of the whole $100,000. In this case as it actually is, during the period intervening between the death of her husband and this 8th day of July, 1908, the trust as an entity was not in being; it existed only on paper. The fund itself, part of George Wiegand’s estate which was to be separated from his general estate and turned into, converted into a trust fund, was in Mrs. Wiegand’s own hands, possession and control as part of the estate in her hands as executor. If she did not make it yield interest, it was surely not for the trustees to allow her to deduct $5000 from it, nor is it equitable that her neglect should make the other beneficiaries of the trust fund suffer by a diminution of the capital, of the trust fund itself. If, when Mrs. Wiegand turnéd over the capital fund to the trustees, she had also turned over any interest accruing on it during the period the fund [246]*246was in her hands, the case might present another aspect. She did not do this and there is no snch element presented for decision. We express no opinion whatever on this view of it. On this branch of the case, therefore, and under the facts peculiar to this case, we hold that the executor of Mrs. Wiegand, as such, had no right whatever to assert, as against the trust fund in the hands of the trustees, a claim for interest or an accounting for interest on the fund while she held it and before that fund came into the hands and under the control of the trustees, as such. Following this a little further, if it could be supposed that these trustees, failing to account for the interest at the end of a year from the time of the death of George Wiegand, had been sued by Mrs. Rosalie Wiegand for the $5000, is it possible that they would not have been allowed to set up in answer to this claim for the $5000, that the trust fund had never been in their hands during the year but during all that period had been in the possession of Mrs. Wiegand herself? Is it possible that any court of law or of equity would have mulcted them for the interest, or held them guilty of violation of their trust by not having the fund earn interest while it was not in their hands? Least of all should Mrs. Wiegand’s executor be permitted to take that interest out of the principal fund, a fund which, under the will, was to stand for the benefit of all the parties ultimately interested in the fund. The foregoing remarks are expressly limited- to the facts in this case.

The second proposition covering the law as to the-right of apportionment of an annuity, while, so far as’ we know, touched on by but one decision of the appellate courts of this state — that of Lynch v. Houston, infra — is a proposition settled by authority and a long-line of decisions by courts of other jurisdictions. That at common law the right of apportionment did not exist, admits of no argument; tha/t the common law, unless changed by statute, is in force in our state, is [247]*247beyond donbt; that we have no statute changing the common law on this, is equally beyond question. It is, however, universally conceded, that while at common law the right of apportionment of an annuity did not exist, two exceptions have been, by the application to them of principles of equity, engrafted upon that law. Judge Woerner, in his work on The American Law of Administration (2 Ed.), vol. 1, sec. 301, *p. 638, after announcing the rule of the common law that there is no apportionment of rent between successive owners, announces that the same rule with reference to apportionment applies to annuities. “They are not,” says that learned author, “in their nature apportionable either in law or equity, except annuities for the maintenance of the Avidow, or married women living apart from their husbands, or infants, in which case they are apportion-able on the ground of necessity.” But the cases which bring the widow within the exception and which support Judge Woerner in extending the exception are cases in which the widow was without other means. That is undoubtedly what the learned author had in mind when referring to the widow; that is, the case of a widow not provided for by dower or otherwise. Judge Ellison, in Lynch v. Houston, to be hereafter referred to, notes the same exception.

In Manning v. Randolph, 4 N. J. L. 144, it is said that no principle is better settled than that if a bond be for the payment of an annuity at a date certain and the annuitant died before the day, the annuity of that year is lost, and that in the case before the “court, as in the case at bar before us, the deceased could not herself have recovered the annuity before its anniversary, if she had been living; that the day of payment had not then come, “and surely,” says the court (l. c. 145), “her administrators can have no greater right than she herself would have had.”

In Tracy v. Strong, 2 Conn. 659, l. c.

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Bluebook (online)
134 S.W. 596, 155 Mo. App. 227, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiegand-v-woerner-moctapp-1911.