146 Mo. 436 | Mo. | 1898
This is a proceeding in equity to divest the title to property, real and personal, out of the Levering Investment Company, and vest it in the devisees under the will of Lawrason Levering, and to secure an accounting.
On the 20th of September, 1889, Lawrason Levering died, testate, and seized of a large estate, real and personal. After specific legacies, not here involved, the will provided: “All the rest and residue of my estate, real, personal and mixed, of whatever kind, and wherever situated, I give, devise and bequeath to my wife, Brianna Levering, and Robert B. Whittemore, and the survivors or survivor of them, upon the following uses and trusts: In trust to pay my wife, Brianna Levering, in cash, so long as she shall live, and for uses and support, and in such
The will was duly admitted to probate, and letters testamentary granted to the executors selected by the will in September, 1889.. The devisees were a daughter (Katie Whittemore) and fourteen grandchildren, Mrs. Levering took no active part in the management of the trust estate, but let Mr. Whittemore control it, ratifying, however, whatever he did. The executors, pending the administration, without permission of any court and pursuant to the power contained in the will, sold parts of the real estate and reinvested the proceeds in other real estate.
Before the close of the administration, and on June 23, 1890, Robert B. Whittemore (the co-executor), his two sons, Robert B., Jr., and Lawrason L., together with John S. Parrish, a clerk and stenographer in the office of. Mr. John F. Lee, attorney for thó executors, organized the Levering Investment Company, under article 8 of the corporation laws of this State, with a capital stock of $300,300, divided into 3,003 shares of a par value of $100 each, of which Mr. Whittemore and
Howbeit, the new company became the owner of all the property of the Levering estate, the executors reported that the’ personal property of the estate amounted to $315,850.24 (of which $300,000 was the stock so acquired), and they were allowed five per cent commission thereon, amounting to $15,000; they made final settlement, turned over the stock to themselves as trustees, and were discharged as executors.
The executors and trustees say that the purpose of this transaction was to prevent and avoid the expense of a partition of the property, and to preserve the estate intact and prevent a sacrifice of the property at a public partition sale.'
As Mrs. Levering had a life estate, the trustees held all the three thousand shares of stock, and voted it at all elections held by the company. Mr. Whittendore was made president of the company, and paid a salary of $200 a month, from July 1, 1890, to July 1, 1892, amounting to $4,800, and of two hundred and fifty dollars a month, from July 1,1892, to” February 1,1896 (when this suit was brought), amounting to $10,500, and aggregating $15.300. Mrs. Levering was paid the income from the estate, thus corporationized, until her death in August, 1895, having received in this way some $38,000. She, having taken no part in the management of the estate, turned over her share of all commissions allowed the executors to Mr. Whittemore.
Thus the matter stood in August, 1895, when Mrs. Levering died. In September, 1895, all the remaindermen were invited to the house of Mr. Whittemore. Statements were made by him and his attorney as to the management of the estate. It was represented that under Mr. Whittemore’s wise management the estate had nearly doubled in value since Mr. Levering’s
Between September, 1895,' and February, 1896, the dividends on plaintiff’s interest in the estate, which is valued at from $20,000 to $25,000, amounted to $530.33, of which $333.33 was applied as her part of the $5,000 cash allowance to Whittemore, and $197 was paid to her. She and her husband were shown to be inexperienced in business matters and do not seem to have a very clear idea of the workings of a corporation. No one even attempted to explain to her how the estate of her grandfather came to be vested in a corporation, nor had she ever seen the will, but when Whittemore undertook to explain the matter to her husband he told Whittemore he could talk to him until doomsday and not convince him that it was to the interest of Mrs. Garesche that Mr. Whittemore should manage her affairs, and that he would rather lose his property than have it managed by any one else, no matter how honestly or efficiently it was managed. Mrs. Garesche consulted attorneys, who, upon investigation, gave the opinion that the transfer of the property to the corporation was illegal, demanded her share of the estate and, being refused, instituted this action4
I.
With commendable zeal and industry the counsel on both sides have presented this ease, both by able oral arguments and upon voluminous and exhaustive printed briefs, covering a wide field of research and investigation, and raising a multiplicity of questions as to the powers and duties of trustees, but they have been compelled to admit that they have found no case that is a precedent for this. The truth is that the case lies in a small compass. The fact that it is the first instance where executors or trustees under a will, with power to sell and reinvest, have ever attempted to incorporate the estate without the consent of the cestuis g%ie trusient, is, in itself, persuasive'that until now no such power was ever thought by the profession to be possessed by such trustees. The law has long been regarded as settled that it is the duty of trustees to collect and preserve, intact, the trust property, and that they have no power to change the character of the trust property, unless it is of a perishable or transitory nature, and then only to convert it into a substantial,'
In Haydel v. Hurck, 5 Mo. App. l. c. 274; 72 Mo. 253, the will granted to the executor and the testamentary trustee full power to “sell, deed in trust, lease, mortgage, convey, or in any manner dispose of the same at private' or public sale,” and the court said: “A court of equity will never favor a construction that confers upon the trustee absolute and uncontrollable powers. Tophan v. Duke of Portland, 1 De G. J. & S. 568. In this case the will provides: ‘The proceeds of such sale, together with the rents, income, or revenue of my estate, my said trustee may invest and reinvest in such securities as to him may seem best.’ The intent and purpose of all such powers is universally held to be the preservation and amelioration of the trust estate. It is said that trustees ought always to have an immediate and advantageous investment in view before they sell existing securities. Watts v. Girdlestone, 6 Beav. 188; Wormley v. Wormley, 8 Wheat. 421. A sale for the mere purpose of converting real estate into personal, or vice versa, or without some well defined and proper purpose in view, will render the trustee responsible for any resulting loss.”
In the case at bar the trust property was principally real estate. The executors sold the portions which appeared likely to depreciate in value, and reinvested in other real property. Of this there is no complaint except as to the apportionment of the proceeds, to which fuller reference is hereafter madq. At the time the estate was thrown into the corporation the character of the trust property was unexceptionable, and no loss or depreciation was threatening. The whole scheme was to place the title to the property, real and personal, in the corporation, so as to prevent a partition
The will itself nowhere gives any intimation of any such idea in the mind of the testator. He provided for his wife for life, and after her death directed the remainder of his property, ‘‘real, personal and mixed,” to be equally distributed among my daughter, Katie Whittemore, and our grandchildren, share and share alike.” This language can not impart the idea that the trust estate was to be changed in character and converted into a corporation, and the shares of stock distributed. The corporation is organized for a duration of fifty years. The Whittemore branch of the devises controlled about two thirds of the stock— the Levering share comprising only one third. When
H.
But it is insisted that the plaintiffs are estopped from drawing in question the legality of these acts. To constitute an estoppel it must appear that the party acted with full knowledge of all the material facts and circumstances and with a knowledge of his legal rights, and that the position of the party invoking the
in this case it is not pretended that Mrs-. G-aresche was advised or consulted about the conversion of the land into stock in the company, nor that any of the facts or circumstances were communicated to her, nor that she knew them or understood her rights. In fact at the so-called ratification meeting at Whittemore’s house, after Mrs. Levering’s death, there was no rendering account of stewardship by the trustee, in any proper sense; it partook rather of generalities as to the increased value of the estate, upon which to predicate a claim foi an additional bonus to the trustee. She can not be said to have had knowledge of her rights nor of the facts and acts which she is claimed to be estopped to deny. When Mrs. Knapp, one of the devisees, asked Mr. Whittemore by what authority the estate had been incorporated, he answered, by authority of her grandfather’s will under the power “to invest and reinvest,” and his son Robt. B. Whittemore said, “By order of the court.” It is upon this sandy foundation that the temple of estoppel — good con
III.
As the circuit court referred the case to a special master to take an account, and as no judgment on an accounting was rendered against the trustee in that court, it is only necessary to say that whether the executor gave the estate its proper portion of the proceeds of the sale of the former residence property and the adjoining property belonging to the executor, is a question of fact, which must be settled in the accounting, and that if the houses were substantially the same, and the land of equal value per foot, as Mr. Whittemore testified was the fact, the estate should receive eleven sixteenths and Mr. Whittemore five sixteenths of the $37,000, as the estate owned one hundred and ten feet, and Mr. Whittemore fifty feet, which would make the estate’s interest $25,437.50 and that of Mr. Whittemore $11,562.50. Mr. Whittemore gave the estate credit for $21,000 which, upon the basis of value
Inasmuch also as Mr. Whittemore received as executor, $15,000 'as commissions on the property turned into stock, and inasmuch as he was not entitled thus to change the character of the trust property, and as executor he was not entitled to any commissions on the real estate, his accounts should be surcharged by deducting from the $15,000, the proportion thereof which represented the realty turned into stock, and allowed only the portion which represented commissions on the personalty distributed.
As the $10,000 bonus allowed Mr. Whittemore at the first meeting of the heirs after the termination of the life estate was based upon claimed meritorious and beneficial services rendered the estate, and as it was allowed, so far as the plaintiff is concerned, without full knowledge of the facts and upon the erroneous supposition that he had power under the will to do as he had done or that it had been done by order of court, it can not be allowed to stand, and the cash and stock so received must be brought into the accounting.
The formation of the corporation being illegal, Mr. Levering is not entitled to any salary for acting as its president, and the $15,300 received as such must also be brought into the accounting. This restores the legal status quo of the parties, and Mr. Whittemore must be allowed a reasonable compensation as trustee for managing the trust property. Tracy v. Railroad, 13 Mo. App. 295; s. c., 84 Mo. 210; Kemp v. Foster, 22 Mo. App. l. c. 649; Gamble v. Gibson, 59 Mo. l. c. 593.
The decree of the circuit court was right, and the orders made regular and proper, and it is, therefore, affirmed.