117 Mo. App. 273 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
Plaintiff’s father died in November, 1903. He left plaintiff by his will five thousand dollars in money and twenty shares of bank stock (of the face value of one hundred dollars per share) in the Bank of Blue Springs. By the terms of the will, the defendant was made trustee for the money with directions to loan it out for at least five years and pay the interest to the plaintiff. For the bank stock, while left in trust, a trustee was not named and, afterwards, defendant was appointed by the court as trustee for that also. This proceeding was brought to remove defendant from the trusteeship and resulted in refusal by the trial court; whereupon plaintiff appealed.
The main grounds' charged as cause for removal were that defendant had not loaned the money, but had converted it to his own use; and that the relations between him-and the plaintiff had become unfriendly by reason of business rivalry between two banks at Blue Springs, which had resulted from defendant having started and becoming largely interested in a bank in opposition (as alleged) to the bank in which plaintff was interested in the same little town; the tendency of which
It appears that defendant received the money from the executor of the estate in March, 1904, and that this proceeding was instituted in a year and a month thereafter; so that whatever breach of trust there is must have occurred within that space of time. Defendant gave bond in the sum of ten thousand dollars with an approved surety company as surety, on account of the five thousand in money, and eight thousand on account of the stock. The bond is not questioned and defendant is amply solvent. But it was shown that defendant deposited the money received as trustee in bank in his individual name, at a time that his account was overdrawn in the sum of about six hundred dollars. This, and the fact that he does not appear to have kept any separate book of account of his trusteeship, and that his loaning of the fund was, in some instances, done in a somewhat involved manner, and not in a way which approved business methods would suggest, are the grounds of complaint which have chiefly arrested our attention.
The mere fact that a solvent trustee with ample and sound bond mingles the trust fund with his own does not necessarily make it incumbent on a court to remove him. [Tittman v. Green, 108 Mo. 22.] In determining such a question, it is but common sense to take into consideration the solvency of the trustee and the sufficiency of the bond, and so it was said by Judge Gantt in the case just cited. So we conclude that that irregularity (which ought not to be continued) was properly considered insufficient by the trial court; especially, in view of the fact that defendant considered that he was liable for the interest on the whole sum thus received and placed.
When the time is considered, we think the money (in amount) has been fairly kept at interest and that it was amply secured and the rate of interest, at this time, exceedingly in plaintiff’s favor; all, but one loan of five hundred dollars, drawing seven per cent and that draw
But it is said that defendant' has become unfriendly to the plaintiff and that he has done things tending to lessen the value of the defendant’s stock in the Bank of Blue Springs. These things consisted in assisting to organize what is termed an opposition bank in the town of Blue Springs. But we do not consider the act of aiding in the organization and becoming a stockholder of another bank as evincing a desire to destroy or lessen the value of the stock owned by the plaintiff; nor do we find that it has in fact affected the value. It was shown that the defendant was a large stockholder in the Blue Springs Bank and that he still OAvns that stock. From which fact, it ought to be supposed that, so far as his intentions are concerned, he would not do anything to injuriously affect the prosperity of that bank.
Enmity between trustee and beneficiary is á matter for consideration on the question of removal of the trustee, but it is not a mandatory cause for removal. [Gaston v. Hayden, 98 Mo. App. 683.] However, we do not consider that there has been cause for an interruption of friendship between these parties and, save for the institution of this proceeding, do we see that there has been.