35 A. 1042 | R.I. | 1896
This is a bill for instructions. Complainants are the trustees under the will of Rufus Greene, formerly of Providence, deceased, and the *621
respondents are his widow, Ellen Maria Greene, a grandchild Mary C. Greene, the only child of Rufus Greene, Jr., deceased, who was a son of the testator, and the testator's sons, Robert L. Greene, Archer Greene and Howard Greene. A copy of the will may be found in Robinson v. Greene,
By the seventh clause of the will the trustees were directed to retain that portion of the testator's personal estate invested in the business of Greene Cranston, bankers, as it then was, so long as the testator's partner in their judgment should be physically able to manage the same, or until he should signify in writing to the trustees his unwillingness further to continue the business, or until in the judgment of a majority of the trustees the business should become hazardous and unprofitable.
The bill sets forth that at the making of the will the larger part of the testator's personal estate, to wit, $100,000, was invested in the business of Greene Cranston, which was retained in the business after the decease of the testator, agreeably to the direction of the will; that in 1875 the firm of Greene Cranston became embarrassed, and on December 17th of that year made an assignment; that the affairs of the firm were settled in the latter part of 1878 and early part of 1879, the trustees then in office receiving of the $100,000 invested by the testator in the business $61,692.45, paid to them in two sums, the average date of payment of which was December 9, 1878. This sum they credited to the corpus of the estate. The life tenants claim that this was erroneous, and that an allowance should have been made to them from the sum received for the loss of income suffered by them between the date of the assignment, December 17, 1875, and the date when the sum was received, December 9, 1878.
We are of the opinion that this claim is well founded. The authorities hold that when a fund is held in trust for *622
the benefit of one person for life, and another in remainder, and a part of the fund is lost because of the insecurity of the investment, the loss is to be apportioned between the life tenants and remainder-men. Cox v. Cox, L.R. 8 Eq. Cas. 343;Maclaren v. Stainton, L.R. 4 Eq. Cas. 448; Roosevelt v.Roosevelt, 5 Redf. 264; Veazie v. Forsaith,
The question is raised as to the method in which the apportionment should have been made. The life tenants suggest that, as the $100,000 invested in the firm of Greene Cranston was intended by the testator to be a permanent investment, the proper mode of apportionment would have been to ascertain the average yearly profit earned by the investment prior to the assignment, multiply it by the 2 357/365 years during which the affairs of the firm were in liquidation, and then to divide the sum received in liquidation between the life tenants and remainder-men, in the proportion which the $100,000 originally invested bears to the amount of income ascertained in the manner stated for the period specified. They have cited no authority which holds that such a method of apportionment in a similar case is proper. They have referred to Westcott v. Nickerson,
Different methods of apportionment have been followed in the cases. Sometimes the apportionment has been made by computing interest on the amount realized from the investment during the period that the life tenant has been deprived of the income, and the interest so computed being deducted from the amount realized and paid to the life tenant, the remainder is held to constitute the future capital. This was the method adopted in Parsons v.Winslow,
By reason of the loss to the personal estate of the part of the fund invested in the partnership of Greene Cranston, as stated, the income of the personal estate became insufficient to keep the real estate in repair and insured, and to pay the taxes and assessments, as directed by the first clause of the will; and the deficiency at the time of the filing of the bill, amounting to $42,802.93, has been made up from the income of the residuary real estate. It is suggested in behalf of the life tenants, that it was the intention of the testator, manifested by the direction of the first clause of the *625 will, that the beneficiaries under the eighth clause should receive the gross rents and profits of his residuary real estate, subject only to the annuity to Rosa Keelwa, just as his daughters received the gross rents and profits of the real estate directed to be paid to them by the fourth, fifth and sixth clauses; and it is argued that, on the failure of the personalty to afford sufficient income for the purposes specified, the deficiency should be made good out of the corpus of the personalty, or of both the personalty and realty. The question, therefore, is raised by the bill whether the trustees have authority to reimburse the life tenants out of the corpus of the personalty or of both the personalty and realty, for moneys taken from the income of the residuary real estate to make good the deficiencies of the income of the personalty, for the purposes stated.
The contingency that the income of the personal estate might become insufficient for the maintenance of the real estate and the payment of taxes and assessments on it, apparently was not present to the mind of the testator in the framing of his will. If it had been, it is possible that he would have provided some method of making good the deficiency. But as he has made no such provision, neither the trustees nor the court can make it for him. Grinnell v. Baker,
The bill sets forth that, in the management of the real estate it has been found necessary, for the advantageous rental thereof, to make changes in the structure of the buildings to provide for modern improvements, notably for water closets and bath rooms, and the additions of plumbing and sewerage coincident therewith, not contemplated by the testator, which have required outlays amounting to $4,630.72; *626 and the question is made whether the trustees are authorized to charge these outlays, and any future outlays of the same character, to the corpus of the estate.
We are of the opinion that the outlays specified, which have been or may hereafter be made for structures of a permanent nature, and not merely to renew or replace what has become defective, especially in view of the fact that these outlays have been rendered necessary to a considerable extent by municipal regulations, are not to be regarded as outlays for repairs, but rather as for improvements (State v. White,
We are of the opinion that outlays for putting improved real estate purchased by the trustees in tenantable repair, are properly chargeable to the corpus of the estate. Such expenditures, being necessary to put the buildings in a condition to be occupied, may well be deemed a part of the original cost or purchase money; the expenses of subsequent repairs being, however, a charge on the income. Parsons v. Winslow,
As the will confers authority on the trustees to change from time to time, if in the opinion of a majority of them it should become beneficial and necessary, the investment of any of the trust funds, and even the real estate if necessary to protect any one or more beneficiaries, it would seem to follow that they would have power to build on vacant land held by them, and to use the trust funds for that purpose. In Re Newman's SettledEstates, L.R. 9 Ch. App. 681, 683, Lord Chief Justice James remarks: "The cases proceed on the principle that the erection of a building is substantially *627
the same thing as the purchase of a new estate;" and again, inDrake v. Trefusis, L.R. 10 Ch. App. 364, 366, "The spending money in building a house on a vacant piece of ground forming part of the settled property is, in substance, the same thing as buying the house." See also Re Johnson's Settlements, L.R. 8 Eq. Cas. 348; Re Lord Hotham's Trusts, L.R. 12 Eq. Cas. 76;Stevens v. Melcher, 80 Hun, 514, 531; Sohier v. Eldredge,
The only language, in the power conferred on the trustees to change the investment of the trust estate, which can be supposed to operate as a restriction, is the direction that the change of investment is to be "to any other and others of a like nature as near as may be."1 We do not think that this language should be regarded as prohibitive of the power of the trustees to change the investment of the personalty into realty or the realty into personalty in the present situation of the estate, if in the judgment of a majority of them such change would be beneficial and necessary. It was the intention of the testator, as has been seen, that the expenses of caring for and managing the realty should be paid out of the income of the personalty. For this reason probably he intended that the trust estate should remain divided between personalty and realty in substantially the same proportions as existed at his death, and he accordingly, with this intention in mind, suggests to the trustees that, in changing the investment of the trust estate, the change should be to other property of a like nature as near as possible, i.e. that personalty should be changed to personalty and realty to realty. That intention, however, has been frustrated by the loss to the personalty resulting from the loss on the investment in the partnership of Greene Cranston. The proportion between *628 the personalty and realty having thus been destroyed, there is no reason for the continued operation of the suggestion.
The power conferred on the trustees to make any and all conveyances which may become necessary, in the performance of the trusts for the benefit of the estate, is given in connection with the power to change the investment of the trust estate. We think it probable that it was intended to be merely ancillary to the latter power. But, apart from this, a power to sell given to trustees, it is held, does not confer a power to mortgage. R.I.Hospital Trust Co. v. Commercial Nat. Bank,
"With full power in said Trustees to make any and all conveyances with as good title as I myself might have made, which may become necessary in the performance of their trust and for the benefit of my said estate.
"As well as to change from time to time if in the judgment of said majority it may become beneficial and necessary the investment of any of said trust funds and even the real estate, if necessary to protect any one or more beneficiaries, to any other and others of the like nature as near as may be."