This is a petition brought by the administrator of the estate of Nelson St. John for instructions as to the disposition to be made of the sum of $5,090, together with $209.92 of accrued interest, now in his hands. The history of that sum of money is this: Caroline St. John, wife of Nelson, died testate in 1909. Her will was seasonably admitted to probate and its provisions were not waived by her husband. Its terms, so far as now material, were these: “I . . . give .and bequeath all my property, both real and personal, to my husband Nelson St. Jean him to have and to hold full use of same during his lifetime, and after his death ... he is to divide all such within named property equally between all our children still living after his death. . . . In case any or all of our children die previous to our departure from this world, then, the property or its value is to be left to their children in same proportions as though they themselves were to receive it; were they still living.” A part of her estate was a farm in Fiskdale, a village in Sturbridge. After the allowance of the will, all the children of the testatrix in 1910 executed an agreement which, so far as now relevant, was in these words: “W hereby consent that our Father, Nelson St. John shall sell
It does not appear that any of these children died leaving issue before the death of the testatrix, or that any of them have died since her decease.
It has not been and could not well be contended that by the will the husband took anything more than a life estate. Allen v. Hunt, 213 Mass. 276. Dallinger v. Merrill, 224 Mass. 534, 540. Homans v. Foster, 232 Mass 4. Whitcomb v. Taylor, 122 Mass. 243.
There is strong ground for argument that the will of the testatrix created a contingent rather than a vested remainder in the children of the testatrix. If one of the children had died after the mother and before the father, leaving issue who survived the father as life tenant, such issue doubtless would have shared in the remainder. Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Blanchard, 196 Mass. 35. Welch v. Howard, 227 Mass. 242. Hall v. Read,
If the will had dealt with real estate alone, so far as this record discloses there would have been no occasion for the appointment of a trustee and no trust would have been created. But the will in terms included personal as well as real estate. The paper signed by the children of the testatrix specifically refers to “personal estate” and to a “bill of sale” as well as to “real ... estate,” “the home place” and “deeds,” thus indicating plainly that the sum deposited in the trust company flowed in part from the sale of personal property. It is settled in this Commonwealth that, in the case of money or any personal property except specifically devised chattels, of which one person is given the use or income for life with remainder over, if no trustee is appointed, the executor is to hold it in trust and pay the income to the person entitled for life. White v. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 171 Mass. 84, 96, and cases cited. In such cases a trust is necessarily implied. Hooper v. Bradbury, 133 Mass. 303, 307. Rhines v. Wentworth, 209 Mass. 585, 588.
When real estate is subject to a life estate and either to a vested or contingent remainder, there is provision by statute for sale and the appointment of a trustee to hold the proceeds. R. L. c. 127, §§ 28,29,31, as amended by St. 1917, c. 306. The parties in the case at bar without the intervention of a decree, of the court converted the real estate into money and impressed it with a trust. Lewis v. Shattuck, 173 Mass. 486. They appear to have commingled the proceeds of the real and personal estate in a single fund. .But, even if it came from the real estate alone, the inference is inevitable that the trust, with which it was impressed, was the same to which, if the terms of the statute had been followed, it ought to and would havezbeen made subject.
The husband and children had no right to terminate such trust as to the personal property. We think that under the circumstances the same rule applies to the proceeds of the real estate. This is true even though the remainders had vested in the children. A fortiori they had no such right if the remainders created by the will were contingent. Partridge v. Clary, 228 Mass. 290. Claf
The children of the testatrix only undertook, so far as their agreement went,' to have the money held by the trust company under a trust agreement, according to the terms of which the income was to be paid to their father during his life and “at his death to his legal representatives.” This instrument was not, according to its terms, an attempt to terminate the trust. While not- drawn with accuracy and fullness, that instrument contemplates the continuance of a trust in general conformity, so far as expressed, with the trust established by implication by the will of the testatrix respecting personal estate. That created a life estate in the surviving husband Nelson. The will also-directed the husband “to divide all . . . property equally between our children still living after his death.” Of course that provision could not be executed by the husband because it was to be executed only after his death. It naturally, if not necessarily, would be done by his personal representatives. The provision in the instrument signed by the children of the testatrix, to the effect that the money should be paid at the death of their father “to his legal representatives,” did not purport to and did not have the effect of changing the. terms of the trust. It was in conformity in substance to the terms of the will. It was at most a convenient method of administering the final distribution of the fund. It was analogous to the payment of appointed property to the personal representatives of a person exercising a power of appointment. See Olney v. Balch, 154 Mass. 318. The use of the words “legal representatives” in the instrument signed by the children and authorizing the payment of the trust fund by the trust company to the “legal representatives” of their father, cannot under these circumstances be construed as including a further agreement wholly by inference that the fund when so
The provision in the agreement between Nelson St. John and the trust company, that at his death the fund should be paid over to his legal representatives “freed from all trusts,” does not affect the rights of the children of the testatrix. They did not sign that agreement. They were not parties to it and do not appear to have assented otherwise to its terms. The insertion of such a provision in the agreement by Nelson St. John was beyond the power conferred upon him by the agreement signed by his children, and he could not bind them in that particular.
Since no attempt was made to “terminate the trust as provided in the agreement with said trust company,” the effect of that part of the agreement need not be considered.
It follows that, without deciding other questions raised by the children of Caroline St. John, the decree is to be reversed and a decree entered instructing the petitioner to divide the fund in his hands equally between all the children of Caroline and Nelson St. John living at the time of the death of the latter, in accordance with the will of Caroline St. John, and i that Mildred Mary St. John, the widow of Nelson, is not entitled, to share therein.
Decree accordingly.