62 So. 508 | Ala. | 1913
The last will and testament of appellants’ testatrix gave all her property, after debts paid,
The trial court did not go astray in denying the application for a writ to restrain the judge of probate. Principles of law, as well as the provisions of the will, deprive the probate court of jurisdiction to inquire into the conduct of the extraordinary, personal trust created by the will for the support, maintenance, and education
Now it is suggested that a testator has as much right to direct how his estate shall be administered as he had to direct its distribution, and that volunteers have only such rights as the will gives them; they take under and pursuant to the will, and as against their demands the will must prevail. Such was the language of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Keller’s Estate, 224 Pa. 525, 78 Atl. 926, and it is sound doctrine. It is to be observed, however, that an accounting was refused to petitioners in that case, not on the theory that beneficiaries under the will could not have an accounting because of the exemption thereby provided, but because they did not take under the will, nor were they creditors.
And so of Sellers v. Sellers, 35 Ala. 235. There the court sustained the equity of a bill for an accounting on the distinct ground that there was such a complica
Our opinion is that the testamentary provision in question constituted a personal1 trust committing testator’s estate during the minority of her grandchildren, or until they should marry, to the discretion of the trustee unfettered except by the requirement of honest purpose; that no rule of law prohibits the creation of such a trust, nor does section 2666 of the Code impose any limitations upon the power of a testator in disposing of his estate or providing for the manner of its distribution, so far as concerns those who take under his will; that such an exemption during the period provided for its continuance becomes a part of the law of the administration ; and that pending the arrival of the time when under the provisions of the will the grandchildren, or some of them, may become entitled to so much of the estate as may survive the trust, the executor-trustees cannot be called to account in the probate court. It follows that if the citation was issued at the instance of a grandchild whose interest in the estate has not yet been relieved of the trust, or if it was issued ex mero without disclosure by the record that creditors or grandchildren entitled to a statement needed the intervention of the probate court, it should be quashed.
We cannot say on the facts shown in the petition to the circuit court that the probate judge did wrong in issuing the citation. We must therefore say that the circuit court did well in sustaining the demurrer to the petition.
Affirmed.