279 Mass. 380 | Mass. | 1932
This is an appeal from a decree of the Probate Court instructing the administrators with the will annexed of the estate of Caroline A. Estes that it is their duty to purchase seventy-five shares of the stock of the Providence Gas Company to be transferred to the trustee under the tenth clause of the will for the benefit of Caroline Jennie Salter.
Mrs. Estes by her will, executed in 1926, bequeathed to her granddaughter, Caroline J. Salter, in trust, fifteen shares of the capital stock of the Providence Gas Company. Following her death it was learned that Mrs. Estes had none of this stock standing in her name, but that she was in possession of a certificate for fifteen shares thereof which she had purchased in 1923, and had caused to be issued in the name of Caroline J. Marr (now Salter). Upon the death of the testatrix Mrs. Salter claimed these shares, and the same were turned over to her as her own property. The stock was purchased in these circumstances: In 1900 the mother of Mrs. Estes had devised to her certain real estate for life, with remainder to her children, J. Edmund Estes,
The trial judge found that by virtue of the mutual agreements Mrs. Estes had constituted herself trustee of the certificates for the parties entitled thereto. No question is raised but that the three thirty-share certificates belong to the parties named thereon. The trial judge found that there was a perfected gift of the fifteen shares from Mrs. Estes to Caroline J. Salter at the time of their purchase; that Mrs. Salter consented and agreed that during the lifetime of the testatrix she might hold the certificate of stock and receive the dividends. He also stated that he was unable to find that the fifteen shares of stock given in the will of Mrs. Estes in trust for Mrs. Salter were the fifteen shares of stock purchased in 1923.
The tenth clause of the will of Mrs. Estes is in the following terms: “To said Frederick E. Bemis, trustee herein named, thirty shares of the capital stock of the Charlton Mills, thirty shares of the capital stock of the Davis Mills,
The finding of the trial judge that there was a perfected gift from Mrs. Estes to Mrs. Salter of the fifteen shares at the time of their purchase in 1923 must stand. It is not inconsistent with or controlled by the other findings made. The finding that by virtue of the mutual agreements Mrs. Estes constituted herself trustee of the certificates for the parties entitled thereto does not mean that she held as trustee the title to the shares which the certificates represented, but merely that she held the certificates themselves with an obligation to deliver them in accordance with the terms of the agreement. See Sherman v. New Bedford Five Cents Savings Bank, 138 Mass. 581. In the circumstances disclosed by the record a perfected gift could have been found, notwithstanding the fact that Mrs. Estes did not deliver the certificates to the persons in whose names they were issued. She was permitted to hold the certificate issued in the name of Mrs. Salter but she had no title to the shares represented by it. She, with her granddaughter’s assent, had caused the latter to appear upon the books of the corporation as owner of fifteen of these shares with the rights and obligations of such owner of record. G. L. c. 155, § 29. See Leonard v. Boston Five Cents Savings Bank, 278 Mass. 36, 42; Beecher v. Major, 13 L. T. R. (N. S.) 54. Mrs. Salter asserted her title to the shares as owner, and Mrs. Estes and the corporation recognized that title by the orders made concerning dividends and the payments thereof. Mrs. Estes could be found to have relinquished to her granddaughter all present and future dominion and control of the
It is not disputed that if any shares are to be purchased by the administrators the number should be seventy-five instead of fifteen because of the fact that after the death of the testatrix the Providence Gas Company gave to each stockholder five shares of stock for each share then held by him. When Mrs. Estes made her will she knew that she held the legal title to no shares of stock in the Providence Gas Company, and that her only right therein was to hold the certificate and receive the income for life. We find no error in the conclusion of the trial judge that he was unable to find that the fifteen shares given the trustee for Mrs. Salter were the fifteen shares purchased in 1923.
In Tomlinson v. Bury, 145 Mass. 346, 347-348, the court said: “A specific legacy is one which separates and distinguishes the property bequeathed from the other property of the testator, so that it can be identified. It can only be satisfied by the thing bequeathed; if that has no existence, when the bequest would otherwise become operative, the legacy has no effect.” There is nothing in the legacy in question “to indicate that the gift is a specific one; it is a legacy of so many shares of stock; that per se is a general legacy . . . certainly where the number of shares given does not coincide with the number owned.” Slade v. Talbot, 182 Mass. 256, 259. The bequest being general could be satisfied either by the purchase by the administrators of the requisite number of shares and delivery of them to the trustee, as in Slade v. Talbot, 182 Mass. 256, or by giving them the option to make such delivery or to pay to the trustee the amount of money'with which the specified number of shares could be purchased, as in Johnson v. Goss, 128 Mass. 433, 436. The case is distinguishable in its
Decree affirmed.