24 A. 530 | R.I. | 1892
The complainant, trustee under the will of Mary M. Bourne, late of Newport, deceased, brings this bill, practically a bill for instructions, for the distribution of the trust fund, and the case is submitted on bill, answer, and proofs. The will was dated September 30, 1879, and admitted to probate in Newport, January 16, 1882. The testatrix bequeathed one sixth of her residuary estate to the complainant in trust for the benefit of her grandson, Charles Allen Thorndike Rice, during his life, and upon his decease to transfer and pay over *669 the same to his issue, if he should leave any, as he should appoint "by will, or instrument in the nature thereof, executed in the presence of three or more witnesses; and if he leaves no issue, to and among such persons, and upon such uses and trusts, as he shall so appoint;" and in default of such appointment and issue, to and among those who should then be her heirs at law.
The grandson died in New York, May 16, 1889, without issue; leaving a will executed in England, September 17, 1881, which was duly probated in New York, where he was domiciled at his death. The will did not specifically dispose of the trust fund, which was subject to Mr. Rice's appointment, nor make any mention of it. The complainant is both trustee under the will of Mrs. Bourne and executor of the will of Mr. Rice. In the latter capacity he claims the right to receive and distribute the fund, as one which passes by appointment to the legatees under Rice's will. On the other hand, the heirs of Mrs. Bourne contend that there is a default of appointment, and so, under the will, the fund goes to them. The issue now raised, therefore, is whether there has been an execution of the power by the general residuary clause of Mr. Rice's will. Upon this issue our first inquiry must be, by what law the execution of the power is to be determined. It is admitted that both in England, where the will was executed, and in New York, where the donee of the power was domiciled, there are statutory provisions to the effect that a general devise or bequest will include property over which the testator has power of appointment, and will operate as an execution of such power, unless an intention not to execute the power shall appear by the will. If, therefore, the question is to be determined by the law of either England or New York, the power has been executed. Clearly the mere accident that Mr. Rice's will was executed in England, while he was temporarily there awaiting a steamer, cannot control its operation by impressing upon it the law of the place where it was made. It was neither the domicile of the testator, nor the situs of the property, nor the forum where the question comes for determination. Caulfield v. Sullivan,
The fund, then, being a Rhode Island fund, disposable under a Rhode Island will, it follows, naturally and necessarily, that the fact of its disposition must be determined by Rhode Island law.
The question is not what intent is to be imputed to the will of Mr. Rice, but what intent is to be imputed to the will of Mrs. Bourne. She authorized a disposition of her property by an appointment, and it is under her will that the question arises whether an appointment has been made. Her will is to be adjudged by the law of her domicile. So far as assumptions of intent may be made, it is to be presumed she intended the appointment to be made according to the law of her domicile, and not by the law of New York or England, or any other place where the donee of the power might happen to live. It is not the fact of Mrs. Bourne's ownership of the property which points to the law of this State as the criterion, but the fact that her will is the controlling instrument in the disposition of the property. Precisely this question arose in Sewall v. Wilmer,
The principle on which these cases proceed is that to which we have already alluded, viz., that the appointer is merely the instrument by whom the original testator designates the beneficiary, and the appointee takes under the original will, and not from the donee of the power. The law of the domicile of the original testator is, therefore, the appropriate test of an execution of a power. The case of D'Huart v. Harkness, 34 Beav. 324, 328, apparently holds the contrary, but, we think, only apparently. In that case property was held under an English will, with power of appointment, by will, in a woman domiciled in France. She died, leaving a holograph which was valid as a will in France, but not in England. Under the Wills Act it was admitted to probate in England as a foreign will, which gave it all the validity of an English will. The probate in England was held to be conclusive that it was a good will according to English law, and being a will it executed the power. The case was really decided by the law of England. While there are numerous decisions upon the general rule that a will is to be governed by the law of the testator's domicile, such decisions are not to be confounded with the present question: Which testator is the one to be considered in the case of a testamentary power? We know of no case which applies the law of the domicile of the donee of the power without reference to that of the donor. For these reasons we think the law of the domicile of the donor of the power should control, and hence that the law of Rhode Island must govern in this case.
What is the law of Rhode Island relating to the execution of a power? In Phillips v. Brown,
Decree accordingly.