Young v. Boatmen's National Bank

171 S.W.2d 553, 350 Mo. 1157, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 683
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 5, 1943
DocketNo. 36823.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 171 S.W.2d 553 (Young v. Boatmen's National Bank) 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
Young v. Boatmen's National Bank, 171 S.W.2d 553, 350 Mo. 1157, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 683 (Mo. 1943).

Opinion

*1164 ELLISON, C. J.

— The defendant bank, as executor of the estate of Hugh W. Thomasson, deceased, appeals from a judgment of the circuit court of the City of St. Louis allowing the plaintiffs-respondents Taylor R. Young and P. H. Cullen (the latter now deceased and represented by his executor) an attorney fee of $42,500 for legal services rendered to. the ' administratices of the deceased Thomasson’s estate while they were in charge thereof before his will was found.

The administratrices had been appointed in February, 1933, about a month after the death of the supposed intestate-; and on the same day by written contract they employed the respondents to represent the estate, and themselves as administratrices. But a little over eight months later, in October, 1933, a will executed by Thomas-son was found! Upon the discovery of the will the administratrices were supplanted by the appellant bank, the executor named therein; and in February, 1934, they filed in the probate court a final settlement covering their administration up to-the revocation of their *1165 letters. The probate court shortly thereafter approved it. This settlement was prepared by their attorneys, Young and Cullen; but it did not include any charge for the legal services theretofore rendered to the estate by said attorneys.

When the will was produced the heirs promptly brought a suit contesting it, on the ground of testamentary incapacity. During the period of the contest the appellant served as administrator pendente lite. This litigation continued for over three years until a judgment sustaining the will was affirmed by this court in April, 1937 [Townsend v. Boatmen’s National Bank, 340 Mo. 550, 104 S. W. (2d) 657.] A few days later, the respondent attorneys filed in the probate court a motion for the allowance of their fee as attorneys for' the administratrices during the prior intestate administration. The appellant executor contested the motion. The probate court ruled against the respondents, filing a memorandum opinion, but on appeal the circuit court gave- judgment in their favor. Then followed the instant appeal by the executor to this court.

Appellant’s main contention is that the judgment of the probate court approving said settlement to revocation was final and binding on both the administratrices and the respondent attorneys; and since they failed to have their, attorney fee allowed in the settlement, they were forever barred thereafter. Another contention is that any.services performed by respondents were not rendered to the estate, but were referable to a different contract (on a 50% contingent fee) which they had previously made with some 35 relatives and prospective heirs of Thomasson, including the administratrices, to protect him and his property from the machinations of certain persons, to the end that said relatives might thereafter obtain their shares of his estate at his death, as his heirs. Again, it is claimed the services principally were for-the purpose of protecting the title to Thomasson’s real estate which passed directly to his heirs or devisees, .not to the administratrices as such, in consequence of which such: services were not chargeable to the estate. Other assignments complain of the admission and exclusion of evidence.

Appellant’s first contention- — that .the probate court’s judgment approving the administratrices’ settlement to revocation bars the respondents’ claim for attorney fees — is based on Matson & May v. Pearson, 121 Mo. App. 120, 134, 97 S. W. 983, 987. The suit there had been brought by two lawyers directly in the circuit court in equity, against the administrator d.b.n., c.t.a. of an estate,- for- legal services rendered the preceding executor, who had resigned and died tvithout making a-settlement to revocation. In endeavoring to find a basis for equitable cognizance of the suit the St. Louis Court of Appeals in a long opinion (by Nortoni, J.) enumerated the .three legal methods of presenting such claims for attorney fees.

*1166 It said the first of these would have been for the retiring executor to have made a settlement claiming credit for the attorney fees, and to have obtained a reasonable allowance therefor; but since he had died without making any settlement the plaintiff attorneys were foreclosed as to that method. Next, it said the attorneys could have presented their claim directly to the probate court and had it allowed as a demand against the estate. Thirdly, they might have brought a suit at law in the circuit court for their attorney fee and exhibited the judgment for allowance in the probate court. But the decision declared the second and third methods would have to be followed in one year (under Sec. 184 V, R. S. 1899), and would have resulted in the classification of the claim as a fifth class demand, in which event the plaintiffs would have been denied the priority to which they were entitled because their claim was really an expense of administration. And so the decision concluded the plaintiff attorneys had properly brought their suit in equity because they had no adequate remedy at law.

Appellant interprets the foregoing statements in the Matson case as meaning that any claim for legal services rendered to a prior executor must be presented to the probate court by that executor, or asserted by the claimants while he is in office. Appellant’s brief says the decision held our probate courts do not have power to make a fee allowance to an attorney employed by a prior executor or administrator, after the latter had died without asking such allowance; and that the St. Louis. Court of Appeals for that reason permitted the plaintiffs there to sue in equity.

We do not so construe the Matson decision. As recited in the opinion (121 Mo. App. l. c. 123-4, 97 S. W. l. c. 984) the letters testamentary in that case were issued to the first executor on October 26, 1903, and he died before May 25, 1904, which was just about seven months after the letters were granted. Yet the opinion conceded (121 Mo. App. l. c. 134-5, 97 S. W. l. c. 987-8) the plaintiff attorneys could have established their claim if they had presented it as a demand directly in the probate court or had sued thereon at law in the circuit court, “within one year from the grant of the first letters on the estate.” That-year included five months after the preceding executor had died. So it is clear the Matson opinion did not hold the plaintiffs there had lost the right to assert their claim- at law because they failed to do so before the death of the preceding executor.

Further conclusive on that point is the fact that the opinion expressly sanctioned equity jurisdiction on the ground that if the plaintiff attorneys had asserted their claim by probate demand or action at law in the circuit court it would have lost the priority to which it was entitled — that is, it would have been classified as a fifth class demand when it properly was an expense of administration. In short, the ruling was that ,the plaintiffs there had no adequate remedy *1167 at law and were entitled to sue in equity solely because at law the proper classification

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.2d 553, 350 Mo. 1157, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-boatmens-national-bank-mo-1943.