147 A. 367 | Conn. | 1929
Two of the questions reserved for our advice were determined upon a former construction of the will of the testatrix, namely, that the plaintiff, substituted trustee, "has the same rights, privileges, powers and duties with reference to the payment of the principal and income of the trust [fund] as did the original trustee," and that the provisions for the payment of income and principal to the wife of the son of the testatrix, Edmund C. Converse, Jr., were for the personal benefit of the wife of the son, Estella Converse, who took the place of the divorced wife of the son. Greenwich Trust Co. v.Converse,
The entire income, which had accrued, and whether collected or not, from the trust fund provided for in Article Fifth to the wife of Edmund C. Converse, Jr., surviving him, was payable to Estella Converse during her lifetime or until she remarried, and upon her decease or marriage to her estate. Since this wife might not be in being at the death of the testatrix, the defendant executors claim the limitation upon her life "is too remote and violates the rule against perpetuities." The claim can only be sustained provided (1) the nonexistence of the wife at the decease of the testatrix offends this rule, or (2) the existence of the estate in the wife at his death offends this rule by bringing the estate in her beyond the period limited by the rule. We have held that the vesting is not required to be ascertainable at the testatrix's death but only within the period limited by the rule.
The statement of our rule is unequivocal. "The plaintiff claims that the will contravenes the commonlaw rule against perpetuities. That the legal estate vested upon the death of the testator in his executors is, in respect to this point, immaterial. The law searches out the beneficial estate and demands that this shall vest within a life or lives in being and twenty-one years (or, as the case may be, twenty-one years and the period of gestation) thereafter. It does not demand that the particular individuals in whom it must be vested shall definitely ascertainable at the testator's death. It is enough if it is certain that they will be definitely ascertainable within the period limited after that event." Bates v. Spooner,
The second ground in support of this claim is equally untenable. The period of the rule must begin *124
"within lives in being and twenty-one years, although it may end beyond them," therefore it is not obnoxious to the rule. The Rule against Perpetuities, Gray (3d Ed.) p. 207; Colonial Trust Co. v. Brown,
The remainder of the trust fund under this Article is distributable, upon the death or remarriage of the wife, Estella Converse, "among the issue of my said son in equal shares per stripes and not per capita." "Issue," under our decisions, is construed as a word of purchase, unless the context shows it to have been used as one of limitation. As a word of purchase its primary and therefore presumptive meaning is heirs of the body, and includes descendants of any degree. Neither in the will nor in the surrounding circumstances is there anything evincing an intention on the part of the testator to use the term issue in its limited sense for children or grandchildren. MiddletownTrust Co. v. Gaffey,
We answer the questions as follows: 1. The same as the original trustee. 2 and 3. Yes, as set forth in the opinion. 4. Yes. 5. No. 7. The substituted trustee shall pay over the remainder of the principal of the trust fund upon the death or remarriage of Estella Converse to Bankers Trust Company, sole surviving executor of the will of Edmund C. Converse. 9. No.
Other questions, in view of the answers to the above questions, do not require answer.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.