96 Mo. App. 643 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
This action is based on a promissory note. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence and the plaintiff duly appealed.
It appears that in 1890, in the lifetime of William Maberry, the “Avalon College” borrowed of him one thousand dollars, due in four years, with eight per cent interest per annum. The note was signed officially by the chairman and secretary of the board of trustees, as well as by several others, apparently in their individual capacity. Maberry died in 1895, and left a will, referring therein to said note as the “Avalon College note” and appointing his grandson, Albert L. Maberry, executor. The will reads as follows:
“I will and bequeath first of all to my beloved wife, Marian M. .Maberry, my house and lot in Ava.Ion, Livingston county, Missouri, also the interest on what'is known as the Avalon College note, and if said note is paid then she is to receive interest at the rate of eight per cent on one thousand dollars, annually until her death, when the $1,000 is to be divided' equally among my heirs, except Daniel P. Maberry who is to receive only one hundred dollars of it. The 80 acres I now live on is to remain in my name, and my wife is to have the proceeds of it until her death, when it is to be sold and divided equally among my heirs. My notes, deeds of trust, cash on hand and personal property, after all funeral and necessary expenses are paid, is to be divided equally among my heirs, Pernicy C. Gibbons, Thomas B. Maberry, Sarah Jane Morris,*647 George Maberry’s heirs, Wylie Maberry’s heirs, except Daniel P. Maberry, who is to receive only one-half as; much as the other heirs. I hereby appointed Albert L. Maberry my executor to settle up my estate.”
After the death of William Maberry, the plaintiff having become one of the college trustees, claims that he purchased the note of the executor and that the executor indorsed it to him in blank. The defendants claim that plaintiff did not purchase the note, but that he paid it off and discharged it. Following these contentions, the defendants claim that though plaintiff did attempt to purchase the note and the executor to sell it to him, yet the executor could not do so under the law of this state and that plaintiff got no title by such attempted purchase. On the other hand, the plaintiff contends that under the will the executor held the note as a trustee and in that capacity had legal authority to sell it and that he got a valid title by his purchase.
We are of the opinion that a fair consideration of the evidence shows that plaintiff purchased the note. The undisputed facts are that he used his own funds for its purchase; and that he was not under any personal obligation to pay it, and that the executor indorsed it in blank and delivered it to him uncancelled; and that at the time of his purchase, just as the executor indorsed and handed it over to him, he said that he-believed it was a good investment. These facts ought to overcome the mere statement of the executor that he thought it was being paid off and discharged.
Ordinarily, where the payor of a promissory note pays the money due thereon to the holder and receives it from him, it will be presumed the transaction was a discharge of the note. But, upon the other hand, where one, not the payor, pays the amount due upon a note to the holder and takes his indorsement and receives from him the possession, it will be presumed that the transaction was a purchase and not a discharge. Possession with a blank indorsement of a promissory note is prima facie an ownership of such note. 'And the fact that the note is past due when possession re
We are therefore brought to the necessity of passing on the legal right or authority of the executor to sell the note. It is conceded by plaintiff to be the law in this State that without an order of the probate court, or a direction in the will, the executor, exercising the ordinary power of an executor, has no such authority. Sec. 210 R. S. 1899; Stagg v. Linnenfelser, 59 Mo. 336; Chandler v. Stevenson, 68 Mo. 450; State to use v. Berning, 74 Mo. 96.
But it is contended that the will in this case made of the executor a trustee (or gave him the powers of trustee) who held the note in trust for the purpose contemplated by the testator. We believe such contention to be sound. For the law is that where a will provides for the administration of a trust fund, as, for instance, that the income of a sum of money be applied to the benefit and use of a person during life and afterward to be divided among his heirs, and appoints an executor without specifying-that he or anyone else shall act as trustee, the executor, as such, becomes the trustee of the fund. Scott v. West, 63 Wis. 558; Dorr v. Wainright, 13 Pick. 328; Hodges Estate, 63 Vt. 661; White v. Mass. Inst., 171 Mass. 84, 96.
The executor, as such, handles the fund and administers the trust as directed by the will. Field v. Hitchcock, 17 Pick. 182; White v. Mass. Inst., supra; Hodges Estate, supra; Carson v. Carson, 6 Allen 397; Pettingall v. Pettingall, 60 Maine 423; Richardson v. Knight, 69 Maine 285; Scholl v. Olmstead, 84 Georgia 693; Keplinger v. Maccubbin, 58 Maryland 203. Though his ordinary powers as executor have been added to by the trusteeship. He occupies a double capacity. He is an executor proper, for the ordinary ad
As to matters pertaining to the trusteeship he may exercise the power and authority of a trustee under the law and the direction of the will uninfluenced by restraints upon the office of executor. That an executor administering a trust fund must exercise more power in that regard than if he was administering the fund in ordinary administration of a decedent’s estate ought not to be considered disputable. For the ordinary duties and powers of an executor pertain merely to gathering the estate together, paying debts and legacies and distributing the remainder. The powers of the two capacities in one person are distinct. We examined such question as to real estate in Compton v. McMahan, 19 Mo. App. 504-511, and concluded that where an executor had been directed to sell lands of the decedent, he would do so in the capacity of trustee and that such trusteeship could not be exercised by a succeeding administrator..
In view of the foregoing considerations, we construe the statute aforesaid, restraining the power of the executor to sell, to refer to him in his ordinary capacity as an executor; and that it does not affect the trustee power which has been joined with his executorship. We regard the case of Carson v. Carson, 6 Allen 397, as directly bearing out this construction. In Massachusetts there was a statute that debts, legacies, goods, effects or credits “in the hands o’f an executor or administrator as such” could be attached in his hands. Yet it was held in that case, that personalty left by will so that the income and interest thereof was to go to' the widow during life and then to be distributed to heirs, was in the hands of the executor appointed by the will, in the capacity of trustee, and the statute-did not reach 'Min in that capacity, and'therefore he could not be garnished in respect to such property.
There is another consideration which we may, with propriety, notice. The law requires an estate to pay
Whether that could be done in this State the necessities of this case do not require us to decide. But what we do say is that the executor’s duties as such are primary to his duties as a trustee; for until creditors are satisfied, or there is sufficient for their satisfaction, there is no room for trusteeship. How this should be made to appear it is not necessary to decide. Such question more frequently arises where there are separate bonds for the two capacities and the question is whether the sureties of the executor or trustee are-liable. The point here is that the executor had added to his ordinary duties the power of a trustee. This, as we have seen, gave him authority as executor which pertains to a trustee. If he should exercise his trustee powers inopportunely, as, for instance, before it is known whether the trust property will not be exhausted for debts, and loss to creditors should ensue, he and his sureties would be liable therefor. Whether in such case, at the election of parties in interest, the trust fund could be recovered from the purchaser, need not be decided at this time.
In this case the deceased died in January, 1895, and the executor qualified during the next month; and in the October following he sold the note in controversy to plaintiff. This action was not begun until some five
Having thus shown that the executor as to the trust fund embodied in the note in question may exercise the powers of a trustee, we have only to ascertain whether a trustee has authority to sell a promissory note. As to such question we are relieved of the necessity of an independent examination, since it was decided by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Mason v. Bank, 16 Mo. App. 275 (affirmed in 90 Mo. 452), that a promissory note to mature in less than a year was a transient security and, as such, could be sold by a trustee and good title conveyed.
The result is that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.