Bowlin v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co.

131 Ark. 97 | Ark. | 1917

HUMPHREYS, J.

Appellants brought suit against appellee, as trustee for John Bowlin and Mattie Bowlin, and as executor of the last will of William Bowlin, deceased, in the Crawford chancery court, to terminate a trust and recover the trust fund amounting in round numbers to $22,000.

A demurrer to the bill was sustained. Appellants refused to plead further and 'the bill was dismissed for want of equity. From the decree dismissing the bill, an appeal has been prosecuted to this court.

The alleged trust was created by the eighth clause of the last will of William Bowlin, deceased, which is as follows, towit:

“I give and bequeath unto the Citizens Bank &• Trust Co., of Van Burén, Ark., as trustee for John Bowlin and Mattie Bowlin, his wife, the one-seventh part of the remainder of my personal property after paying my debts and funeral expenses and the legacies herein-before set forth in articles three and six more particular set forth in article seven of this will, upon the trust that said .trustee shall invest the same in its name as trustee in any manner proper for a trust that it may yield the. greatest income, with power from time to time to vary and change such investments, and the income thereof upon such trust fund shall be paid by my said trustee quarterly the one-half thereof to my said John Bowlin and the one-half thereof to his wife Mattie Bowlin, during their natural lives, provided that if the said Mattie Bowlin shall survive her husband John Bowlin and remain a widow, and if the said Mattie Bowlin shall survive the said John Bowlin and marry again, that this shall immediately cease and determine upon the happening of that event, that upon the death of either the said John and Mattie Bowlin the one-half of said income shall be paid to Marcus L. Bowlin, Paul C. Bowlin, Othel Bowlin, and Maud E. Campbell, children and their heirs or the survivor of them until the final determination of this trust as hereafter provided. That upon the death of John and Mattie Bowlin or the marriage of Mattie Bowlin should she survive her husband John Bowlin, this trust shall immediately cease and determine and the trust fund with any income that may have accrued at the time I give and bequeath unto the said Marcus Bowlin, Paul C. Bowlin, Othel Bowlin, and Maud E. Campbell and their heirs share and share alike or their survivors in the event that either of said legatees should not survive the determination of this trust and die without issue of their bodies. ' I further direct that this trust shall be without power of anticipation of such income by way of assignment charge or otherwise by the said beneficiaries. It is not that I have any less affection for my son John than my other children that I make this provision in my will for him, but to provide a stated income for him and his wife and relieve him of the care and charge of an estate which I fear that he would not be able to properly care and manage.”

John Bowlin and Mattie Bowlin, cestuis que trust of the life estate in said property, acquired the remainder interest therein from the remaindermen all of whom were, at the time, sui juris.

Appellants contend that under the doctrine of merger of estates .and acceleration of remainders, the trust was terminated when the beneficiaries of the life estate acquired the interest of the remaindermen. As a general rule this is true when the estates, both legal and equitable, unite in the same person, but otherwise, if the merger is held in abeyance by the clear intent or purpose of the trust. "What is characterized in law as a spendthrift trust usually acts as a barrier and prevents merger. It seems that equity will not recognize a merger, even where there is a union of legal and equitable estates in the same person, if contrary to the intention of the parties if the effect would be to destroy a valid trust. 39 Cyc. 246; In Re Moore’s Estate, 48 Atl. 884, (Pa. St.); 2 Washburn on Real Estate (6 Ed.), section 1484; Evansville Gas Light Co. v. State, 73 Ind. 222; Watson v. Dundee Mortgage & Trust Investment Co., 8 Pac. 548 (Ore.); Asch v. Asch, 21 N. E. 70 (N. Y.); Mason v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co., 78 Conn. 81.

The soundness then of appellants’ contention must depend upon whether spendthrift trusts are valid in Arkansas, and if valid, whether a spendthrift trust was created by the terms of the section of the will quoted above. The English doctrine condemns and the American doctrine upholds spendthrift trusts. Nichols, Assignee v. Eaton et al., 91 U. S. 716.

It is a mooted question in this State. Being a question of first impression here, the court adopts the American doctrine both upon réason and because the American doctrine is supported by the increasing weight of authority. This court said in the well considered case of Booe v. Vinson, 104 Ark. 439, that, “Although it is intimated va Honnett v. Williams, 66 Ark. 153, that such a trust can not be created or exist in this State, the increasing weight of authority in America favors the contrary rule. ’ ’ It may be noted also that the distinguished jurist, in rendering the opinion in Honnett v. Williams, supra, reserved the question for future consideration. It was unnecessary to decide the question in Booe v. Vinson for the reason that no restriction was placed upon the cestuis by the testator in the disposition of the income from the life estate. This court has jealously protected the free and unlimited right of a person in sound mind and otherwise competent to dispose of his property according to Ms pleasure, unless in contravention of some statute or the well established rule against perpetuities. Fortner v. Phillips, 124 Ark. 395.

There is no misconstruing the intent of the testator in the instant case. The language of the eighth clause is direct and unambiguous. By the very wording, the legal title and the absolute control of the property passed to the trustee for the sole purpose of creating, by use and investment, a permanent income for the maintenance of the testator’s son during life, and his daughter-in-law so long as she remained the wife or widow of his son. The testator assigned as a reason for creating the trust, the inability of his son to care for and manage the estate. In the fear that his son might resort to some method of defeating his purpose, he provided against the anticipation of the income in any manner. He evidenced his intention most clearly by creating a stated income. His purpose was to impound the corpus of the estate in such way that the cestuis should not receive it, or even the income therefrom, except at certain and reasonable intervals. All power of alienation of the trust fund was withheld from the cestuis. By the bequest appellants acquired no vested estate therein. Every essential necessary to create a spendthrift trust is present in the devise.

Having subscribed to the American doctrine upholding spendthrift trusts, and the intention of the testator being manifest to create such a trust for the protection of the cestuis against improvidence and incapacity, which trust is not contrary to law or public policy, and being convinced the doctrine of merger of estates can not operate to destroy ,a valid spendthrift trust, the decree of the learned chancellor is affirmed.