197 Mo. App. 555 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1917
One John Mays, referred to in the abstract as Colonel Mays, had been married three times. Of his first marriage he had one child, a son, William J. Mays, and of his second marriage he had two children, daughters, namely Martha Y. Brown and Ellen Benson. Ellen Benson was the wife of Joseph J. Benson and they had a son named John M. Benson, who married and had one child, a son named Mays Benson. Colonel Mays married a third time, his last wife being Mary 0. Smith. There was no issue of this marriage and Colonel Mays died some time before the death of his third wife, Mary C. Mays. Mrs. Mary C. Mays was the
A considerable fund came to this last wife on the death of her hnsband, which was of her estate at the time of her death. She died testate. After providing for payment of funeral expenses and debts her will proceeds :
“First, I direct my executors to pay my funeral expenses and all my just debts and liabilities as soon as it. can be conveniently done. First, I give and bequeath to Mount Olivet Cemetery four hundred dollars, I do hereby appoint John M. Benson trustee .of the said money to be held and used the interest to be applied to keeping the cemetery clean and the fencing in repair the residue of my estate consisting of money alone shall be kept at interest secured by landed estate the interest to be given to my three sisters Susan, Felicia and Margaret Smith to be used by them for their benefit alone during their natural lives at their deaths I will the principle shall be divided equally between the children of Martha V. Brown, John M. Benson and the four children of William J. Mays, Homer, Virginia, John, Violet.
“I give to my stepdaughter Ellen Benson all the things I- left in her care to my stepdaughter Martha V. Brown I give her father’s portrait done in crayon and my glass globe and the flowers therein.
“I here subscribe my name and affix my seal.”
It is said that this will was written by Mrs. Mays herself, although her signature to it is by mark and duly witnessed, and it was duly probated.
The three sisters of the testatrix, Susan, Felicia and Margaret, died after the death of the testatrix and no trustee having been named to take over the fund on their death, Joseph J. Benson, referred to as Judge Benson, was appointed trustee of the fund. He appeared in the circuit court of Marion county and made his report and settlement of the fund in his hands as trustee, reporting that the principal and interest in his hands, up to May 8, 1914, amounted to $5003.69. He claimed credit on this for expenditures and commissions in the sum of $291.37,
All the beneficiaries but John M. Benson excepted to the allowance of a commission of five per cent, on $5000, claimed by the trustee, averring that it was exorbitant and that the trustee, in previous settlements, had been credited with and paid his full commission, they claiming that the commissions were payable solely out of the income of the fund and in no event chargeable against the principal. These same legatees also filed a motion for distribution, claiming that they and Mays Benson, son and only child of John M. Benson, are entitled in equal shares and proportion to the trust fund? that is to say, an undivided one-eleventh each, and they prayed for an order for distribution of the trust fund accordingly. John M. Benson, as curator of the estate of his minor son, Mays Benson, contesting this, claimed that the fund was to be distributed per stirpes, that is to say, one-third to the children or descendants of Martha Y. Brown, one-third to Mays Benson, child of John M. Benson, and one-third to the four children named of William J. Mays.
At a trial before the court, the court held that the fund was to be divided per capita among the children of Martha Y. Brown, naming them, Mays Benson, the son and only child of John M. Bensón, and the four children of William J. Mays named, one-eleventh to each, and it adjudged and decreed that the trustee’s final settlement be restated so that he be charged with the sum of $5003.-69; that he pay the costs herein taxed, of $5.35, and retain $40 with which to pay estimated taxes for 1914 and retain as his commission “the overplus, if any, over and
We think that the conclusion arrived at by the learned trial judge, that the legacy here involved was to be distributed per capita and not per stirpes is correct.
An accepted authority, (Jarman on Wills, vol. 2, sec. 12, chap. 30, *p. 1051 [6 Am. Ed.]) says:
“Where a gift is to the children of several persons, whether it be to the children of A and B, or to the children of A and the children of B, they take per capita, not per stirpes. The same rule applies, where a devise or bequest is made to a person and the children of another person; or to a person describel as standing in a certain relation to the testator, and the children of another person standing in the same relation, as to ‘my son A and the children of my son Bp in which case A takes only a share equal to that of one of the children of B, though it may be conjectured that the testator had a distribution according to the statute in his view. So if the gift'be to A and B and their children, or to. a class and their children, every individual coming within the terms of the description, childrep. as well as parents, will take an equal proportion of the fund; that is, the distribution will be made per capita.”
The same learned author says, however, that this mode of construction will yield to a very faint glimpse of a different intention in the context, and we may say with reference to the case at bar, that we find nothing in the context of the will which in any way tends to indicate a different intention.
Our Supreme Court, in Records v. Fields, 155 Mo. 314, 55 S. W. 1021, with a will before it providing that the. balance of the testator’s property be “equally divided
In McIntire v. McIntire, 192 U. S. 116, the Supreme Court of the United States, construing the meaning of the word “between,” says that that word, “if accurately
In Scott’s Estate (Gwin’s Appeal), 163 Pa. St. 165, the third clause of the will in question reads (l. c. 168): “Should my' beloved niece Miss Jessie A. Barnes die without issue, then in that case I will and devise the remainder of my estate after her decease without issue as aforesaid, to be divided among my nephews and nieces, to-wit: the legal heirs of Mrs. Lily A. Gwin, the heirs of my deceased brother James A. Scott, and the lawful heirs of my beloved brother John W. Scott, and Anna R. Stuckey, each to take share and share alike.” The trial court held that this will provided for a distribution per stirpes. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, however, did not agree to this and held that whether the technical rules of construction are to be applied to this residuary clause or it is to be given the plain meaning which the words import and its grammatical construction would demand, the result would be the same, Mr. Justice Felt,, who delivered the opinion of the court, saying (l. c. 169):
Here, the objects of the testatrix’s bounty are children of her stepchildren, and not of her blood. As before said, the statute of distribution is of no effect, and, as we understand, these decisions both of the Supreme Court of the United States and. of Pennsylvania, as well as of our own Supreme Court, supra, state the common-law rule prevailing throughout this country, to the effect that the settled legal construction of the words “equally to be divided,” or equivalent terms, when used in a will are to cause an equal division of the property per capita and not per stirpes, whether the devisees be children and grandchildren, brothers or sisters, or nieces and’ nephews, or. strangers in blood to the testator.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the word “be-' tween,” as used in this will, means “among,” and it follows that the learned trial court was right in holding that this will provides for a distribution per capita and not per stirpes between the parties..
But that decision cannot stand in awarding a share to Mays Benson, only child of John M. Benson. As we interpret this will, the beneficiary included in it is John M. Benson himself and not his child or children. Plence his only child, Mays Benson, now has no interest. The
The decree of the circuit court names a specific amount as to be distributed to the several parties. As this is based on the amount of the fund at the time of the decree and as this amount has increased by the accumulation of interest, those amounts are necessarily incorrect, The allowance which that court made to the trustee for expenses and expenditures and its action in holding that the distribution was to be made per capita and not per stirpes, is affirmed. On what amount the commission is to be allowed will depend on the amount of the interest earned on the fund — out of which alone a commission can be paid. ■ The judgment of the circuit court.is according