delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
Tbe very able brief of learned counsel for appellant states tbe rule as to tbe meaning of the phrase “legal representatives” as we understand the best modern authorities to define it. The phrase has no hard and fast meaning’. It usually means executors or administrators; but it cannot, of course, mean executors and administrators only, in whatever instrument it may appear, and with reference to all the different subject-matters treated of in the multitude of varying instruments, and no matter what the plain purpose of the maker of the instrument using the phrase may be in using it. The court construing the meaning of the phrase arising upon the face of a particular instrument having reference to a particular subject-matter must seek to find the purpose of the party using it in using it as he does. “The what and where, with whom, and when and why” of the use of a phrase in any particular case must all be considered to reach a proper conclusion as to what the phrase may mean just in that case. So the authorities clearly demonstrate that it may, in various circumstances, mean executors, administrators, heirs, legatees, assignees, and devisees, even while legatees or devisees are strangers; in short, it may mean any person or corporation taking the beneficial interest in property, real or personal. One is not usually within the definition of “legal representative,” however it may be as to the phrase “personal representative,” unless he represents the other in beneficial ownership.
The words of the power to be construed in this case are as follows: “In case of the refusal, neglect, or incompetency to act of said trustee, or his absence from the state or his decease, then said party of the third part (the Alliance Trust Company), or any holder of said note or notes, or their legal representatives, can, at any time they may desire, appoint a trustee in the place of the said party of the second part (the original trustee, Currier), or any succeeding trustee, whose acts done in the premises shall be of the same validity as if done by the
We wish to say a cautionary word. We are not to be understood as holding now that one can repose a personal confidence or trust in a corporation. The doctrine of delectus per
It-will be noted that we have not cited an authority, since they are fully and discriminatingly collated by the counsel on both sides in their unusually able briefs.
Affirmed.