153 Mo. App. 312 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This is a proceeding in equity in the nature of a creditor’s bill or an equitable garnishment. The finding and decree were for plaintiff, and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
Defendant Amanda V. Dickson is the beneficiary of a trust estate, settled to her use by the provisions of her father’s will, and the important question for decision relates to a construction of that instrument. But there are other matters urged relating to plaintiff’s right of recovery which should be first examined and disposed of. The bill is in two counts, each of which
It is first argued that the suit on the note may not be maintained by plaintiff for the reason it appears he signed his name on the back of the instrument before delivery. It is said in such circumstances plaintiff is a co-maker of the note instead of an indorser and that therefore, upon paying the note, he extinguished the indebtedness vouchsafed therein and acquired the sole right to sue defendant for contribution on the implied undertaking which always obtains between the parties in such circumstances. The notes in suit antedate our Negotiable Instrument Law of 1905 and with that legislation we are not concerned. Under the rules of decision in this state pertaining t.o the law merchant, there can be no doubt of the general proposition that if one,
It is next argued that eren if plaintiff may maintain a suit on the note in a court of law, he is not permitted to do so .in a court of equity. It is said that though the proceeding seeks to sequestrate defendant’s income from a trust estate, which is peculiarly a matter of equitable cognizance, and the court may decree the payment of a debt from that source in some cases, this suit must fail for the reason it does not appear plaintiff has exhausted his remedy at law. The suggestion is that before seeking relief in this proceeding plaintiff should have obtained a judgment at law on the note and endeavored to collect the same by the usual process. It is unnecessary to consider this argument further than to say that an exception to .the rule invoked exists in
By his last will, John S. Moore, father of defendant Amanda Y. Dickson, settled a trust to her use by vesting the legal title to certain real property in his execu
It is argued by defendant that such income is immune from the claims of creditors for the reason the donor created a spendthrift trust by his will. It is said though the will contains no express words inhibiting the cestui que use from anticipating or alienating her one-fifth part of the net income from the estate or withdrawing it from the grasp of her creditors, it nevertheless manifests an intention to that effect sufficient for the purpose suggested. A consideration of the argument advanced, of course, involves an interpretation of the provisions of the will touching upon the trust. While it is the duty of the court to ascertain the intention of the testator from the provisions of the whole document, it is conceded by all concerned that the fourth section of the will alone is important; and that no words contained in other parts thereof suggest anything relevant to the matter in judgment. The portion of the will referred to is as follows:
*323 “Item 4th. I desire that my real estate in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, and in Cairo, Illinois, shall continue to carry the incumbrance which may be upon the same at my death, during the lifetime of my children, and that my wife and my children, or their heirs shall receive quarterly from my executor one-fifth each of tbe net income from the rental of my real estate (the children of my daughter, Mrs. M. M. Thornton, deceased, receiving her fifth). After the death of the last of my children, I desire that my real estate shall be sold to the best advantage and the proceeds equally divided among my wife or her heirs, and my grandchildren or their heirs living at that time.”
That the will contains no express words of limitation against the right of the cestui que trust to anticipate or alienate her portion of the income from the trust property or withdraw it from the claims of creditors is obvious. Indeed, so much is conceded. But it is said that as the settler directed that his wife and children, or their heirs, should receive quarterly from his executors one-fifth each of the net income from the rental of the real estate settled in trust, and it appears such arrangement was to continue until the death of the several beneficiaries, it is obvious his intention was to restrict the right of alienation and place the net income of the estate beyond the reach of creditors. There can be no doubt that in construing a will the intention of the testator is the polar star by which the court must be guided, and if it appears from reading the whole instrument that John S. Moore intended to create a trust for the purpose suggested, such intention should be effectuated by declaring the result accordingly. [Partridge v. Cavender, 96 Mo. 452, 9 S. W. 785; 26 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2 Ed.), 141, 142.] But such intention in the instant case must be clear and undoubted, for the reason the principle advanced operates to fetter the transmission of property and render a valuable estate unavailable as a means of compensating just
It is sometimes said in favor of the English rule, above referred to, that it is just, for the reason creditors
But it is said, though there appears no spendthrift trust was created, the trust is an active one beyond question and for this reason the income is not subject to the claims of a creditor. It seems such was stated to be the law by this court in Schoeneich v. Field, 73 Mo. App. 452. Such is an erroneous view, indeed. There can be no doubt that the will discloses an active trust in contradistinction to a dry one, for it imposes active duties of a substantial character upon the trustee, but we are familiar with no principle of our jurisprudence which inhibits the rights of creditors to proceed in equity against the income from the trust estate because of the mere fact that the trust is an active one. The case declaring the doctrine seems to rest the decision to that effect upon Pugh v. Hayes, 113 Mo. 424, 21 S. W. 23, from which a considerable excerpt of the opinion is copied. But, upon scrutinizing the opinion of the Supreme Court in that case, it is obvious that no such principle was declared. In Pugh v. Hayes, an estate in land had been settled in favor of the testator’s widow with the title in the executor trustee. Under the terms of the will, the widow was to enjoy the use and benefit of the land during her natural life in lieu of dower. A judgment at law had been obtained against the widow, cestui que trust, and the proceeding in judgment was in equity