132 A. 525 | N.H. | 1926
In this state the identity of a beneficiary under a will presents a question of fact to be determined by the court from the language employed, construed in the light of all the competent evidence. Great liberality is shown in seeking the intention of the testator in this respect. Clark v. Campbell, post, 281, and cases cited. The will here under consideration is crudely drawn and bears evidence that the language employed was used according to its most commonplace signification. When, in ordinary conversation among laymen, reference is made to a designated person and his family, the word "family" is used more often than otherwise as descriptive of his wife and children. Such has been the construction placed upon the word in the interpretation of similar provisions in jurisdictions where liberal rules of construction prevail. Gafney v. Kenison,
The extent of the use of the income, and of the principal so far as authorized, is expressly limited to the "support" of the beneficiaries. The grant of "full authority to use the [fund] for herself for her own support" was not intended to eliminate as beneficiaries the other possible members of her family for whose benefit, as well as for Nina's, the trust had just been declared. This was but a convenient manner of expressing, in terms of the then existing status of the beneficiaries, the fullness of the trustee's authority over the fund.
The trustee is accordingly advised in answer to the first question propounded, that it was the intention of the testatrix to create a trust for the support of Nina, and of her husband and children if any she should have during the term of the trust.
2. A bill in equity for instructions lies only in behalf of those holding fiduciary positions (Glover v. Baker,
Case discharged.
All concurred.