218 Wis. 210 | Wis. | 1935
At the time of the death of August F. Marquardt, he owned ten shares of stock in the Citizens State Bank of Wausau, Wisconsin. By his will he gave this bank stock, with all other property remaining after certain
“Five of my ten shares of Citizens State Rank of Wausau stock, which I direct my executors to hold without sale, shall be transferred to my son Erwin Marquardt, and the other five, which shall be similarly held without sale, shall be transferred to my son Leo Marquardt.”
Provision is then made for the division of the balance of the estate equally among his eleven children.
The widow, who is still alive and has not remarried, is the cestui que trust under the will, and the shares of bank stock are part of the trust estate. Circumstances in connection with the bank are such that the assessment for the double liability provided for by statute is due. Appellants contend that the trial court erred in holding that the trustees were owners of the bank stock, and that the property held by them under the trust was liable for the assessment. They insist that the property is segregated as to the rights of separate beneficiaries; that because the bank stock is designed ultimately to become the property of Leo and Erwin Marquardt, the other nine children have no interest in, and can acquire no benefit from, this stock. There is considerable persuasion toward this claim in their statement of the situation, but in the hands of the trustees where the property now is, there is no separation of this "stock from the balance of the estate. The bank stock is given to the trustees for the identical purpose that the other property is placed in their control. The title remains in the trustees until the death or remarriage of the widow. Until one of these events occurs, the entire trust
Sec. 221.42, Stats., provides in part that “persons holding stock as . . . trustees . . . shall not be personally liable as stockholders, but the assets or funds in their hands constituting the trust shall be liable to the same extent as the testator,
It is contended by appellants that the fact that Leo and Erwin Marquardt have been designated in the will as the parties who may receive title to the bank stock after the death or remarriage of Augusta Marquardt makes them persons interested within the meaning of the statute. This contention cannot be sustained. The trust was created for the benefit of Augusta Marquardt. She is the cestui que trust, and receives the beneficial interest from all the property during her life so long as she does not remarry. In such a situation it is the .duty of the trustees to conserve the assets of the estate for the benefit of the contingent beneficiaries under the will, and though the trustees may be personally liable for waste or fraud, the estate itself is subject to all liabilities arising out of the property so held in trust. At all times the ownership of the bank stock carried with it a possible liability. When the potential liability became a positive incumbrance, it attached itself to the resources of the owner. This is true although the ownership is in the trustees in their representative capacity. The liability now affects the entire estate held in trust for the benefit of Augusta Marquardt. Leo and Erwin Mar-quardt have no beneficial interest in the trust so long as their mother is alive and does not remarry. Their sole interest arises out of'the distribution of the property according to the terms of the will after the termination of the trust estate. As the testator required the bank stock to be held, there can be no personal liability on the part of the trustees, and the estate held in trust for Augusta Marquardt is liable for the assessment.
The assignment of error based on the fact that two of the bank directors, after the liability which respondent seeks to enforce was declared due and payable, gave the bank their notes for the amount of the unpaid assessment, and the
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.