207 Mass. 91 | Mass. | 1910
Benjamin H. Punchare!, late of Andover, deceased,
The testator’s adopted daughter Ellen died in 1892, never having married and being much more than twenty-one years of age. Her legacy has been in the hands of trustees, and the first of these cases is a bill brought by the executrix of the will of Amasa Clarke, who was the last survivor of the trustees who had the property in possession,
The interest of the adopted daughter Ellen in the $7,000 was only a life estate, with a creation of certain contingent remainders over. It was not an ownership in fee with an attempt to control the subsequent use and disposition of it by an inconsistent and void provision interfering with the rights of the owner. The whole language is to be construed together to ascertain the meaning of the testator, and it is plain that in no event was the daughter to have anything more than the income for life. The remainder over was to go as prescribed, upon the happening of one or the other of certain contingencies, and if neither of them happened it was left undisposed of. Wynn v. Bartlett, 167 Mass. 292. Ware v. Minot, 202 Mass. 512. Dow v. Abbott, 197 Mass. 283. Stearns v. Stearns, 192 Mass. 144. Loomis v. Gorham, 186 Mass. 444.
The moneys given to the adopted daughters were separate funds, and no cross-remainders were created. Each was to be disposed of independently of the other. While the same methods of disposition are prescribed for each, the takers of a remainder upon the happening of a contingency, take only under the language applicable to the separate fund, and not by reason of any relation of the funds to each other. The children of Sarah Elizabeth Punchard have no interest in this fund.
The question most discussed is whether, to give the remainder effect for the establishment of an asylum in Andover, the' death of Ellen must occur before the happening of either of the events referred to, whichever might happen first, namely, her coming of age, or her marriage, so that the happening of either before her death would defeat the remainder without the happening of the other before her death, or, whether the remainder would vest on her death unless she had both come of age and been married before that time. We are of opinion that it was only in case her death before either event happened that this remainder was to take effect, so that if she came of age or was married before her death the money was not to be appropriated to this charitable use. Provision was made for the payment of the income directly to the life tenant on her arrival at the age of twenty-
A construction like that which we adopt has been put upon similar language in many cases, both in this Commonwealth and elsewhere, and it has often been held that the word “ or ” will be construed to mean “ and ” when this seems necessary to give effect to the meaning of the testator. Carpenter v. Heard, 14 Pick. 449. Hunt v. Hunt, 11 Met. 88. Parker v. Parker, 5 Met. 134. Barker v. Suretees, 2 Stra. 1175. Miles v. Dyer, 5 Sim. 435. Thackeray v. Hampson, 2 Sim. & Stu. 214. Weddell v. Mundy, 6 Ves. 341. Hasker v. Sutton, 1 Bing. 500.
As the contingency on which the remainder would vest has not happened, the amount was not disposed of, unless by the residuary clause of the will. The sixth clause assumes to deal with all the residue, but appropriates only $50,000 of it if the amount
It appears that the Foreign board of missions of the Episcopal church and the Domestic board of the same are different departments, under the charge of different committees as official managers of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, a corporation. “ Each of these committees, during the period mentioned, had separate offices and separate treasuries, and made separate appeals to the church, and each conducted its own affairs quite independent of the other. . . . Each committee had its own books and offices and clerks, and elected its own separate secretaries and treasurers and other officers, and for many years the offices of the two committees were in different buildings.” Each of these organizations is entitled to receive the same share of the fund under the residuary clause as each of the three corporations mentioned in that clause; and as each of them was maintained as an agency in the work of the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society and was owned and controlled by this corporation, it follows that this corporation should receive two fifths of the amount to be divided, and that each of the other corporations should receive one fifth.
The other case is an appeal from a decree of the Probate Court dismissing a petition to vacate the decree appointing Harry M. Eames a trustee under the will of Benjamin H. Punchard, to receive the money in the hands of Frances S. Clarke, executrix of the will of Amasa Clarke, a former trustee. It appears that the appointment was made without notice to any of the parties who are now found to be interested in the fund, notice having been given only to the Attorney General and the officers of the town of Andover. The statute applicable to such cases re
In the first case there will be a decree for the distribution of the fund among the parties mentioned in the seventh clause of the will, and in the second case there must be a decree for the petitioner.
So ordered.
The testator died in Andover in 1850.
Amasa Clarke was appointed trustee on September 28, 1885, and died on October 26,1907. One George A. Parker was appointed as trustee in his place on April 21, 1908, but died on August 19, 1908, without having taken possession of the trust fund. Ellen Punchard died on February 18, 1892.