Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Stebbins

309 Mass. 282 | Mass. | 1941

Qua, J.

Herbert Stebbins, by the third clause of his will, dated June 26, 1933, left the residue of his estate to the petitioner as trustee to pay the income to the testator’s widow for her life and upon her decease to his children and their issue until January 10, 1954, and thereupon to distribute the fund “to said issue by right of representation.” Then follow these paragraphs:

“(b) I hereby empower my trustee to pay over to either child of mine from time to time such part or parts of the principal of the trust fund as it shall deem necessary for the reasonable comfort, support and convenience, or for the assistance in business, of such child, such payments not to exceed in the aggregate Five Thousand Dollars to my daughter, and Ten Thousand Dollars to my son, and are not to be made to any grandchild.

“(c) It is my will, however, that any indebtedness to the extent of Ten Thousand Dollars owed by my son to me at the time of my decease, whenever incurred, shall be paid without interest by deduction from the payments authorized under the foregoing section ‘b’ of this will.”

The testator left surviving him his widow, since deceased, and a son and daughter still living. The trustee holds as assets of the trust cash and securities to the amount of approximately $10,000, and four notes of the testator’s son, to wit: an unsecured demand note for $9,200, dated July 20, 1922, an unsecured demand note for $4,000, dated May 22, 1930, an unsecured demand note for $4,000, dated June 3, 1931, and a note for $11,000, made in 1926, and secured by a second mortgage on real estate worth $2,000 above the amount of the first mortgage. We assume, as *285all parties seem to have done, that these notes were payable to the testator, and we further assume with the appellant that all of the unsecured notes have become outlawed. Before the will was made the testator had been the president and had managed the financial affairs of a business corporation in which his son had invested and lost “more than $19,000 his entire funds,” while the testator had invested in the corporation only $1,000. The testator’s son is in the building business, and the trustee believes that it would be “of assistance to his business” to have $10,000 of his indebtedness cancelled, if the trustee has the power to cancel it. The trustee believes that a payment of $5,000 should be made to the testator’s daughter to be used for the education of her children, as she “cannot conveniently provide for the education of her children without such payment.” The judge finds that the trustee’s proposed exercise of its discretion is reasonable and that the payment of $5,000 to the daughter of the testator “for the education of her children” will “contribute substantially” to her “reasonable comfort, support and convenience.”

1. The will does not require the trustee to cancel the secured note to the extent of $10,000, even if the unsecured notes are all wholly outlawed. Paragraph (b) empowers the trustee to make such payments from the principal “as it shall deem necessary” for the reasonable comfort, support and convenience, or assistance in business, of a child of the testator. Paragraph (c) is a qualification of the power granted to the trustee by paragraph (b) in so far as relates to payments to the son. By paragraph (c) any payments made to the son under paragraph (b) are to be subject to a deduction of the amount of “any indebtedness” of the son to the testator “whenever incurred” to the extent of $10,000. In view of the facts that the note for $9,200 had been overdue for many years and the two $4,000 notes for shorter periods before the will was made and that the testator allowed his will to stand unchanged as the later unsecured notes became outlawed, it would seem that by “any indebtedness . . . whenever incurred” the testator meant to include any unpaid debt from his son to himself *286even though it might be outlawed. He could well speak of an outlawed debt as an indebtedness owed, if it remained unsatisfied. Cummings v. Bramhall, 120 Mass. 552, 561, 562. Sibley v. Maxwell, 203 Mass. 94, 105. First National Bank of Boston v. Rothwell, 305 Mass. 116, 120, 121. To the extent that outlawed debts might have to be included in order to make an indebtedness of $10,000 in the event that the aggregate of debts not outlawed at the testator’s death should be less than that sum, the trustee would be obliged to deduct outlawed debts from any payments made to the son under paragraph (b), and inasmuch as these debts are classified by the testator indiscriminately with debts not outlawed, we see no reason why the trustee cannot deduct from the payments to the son his outlawed debts to the amount of the entire $10,000 without reducing the secured indebtedness at all. If there is any anomaly in the idea that “payments” resulting in nothing more than the cancellation of outlawed debts, which amounted to no more than a moral obligation, could conduce to the “reasonable comfort, support and convenience” of the son or assist him in his business, the difficulty is one of the testator’s own making, for we can conceive of no good reason for the addition of the words “whenever incurred” as a qualification of “indebtedness” unless it was to' make plain that an outlawed debt might be subject to cancellation in this manner.

We see nothing in the previous business relations between the testator and his son that affects the construction of the will.

2. On the other hand we think that it also rests within the trustee’s judgment to cancel any part of the secured and unbarred indebtedness up to $10,000 by means of “payments” under paragraph (b). It seems clear that such “payments” under proper circumstances, by relieving the son of liability to pay from his own resources and releasing the security, might promote “the reasonable comfort, support and convenience” of the son or might assist him in his business. Application of the payments to the debt not barred might well be a more effectual means of assisting the son.

*2873. There is nothing in the will that requires the trustee to set off against the income payable to the son amounts due from him on any of the notes. The trustee’s duty in this regard is left to the rules of law.

4. We think that the trustee is empowered to pay the testator’s daughter the sum of $5,000 for the education of her children if it deems such payment necessary for her reasonable “convenience.” Convenience is a much broader word than support or comfort in the sense in which the latter words have commonly been construed in documents creating trusts. See Paine v. Barnes, 100 Mass. 470; Stocker v. Foster, 178 Mass. 591, 598-600; Homans v. Foster, 232 Mass. 4. It includes whatever conduces to freedom from difficulty, from trouble, or from annoyance and whatever promotes one’s ease or advantage or is fit for one’s use or suitable to one’s wants. Plainly “convenience” is an alternative, notwithstanding that it is preceded by “and,” as otherwise it would add nothing to “comfort” and “support.” See Litchfield v. Cudworth, 15 Pick. 23, 27; Sawyer v. Baldwin, 20 Pick. 378, 384; Commonwealth v. Griffin, 105 Mass. 185; Gaynor’s Case, 217 Mass. 86, 89. Compare Central Trust Co. v. Howard, 275 Mass. 153, 158. Money with which to educate her children might be deemed necessary to the reasonable convenience of the testator’s daughter. It might satisfy that which she regarded as a need and which she might otherwise feel at pains to supply, even though she was not to receive the education herself.

5. There is nothing in the will to the effect that after payment of a part of the principal to the son or daughter, payments of income should be made in any other proportions than the equal payments provided for in paragraph (a) of the will.

The decree of the Probate Court is to be modified in respect to the answer to the second question so as to conform to this opinion, and as so modified is affirmed.

Ordered accordingly.

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