ANNIE MAUTHE, WILLIAM MAUTHE, JOHN MAUTHE, G. C. RAU, CARL HUFSCHMIDT, LOUISE HUFSCHMIDT, by CATHERINE WOOD and GEORGE A. BROWN, guardians and curators of the estate of said LOUISE HUFSCHMIDT, a minor, LENA MAUTHE, RAYMOND MAUTHE, LORINE ESSMAN, DEWEY MAUTHE, HAROLD MAUTHE, GERTRUDE MAUTHE, and LOUISE MAUTHE, by LENA HAUTHE, her guardian, Respondents, v. MINNIE BRECKENRIDGE, CONGREGATION OF THE CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF UNION, MISSOURI, J. WILLIAM KELLER, J. L. WALKER, FRED CRIDER, FRANK COOPER, and RUDOLPH SCHULTZE, Trustees of said Congregation, Defendants, MINNIE BRECKENRIDGE, Appellant.
St. Louis Court of Appeals
June 1, 1926
219 Mo. App. 694
The judgment of the circuit court is, accordingly, reversed, and the cause remanded. Daues, P. J., and Becker, J., concur.
ANNIE MAUTHE, WILLIAM MAUTHE, JOHN MAUTHE, G. C. RAU, CARL HUFSCHMIDT, LOUISE HUFSCHMIDT, by CATHERINE WOOD and GEORGE A. BROWN, guardians and curators of the estate of said LOUISE HUFSCHMIDT, a minor, LENA MAUTHE, RAYMOND MAUTHE, LORINE ESSMAN, DEWEY MAUTHE, HAROLD MAUTHE, GERTRUDE MAUTHE, and LOUISE MAUTHE, by LENA HAUTHE, her guardian, Respondents, v. MINNIE BRECKENRIDGE, CONGREGATION OF THE CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF UNION, MISSOURI, J. WILLIAM KELLER, J. L. WALKER, FRED CRIDER, FRANK COOPER, and RUDOLPH SCHULTZE, Trustees of said Congregation, Defendants, MINNIE BRECKENRIDGE, Appellant.*
St. Louis Court of Appeals. Opinion filed June 1, 1926.
1. WILLS: Construction: Life Estates: Power of Disposal by Life Tenant for Support, Comfort or Enjoyment: Not Power to Give Estate Away by Deed, Will or Otherwise. Under a husband‘s will devising the residue of his property to his wife, she to have full power to dispose of same during her lifetime, and in the event she should die without disposing of same, then said residue or so much thereof as might remain undisposed of, should pass to and vest in certain others, held that his widow, by such residuary clause of his will, acquired a life estate in the property therein bequeathed and devised with full power on her part to dispose of and consume the property for her own support, comfort, or enjoyment, but with no power to give it away by deed, will or otherwise.
3. APPELLATE PRACTICE: Failure to Make Allowance Out of Trust Funds for Services: Not Asked for in Court Below: Cannot Complain on Appeal. Where defendant did not ask for an allowance in the court below to her out of a trust fund, held by plaintiff as executor, for services rendered and expenses necessary for taking the account in question, she cannot, on appeal, complain of failure of the trial court to make such allowance.
4. COSTS: Partition: Dividing Costs Between Parties: Discretion of Trial Court. Dividing between the parties the negligible costs of the trial of the accounting phase of a partition suit was within the discretion of the trial court.
*Corpus Juris-Cyc. References: Appeal and Error, 3 C. J., p. 696, n. 61. Costs, 15 C. J., p. 28, n. 88. Executors and Administrators, 24 C. J., p. 936, New. Partition, 30 Cyc., p. 296, n. 74. Wills, 40 Cyc., p. 1833, n. 96 n. 24.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Franklin County.—Hon. R. A. Breuer, Judge.
AFFIRMED.
John W. Booth for appellant.
(1) The intention of a testator must be gathered from the four corners of his will, and it, if not violative of some established rule of law, must be fully effectuated. Cook v. Higgins, 290 Mo. 402; Grace v. Perry, 197 Mo. 559; Brooks v. Brooks, 187 Mo. 476; Cross v. Hoch, 149 Mo. 325. (2) In the case at bar—while the estate given Mrs. Minnie Mauthe in the assets and property of August Mauthe is not expressly declared a life interest, yet
(1) Under the will of August F. Mauthe whereby, after making certain specific bequests, he devised and bequeathed all the rest and residue of his property to his wife, Minnie Mauthe, “she to have full power to dispose of it during her lifetime,” and in the event that she should die without disposing of the same then that “said residue or so much thereof as may remain undisposed of” should “pass to and rest in Minnie Mauthe one-half thereof and the remaining one-half to John Mauthe, in trust,” etc., the widow, Minnie Mauthe, took a life estate in the property devised and bequeathed to her, with full power to dispose of any or all thereof during her lifetime, and with the right to use, consume and enjoy the same, or the proceeds thereof, as she might see fit, whether for her support and maintenance or her comfort, enjoyment or pleasure; the remaindermen taking only “so much of the property as may remain undisposed of” by her. Munroe v. Collins, 95 Mo. 33; McMilland v. Farrow, 141 Mo. 55; Gibson v. Gibson, 239 Mo. 490; Burnet v. Burnet, 244 Mo. 491; Priest v. McFarland, 262 Mo. 229; Dunbar v. Sims, 283 Mo. 356; Payne v. Reece, 297 Mo. 54; Mitchell v. Morrisville College, 305 Mo. 466; Board of Trustees etc. v. Dimmitt, 113 Mo. App. 41; Colburn v. Burlingame, 214 Pac. 226 (Cal.), 27 A. L. R. 1374, and annotations; See also annotations, 2 A. L. R. 1243 et seq., 36 A. L. R. 1177, et seq. (2) The trial court, under the evidence adduced, correctly found that Minnie Mauthe had the right during her lifetime to dispose of and did dispose of all the property, real and personal, received by her under the will of August F. Mauthe, deceased (other than an undivided one-seventh of the realty described in the petition), except the twenty shares of stock of the Citizens’ Bank of Union, the thirty shares of stock of the Pacific Home Telegraph Company, and lots 7 and 8 in block 3 of
SUTTON, C.—This suit as originally brought was a suit for the partition of the following described real estate situate in Franklin County, Missouri, to-wit: The east half of lot 34 of the original town of Franklin, now city of Pacific, lots 1 and 2 in block 3 of Mauthe‘s Subdivision to the city of Pacific, and lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 in block 17 of Mauthe‘s Subdivision to the city of Pacific. It so happens that the plaintiff John Mauthe is executor of the last will of Minnie Mauthe, deceased, though he did not sue in that capacity, and the case in its progress took such shape that the only controversy involved relates to personalty in charge of John Mauthe as such executor. There was, however, no objection in the court below to the ingraftment of this controversy upon the partition suit.
The petition alleges that, in 1902, William Mauthe died intestate, seized in fee simple of the real estate above described, and left surviving him as his only heirs at law, his widow, Susanna Mauthe, who departed this life on February 3, 1923, and his children, August F.
The answer of the defendants Congregation of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church of Union, Missouri, and its trustees, claims title to the undivided one-seventh part of the real estate described in the petition, under the will of Minnie Mauthe deceased.
The answer of the defendant Minnie Breckenridge alleges that, under and pursuant to the provisions of the last will of August F. Mauthe, his entire real and personal estate, except $5 bequeathed to his mother, $5 bequeathed to each of his brothers and sisters, and $1,000 bequeathed to Minnie Breckenridge, passed to and vested in Minnie Mauthe for her life as a trust fund, with power in said Minnie Mauthe to dispose of the same during her life, with remainder in fee as to so much thereof as remained undisposed of by her at her death to Minnie Breckenridge one-half thereof, and to John Mauthe one-half thereof in trust for the use and benefit of the children of Louis F. Mauthe; that August F. Mauthe at the
By its interlocutory decree, rendered August 15, 1923, the court finds the respective interests of the plaintiffs and the defendant Minnie Breckenridge in the real estate described in the petition, as set out in the petition, and orders that the real estate be sold, and that the proceeds of the sale, after deducting all proper costs, be divided between the plaintiffs and the defendant Minnie Breckenridge according to their respective rights as
On November 27, 1923, the sheriff‘s report of the sale of real estate, made pursuant to the foregoing order, was filed and approved, and the sheriff‘s deed conveying said real estate was acknowledged.
On March 21, 1924, a trial was had upon the accounting phase of the suit, and after hearing the evidence and the arguments of counsel, the court took the matter under advisement, and on October 1, 1924, rendered its final judgment thereon substantially as follows:
The court being now fully advised of and concerning all and singular the matters and things herein, doth find that under and by virtue of the will of August F. Mauthe, deceased, Minnie Mauthe received and took in her possession in addition to the undivided one-seventh of the real estate described in the petition, the following described real estate situate at Franklin County, Missouri, to-wit: Lots 196 and 197 of block 184 of Ault‘s Addition to the city of Pacific, lot 4 of the original town of Pacific, and lots 7 and 8 of Robertson‘s Addition to the city of Union; that under said will Minnie Mauthe received and took into her possession personal property, assets, and choses in action of said August F. Mauthe, as follows: Twenty-one shares of the capital stock of the Citizens Bank of Union of the par value of $100 per share, thirty shares of the capital stock of Pacific Home Telephone Company of the par value of $10 per share, twenty-two shares of the capital stock of Pacific Electric Light Company of the par value of $10 per share, five shares of the capital stock of the Commercial Telephone Company of the par value of $100 per share, note of E. D. Jahn for $300, note of Jacob Steffens for $250, and note of Mueller and Hecker for $1,000; that on December 18, 1916, the said Minnie Mauthe sold and conveyed said lot 4 of the original town of Pacific for $2,200, and on December 22,
From this judgment the defendant Minnie Breckenridge appeals.
Upon the hearing which resulted in the judgment appealed from, the appellant introduced the testimony of several witnesses, among them the executor, John Mauthe, who appears to have disclosed frankly all he knew about the property belonging to the estates of August F. Mauthe and Minnie Mauthe, and stated that he inventoried as the property of Minnie Mauthe all the property that was in her possession at the time of her death, and appellant also introduced the inventory of the estate of August F. Mauthe, deceased, the inventory and appraisement of the estate of Minnie Mauthe, deceased, and other documentary evidence. Thereupon the plaintiffs introduced the will of August F. Mauthe, deceased, the will of Minnie Mauthe, deceased, and other documentary evidence.
In the inventory of August F. Mauthe the following items appear: Note of E. D. Jahn for $300 dated October 2, 1909, due April 2, 1910, bearing six per cent interest; note of Jacob Steffen for $250, dated September 7, 1909, bearing eight per cent interest, due one year after date; note of Mueller & Hecker for $1,000, dated August 25, 1909, due one year after date, bearing seven per cent interest from date; five shares of Commercial Telephone Company stock, par value $500; thirty shares of Pacific Home Telephone Company stock, par value $300; twenty-two shares of Pacific Electric Light Company stock, par value $220; twenty-one shares of Citizens Bank of Union stock, par value $2,100.
Minnie Breckenridge prior to her marriage was Minnie Mette. She was reared by August F. Mauthe and Minnie Mauthe, and married after the death of August F. Mauthe. She lived in the Mauthe home up to the time of her marriage.
By his said last will, August F. Mauthe disposed of his property as follows:
“I will and bequeath to my mother, brothers and sisters now living each the sum of five dollars.
“I will and bequeath to Minnie Mette the sum of one thousand dollars.
“All the rest and residue of my property including all real, personal and mixed property, I will devise and bequeath to my beloved wife Minnie Mauthe, she to have full power to dispose of same during her lifetime; and in the event that she shall die without so disposing of same, then it is my will that said residue or so much thereof as may remain undisposed of, shall pass to and vest in Minnie Mette one-half thereof and the remaining one-half to John Mauthe in trust for the use and benefit of the children of my deceased brother, Louis Mauthe.”
August F. Mauthe died in 1910. Minnie Mauthe died September 5, 1922. For some years prior to her death, she was in ill health and required much medical attention and nursing. She was possessed of a considerable estate of her own, consisting of both real and personal property, not derived under the will of her deceased husband. By her said last will she undertook to devise to Minnie Breckenridge lots 7 and 8 in block 3 of Robertson‘s Addition to the city of Union, and after making substantial bequests to her own and her deceased husband‘s relatives, disposed of the rest of her property as follows:
It would serve no useful purpose to set out the evidence in detail. It will suffice to say that the evidence amply supports the finding of facts set forth in the final judgment of the court.
It seems to be conceded, as it should be in view of the authorities, that August F. Mauthe, by the residuary clause of his will, gave to his widow, Minnie Mauthe, a life estate in the property therein bequeathed and devised, with full power on her part to dispose of and consume the property for her own support, comfort, or enjoyment, but with no power to give it away by deed, will, or otherwise, and gave to Minnie Breckenridge and John Mauthe as trustee each one-half of whatever remained of said property at the death of Minnie Mauthe. [Burnet v. Burnet, 244 Mo. 491, l. c. 506, 148 S. W. 872; Gibson v. Gibson, 239 Mo. 490, 144 S. W. 770; Priest v. McFarland, 262 Mo. 229, 171 S. W. 62; McMillan v. Farrow, 141 Mo. 55, 41 S. W. 890; Board of Trustees of Westminster College v. Dimmitt, 113 Mo. App. 41, 87 S. W. 536; Redman v. Barger, 118 Mo. 568, 24 S. W. 177.]
But the appellant complains that the court by its final judgment, as shown upon its face, ignores the equitable doctrine that a trustee may not defeat the trust by commingling the trust property with the trustee‘s own private funds so that the trust property cannot be distinguished or identified in kind, and proceeds upon the
We do not accept the appellant‘s view that the burden was on the executor to account for all the property shown to have come to Minnie Mauthe under her husband‘s will. She was not a trustee charged merely with the duty of administering and preserving the trust property and of accounting for it to the beneficiaries. She
The appellant assigns error upon the failure of the court to make an allowance to her out of the trust fund for her services rendered and expenses necessary and reasonable in and for the taking of the account herein. The appellant did not ask for such an allowance in the court below, and this assignment must be ruled against her for this reason, if for no other.
There is no merit in the suggestion that the court erred in dividing between the parties the negligible costs of the trial of the accounting phase of the suit. This was clearly within the court‘s discretion.
The Commissioner recommends that the judgment of the circuit court be affirmed.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion of SUTTON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. The judgment of the circuit court is accordingly affirmed. Daues, P. J., and Becker and Nipper, JJ., concur.
