145 Tenn. 575 | Tenn. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by Mrs. Eva Eaton and her husband to recover from the Nashville Trust Company something over $3,500, alleged to be due to her under certain provisions of the will of her father. There was a decree for the complainant below, from which the defendants have appealed.
The case involves a construction of a will of George W. Spottswood, Avho died several years ago. The fourth clause of the will and a codicil to the will are in controversy and are as follows:
“Fourth. To the Nashville Trust Company, I bequeath the sum of three thousand dollars in trust for the benefit óf my son, George M. Spottswood. The income from this amount to be paid to the said George Spottswood until he shall have reached the age of forty-five (45) year’s, at that time the principal shall be paid to him or his heirs.”
*577 Codicil to My Will.
“I, George W. Spottswood of Nashville, Davidson county, do publish and declare that I am possessed of sound mind and I wish to add important things to my will which has been written. I desire to bequeath to my son, George M. Spottswood, an additional four thousand dollars ($4,000) to the amount of $3,000 as already named in my will which will make a total of seven thousand. ($7,000) dollars, equal to the amount I give to my other two children, Alvan E. Spottswood and Eva M. Eaton, the said four thousand to be left in trust with the Nashville Trust Company to be invested by them in a way which will bring the best returns, and the whole $7,000 to be kept in trust until he reaches the age of fifty years, instead of forty-five years. The reason I put this amount in trust is the influence which he lives and surrounds him, that other parties would squander and spend his money before he was aware of their influence over him. At his death the remaining money is to be equally divided between his brother and sister, Alvan and Eva, if they are living; if not living, to be divided between their children.”
The son, George M. Spottswood survived his father, the testator, and the son died leaving a wife and minor child before he reached fifty years. The other son, Alvan E. Spottswood, has surrendered to the widow and child of his deceased brother all his interest in the trust fund. The sister, Eva M. Eaton, insists, however, as before stated, that she is entitled to; one-half of this fund and seeks to recover it. The Nashville Trust Company is in doubt as to the proper disposition of the fund since the death of George M. Spottswood and asks the direction of the court. The widow of George M. Spottswood-and the minor child
We think the chancellor was in error in his construction of the will and that the widow and child of George M. Spottswood are entitled to this fund.
It is of the essence of a valid executory limitation that it be not in the power'of the first taker to defeat it by sale or otherwise at his will and pleasure. True, the unlimited power of disposition must be given by the will and cannot arise as a mere incident to the estate devised, but such power may be given, not only by express words, but by words necessarily implying an unlimited power of disposition. Booker v. Booker, 5 Humph. (24 Tenn.), 505; Bradley v. Carnes, 94 Tenn., 27, 27 S. W., 1007, 45 Am. St. Rep., 696; Overton v. Lea, 108 Tenn., 505, 68 S. W., 250.
If the estate given is inconsistent with limitation over, they cannot stand together. Meacham v. Graham, 98 Tenn., 200, 39 S. W., 12.
The will before us as modified by the codicil undertook to bequeath to the Nashville Trust Company the sum of $7,000 to be held by it for the benefit of George M. Spotts-wood until he reached the age of fifty years. Under the express language of clause 4, and by necessary implication from the language used in the codicil, this sum of money was to be paid to George M. Spottswood when he attained the age of fifty years. The codicil then proceeds:
“At his death the remaining money is to be equally divided between his brother and sister, Alvan and Eva, if they are living; if not living, to be divided between their children.”
This gift over to Alvan and Eva or their children follows an absolute estate in George M. Spottswood after he
In Booker v. Booker, supra, property was given to a son “not to be disposed of until he is twenty-five years of age, except by consent of my executors.” The will attempted to impose a gift over upon this estate. The gift over was held to be ineffective. The court said:
“In the concluding clause above quoted, it seems clear that the testator intended to give an absolute power of disposition of the estate after Albert should arrive at twenty-five years of age. When it is said, he is not to dispose of it until he arrived at the age of twenty-five years without the consent of the executors, it is implied that he may dispose of it, with their consent before he is twenty-five, and that after he arrives at that age he may make such disposition without their consent. We cannot more clearly express our approbation that a thing may be done, than to forbid it except upon the happening of a certain event. All men would understand that upon the event happening, the right to do the thing had Aeen granted. It would have been absurd for the testator to limit the right to dispose of the property unless the. executors consent, or unless he arrive at twenty-five years, if he did not intend that upon either of these occurring he might dispose of it.” Booker v. Booker, supra.
“This property I wish my son J. McEwan Stones to have the control of to use for his benefit but he is not to sell or dispose of any of it until he is thirty-five years old; should he sell or transfer this property, his title shall become null and void, and the property shall become the property of his sister, E. B. Stones. And should he die without issue the above described his sister E. B. Maney and her children is to be made, as above stated, sole heirs.”
The last clause containing the limitation over upon death of the son without issue was added to the will after the daughter E. B. Stones married one Maney.
The chancellor refers to the case of Booker v. Booker, supra, as requiring an implication of full power of disposition in the son after he reaches the age of thirty-five years, by reason of the prohibition against disposition before he reaches the age of thirty-five years. The chancellor continues :
“If, therefore, the new clause is to be construed as meaning that the devise over should take effect should the son die without issue either before or after his arrival at the age of thirty-five years, the two clauses would be in conflict and the latter would be rendered nugatory by the former.”
In this case the chancellor construed the will to mean that the devise over was only to take effect in case of the son dying before he reached the age of thirty-five years; that after he reached the age of thirty-five years the son took an absolute estate in conflict with any limitation over.
In the case before us counsel for the complainant say on their brief:
*581 “It is conceded, that George M. Spottswood was entitled to the income from said trust fund until he should reach fifty years of age, if he had lived. At his death before or after that period, it is insisted that what remained of said trust fund went to his brother and sister, Alvan and Eva, if living, and, if eithér or both should be dead, to the children of the deceased brother or sister, etc.”-
This concession brings the case directly within the ruling of Judge Cooper in Stones v. Maney, supra, and renders the limitation over ineffective because inconsistent with the previous estate in George M. Spottswood.
We think counsel were correct in saying the gift over was intended to take effect upon the death of George M. Spootswood, either before he reached the age of fifty years or thereafter. This follows because in the language of the codicil the gift over is of the “remaining money” meaning that some of it might have been spent before the gift over took effect, and it was certainly not contemplated that any part of the money was to be spent before the son reached the age of fifty years, because it was all to be held intact by the Nashville Tust Company.
The gift over of the “remaining money” also forces the implication that George M. Spottswood was to have an unlimited power of disposition when the money came into his hands. Such language certainly implied that he had the right to spend some of the money, and, if he had the right to spend any of it, he had the right to spend it all. Meacham v. Graham, supra; Bradley v. Carnes, supra.
The case of Clark v. Henry, L. R., 11 Eq. 222, affirmed in L. R. Ch. App., 588, referred to in Stones v. Maney, supra, is direct authority for the proposition that a bequest of money in trust for a beneficiary until he reaches a certain
We are therefore of opinion that the limitation over of the “remaining money” to Alvan and Eva Spottswood or their children after the death of George M. Spottswood is an effort to follow an absolute estate with a gift over, that the tAVO estates are inconsistent, and that under the authorities this limitation over must fail.
Upon the death of George M. Spottswood the purpose for which the trust in his favor was created was accomplished and the trust was ended. The trust fund, therefore, passed to his distributees, namely, to his \Addow and minor child. His brother and sister are not entitled to any part of said fund.
The decree of the chancellor will, accordingly, be reversed, and this case be remanded to the end that the trustee- may make proper settlement, a guardian may be appointed for the minor child, and other proceedings had in conformity with this opinion. A construction of this Avill was necessary, and we think the costs of .this case should be paid one-half by the complainants and one-half by the trustee out of the funds in its hands.
A $200 fee will be allowed the guardian ad litem out of his ward’s estate.