175 Mo. App. 84 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is an action in partition. One ■ Samuel Cannon died testate in 1857 seized of an estate in fee in certain lands in Lincoln county, Missouri. The provisions of his last will and testament affecting the land here sought to be partitioned are as follows :
*86 “Second. I will that my wife-, Hannah Cannon, retain and be in possession of all my real estate during her natural life, and in lieu of dower of my personal property or perishable estate, she have- and retain an amount equal to two. hundred and twenty dollars worth.”
“Fifth. After my death, and after the death of my wife Hannah Cannon, I will to my daughter, Lydia Cannon, and to the heirs of her body (if she ever have any) the tract .of land on which I now reside. In the event she should die childless, then my said executor shall sell said land and divide , the sale money equally between all my children.”
The will then provides as follows:
“Sixth. I hereby appoint John Cannon my executor to carry into effect the provisions of this will, waiving- ;all forms of law, and empowering my said executor to sell any of my personal property either at public or private sale as he may think best, collect debts, make deeds, sue andl defend, and make and give acquittance, and in fact, to do any and everything relative to my said estate that I might or could do were I present and living, hereby confirming and satisfying whatsoever my said executor may din by virtue of this will, and should anything prevent John Cannon from acting, then Samuel Gannon, Isaac Cannon, William, James or Bluford Cannon is appointed in his stead, so that any one of my sons above named is appointed my executor should anything prevent John Cannon from acting. I give and grant all power to whichever of my sons may act that I have given to the first named executor.”
The record shows that John Cannon qualified as executor, of the will, and administered upon the said estate until his death in 1888.. The record' does not disclose who succeeded him as executor, but it does appear that prior to the year 1911 all of the sons, of the testator-named in the-sixth paragraph of his. will departed this life. It further appears that the testator’s
Thereafter the appellant, John R. Cannon, the administrator de bonis non, applied to the court requesting.to be made a party defendant to the suit and to be permitted to file pleadings therein; which request was by the court granted. Thereupon appellant, as such administrator, by leave of court filed what is termed a plea in abatement to the plaintiff’s petition, setting up the provisions of the will of said testator, and asserting that the real estate described in the petition herein, and sought to be partitioned, is not subject to partition because the same would be in contravention of the will of said testator, but that the title to the land is vested in the appellant administrator, as the successor in office of the executor under the will, and that appellant, as administrator de bonis non, is vested with the exclusive power to sell said' real estate in accordance with the provisions of the last will and .testament of said Samuel Cannon.
Thereafter the court overruled said plea in abatement, and entered judgment against appellant thererupon; from which the latter has duly prosecuted his appeal to this court.
When the cause was reached for hearing in this court, it was transferred to the Supreme Court for the reason that we were of the opinion that the action involved title to real estate, within the meaning of the Constitution, and that this court was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the appeal. However, the Supreme Court has since, on motion of appellant, re-transferred the cause here, as being within our jurisdiction, and we shall therefore proceed to a determination of the issue involved.
The only question raised by the appeal is whether partition will lie as to these lands, in view of the right asserted by the administrator de bonis non to make a sale thereof, under the provisions of the will, and distribute the proceeds. Nothing appears in the record to indicate upon what theory the lower court proceeded in determining this question in favor of plaintiff and against the administrator, and we have not been favored with a brief on behalf of plaintiff, respondent in this court.
Section 2569, Revised Statutes, 19091, provides as follows:
“No partition or sale of lands, tenements or hereditaments, devised by any last will, shall be made under the provisions of this article, contrary to the intention of the testator, expressed in any such will. ’ ’
“All courts and others concerned in the execution of last wills shall have due regard to the direction of the will, and the true intent and meaning of the testator, in all matters brought before them.”
That partition of lands cannot be made contrary to the intention of a testator expressed in his will is the clear mandate of the statute, and in obedience to the latter our Supreme Court has repeatedly so declared. [See Stewart v. Jones, 219 Mo. 614, 118 S. W. l.] Numerous other cases might be cited, but to do so would serve no useful purpose as the question is not an open one. As is said in Cubbage v. Franklin, 62 Mo. l. c. 368, “Our partition law is very broad, but it at least provides that a partition cannot be made in contravention of a will. Indeed, if the contrary was held, there would be no use in our statute allowing a testator to make a will.-
The question then is, whether a partition of the lands here in question would be contrary to the intention of the’testator, Samuel Cannon, as expressed in his last will and testament. We think that the answer to this question is obvious, for it clearly appears that to permit partition would be to do violence to the terms of the will. The fifth clause of the will expressly provides that, in the event the testator’s daughter, Lydia, shall die childless, then the executor shall sell the land and divide the sale money equally among all of the testator’s children. The next clause empowers, the executor, among other things, to “make deeds.” Manifestly the intention of the testator, as clearly expressed in his will, was that the lands should be sold and conveyed by the executor and that the proceeds of the sale thereof should be distributed as directed by the will.
We are not to be understood as holding that, under the will of the testator, the executor toiok title to the
•The only remaining question is whether the power of sale conferred by the will upon the executor may be exercised by the administrator de boms non with will annexed, or whether the direction and power to sell is personal to. those named in the will, any one of whom might be appointed and act as executor thereof. The will does not appear to vest in the executor any discretion either with respect to the exercise of the power of sale conferred or in the distribution of the proceeds to be derived therefrom. No personal trust and confidence is reposed in the executor respecting the sale of this land. Under such circumstances, the power is not personal to the executor or executors named, but inheres in the office, and there appears to be no doubt as to the power of the administrator de bonis non cum testamento annexo to execute the power and carry out the terms and provisions of the will, as the successor in office of the executor or executors named. [See Francisco v. Wingfield, 161 Mo. l. c. 558, 61 S. W. 842 ; Donaldson v. Allen, 182 Mo. l. c. 648 ; R. S. 1909, secs. 54 and 141.]
■ Under the record before us, we must assume that the administrator de bonis non with will ¡annexed was regularly and properly appointed by the probate court, whereby he became charged with the duties' and vested with the powers of the executors named in the will, in
For the reasons given above the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to sustain the plea of the administrator de bonis non and dismiss the plaintiff’s petition herein. It is so ordered.