343 Mass. 695 | Mass. | 1962
This is a petition in equity filed in the Probate Court for the County of Middlesex by the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company as trustee under the will of Luke Blanchard. The respondents are the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company as executor of the will of Arthur F. Blanchard and trustee of the Blanchard Foundation, and Arthur W. Wetherbee, Ellen F. W. Whitcomb, and Caroline B. Wetherbee, the next of kin and heirs of Arthur F. Blanchard. The petitioner, as trustee, seeks instructions as to the disposition of the trust established by the will of Luke Blanchard and held for the benefit of Arthur F. Blanchard.
The case was heard on a statement of agreed facts. The judge entered a final decree ordering that “the share of said trust fund held for the benefit of said Arthur F. Blanchard be distributed to his next of kin, Arthur W. Wetherbee, Ellen F. W. Whitcomb and Caroline B. Wether-bee.” The respondent Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company as executor of the will of Arthur F. Blanchard and as trustee of the Blanchard Foundation appealed from the decree and requested a report of material facts. The judge found that “all necessary facts for the consideration of this petition have been agreed upon by the parties. ’ ’
Luke Blanchard died August 18, 1901, testate. He was survived by his widow, Jerusha M. Blanchard, his daughter, Annie M. Blanchard, and his son, Arthur F. Blanchard. These three were appointed executors of and trustees under his will which was executed on March 30, 1899.
“Clause Fourth” of the will of Luke Blanchard provides in material part as follows: “All the rest and residue of my property real and personal, of which I shall die seised and possessed, or to which I shall be entitled at the time of
Jerusha M. Blanchard died August 21, 1909, intestate, leaving as her sole heirs at law and next of kin, Annie M. Blanchard and Arthur F. Blanchard. Annie died intestate on August 29,1931, leaving as her sole heir at law and next of kin her brother, Arthur.
Arthur, by a release dated December 28, 1943, and duly recorded with the Probate Court, irrevocably released and relinquished his power to dispose by will of one third of the remainder of the trust fund set up by his father’s will. Arthur died May 19, 1953, and by his will left all his property to the trustees of the Blanchard Foundation, a general charitable trust.
The sole question before us is whether under these circumstances that part of the trust fund established by the will of Luke Blanchard and originally held for the benefit of Arthur F. Blanchard should be distributed to the Blanchard Foundation or to the heirs and next of kin of Arthur F. Blanchard.
Luke Blanchard’s will provided that if a trustee should die “intestate,” the property over which such trustee had a power of disposition by will should pass to his heirs and next of kin. In the instant case the trustee, Arthur F. Blanchard, did not exercise the power, nor did he die intestate. Luke’s will did not expressly treat with this situation.
By the terms of Luke Blanchard’s will the power given to each of the trustees to dispose of one third of the remainder was exercisable only by will.
The provision for disposition of the property in the event of a failure to exercise the power refers in express terms only to a failure resulting from intestacy. It seems clear that the reference to intestacy in this context was intended to mean a failure on the part of a trustee to exercise the power by his will and was not limited to situations where a trustee dies without a will.
The probate judge was correct in decreeing that the share of the trust held for the benefit of Arthur F. Blanchard be distributed to his next of kin.
Decree affirmed.