The plaintiffs, trustees of a revocable trust created by the decedent, Vincent J. Kelley, M.D., commenced this action in the Probate Court seeking instructions interpreting a provision in the trust. The disputed provision requires that if any of the beneficiaries (the donor’s children) is indebted to the donor at the time of distribution of the trust principal, such indebtedness must be deducted *334 from that child’s distributive share. 3 A son, Kevin, had borrowed $25,000 from the donor, of which $20,000 was unpaid at the time of the father’s death. The trustees seek a determination whether this provision requires the deduction of the $20,000 debt which was discharged in bankruptcy prior to Dr. Kelley’s death. The defendant beneficiaries disagree as to the effect of this provision. Kevin Kelley and his sister Judith Kelley Nelligan claim the debt should not be deducted from his share. Kevin’s brothers, Vincent J. Kelley, Jr., and Stephen E. Kelley, claim the debt should be deducted. The Probate Court judge ruled that the debt should be deducted. Kevin Kelley appeals from that ruling. Having granted his application for direct appellate review, we affirm.
The Probate Court judge found the facts as follows. On November 20,1953, Dr. Kelley created a revocable trust for the benefit of his wife during her life which gave her a general power of appointment. The trust further provided in the event Mrs. Kelley failed to exercise the power, which failure occurred, that the trust principal should be distributed equally to their four children.
In 1969 Dr. Kelley loaned his son Kevin $25,000. Kevin repaid $5,000 of this loan in 1970. However, the circumstances of Kevin’s financial affairs led to an estrangement between him and his father. On April 24, 1970, Dr. Kelley amended the trust to include the provision which is the subject of this dispute, as well as a provision entirely excluding Kevin from receiving any benefit under the trust. On August 22, 1972, Dr. Kelley deleted the provision excluding Kevin from receiving any benefits. On October 21, 1974, Kevin filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in Federal court. The $20,000 unpaid portion of Kevin’s debt to Dr. Kelley was discharged by the Bankruptcy Court.
*335 Dr. Kelley died on August 4, 1975, leaving a will that was probated and which contained pour-over provisions to the November 20, 1953, trust. Mrs. Kelley died on August 8, 1977, leaving a will that was probated and which also contained pour-over provisions to the trust.
At the hearing of this matter, testimony of John F. Groden, a friend of Dr. Kelley, as well as his attorney and one of the trustees, was admitted, de bene. Mr. Groden testified Dr. Kelley told him subsequent to the execution of the trust and its amendments that he knew Kevin’s debt of $20,000 was discharged by Kevin’s discharge in bankruptcy and the discharge ended the matter. Mr. Groden interpreted these statements as a statement of Dr. Kelley’s intention that Kevin’s discharged indebtedness was not to be deducted from Kevin’s distributive share under the trust. There was also testimony by Vincent Kelley, Jr., and Stephen Kelley that at the time of the discharge in bankruptcy and continuously thereafter, Dr. Kelley was in a nursing home as a result of a stroke and that his ability to communicate was very much impaired.
We turn now to consider the merits of this appeal. It is fundamental that a trust instrument must be construed to give effect to the intention of the donor as ascertained from the language of the whole instrument considered in the light of circumstances known to the donor at the time of its execution.
Dana
v.
Gring,
The trust instrument directs the trustee upon the death of Dr. Kelley or his wife, whichever occurs later, to divide any remaining trust principal as well as any accumulated but undistributed income “into such number of shares as shall provide one equal share for each of the Donor’s children then living . . . .” The trust instrument should be read as expressing Dr. Kelley’s intention to treat all of his children equally with regard to the distribution of his estate. We view the April 24, 1970, amendment as intended to maintain and preserve the equality of treatment of Dr. Kelley’s children. It should therefore be read to require a deduction of any of the children’s unpaid debts to Dr. Kelley, regardless of their technical legal enforceability. Cf.
Cummings
*336
v.
Bramhall,
The testimony of Mr. Groden, admitted de bene, requires no contrary conclusion. Dr. Kelley’s statements are at best equivocal as expressions of his intentions regarding the trust. In any event these statements, made after the execution of the trust and its amendments, were inadmissible as direct proof of Dr. Kelley’s intention in using the language in the trust instrument.
5
Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co.
v.
Prindle,
The appellant argues that the term “indebtedness” as used in the trust instrument should be given its normal and well-understood meaning and that in common parlance a debt ceases to be a debt when it is either no longer due or no longer collectible. We disagree. It is established that a “discharge [in bankruptcy] destroys the remedy but not the indebtedness.”
Zavelo
v.
Reeves,
*337
The appellant concedes that by using specific language, a donor may provide for the deduction of debts discharged in bankruptcy.
Allen
v.
Edwards,
The appellant next relies upon the construction in
Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co.
v.
Stebbins,
*338
Finally, the appellant argues that by virtue of the supremacy clause of the Federal Constitution, the Federal Bankruptcy Act, as in effect at the time of his discharge in bankruptcy, precludes the Probate Court from ordering that the discharged debt be deducted. The appellant takes the position that the plaintiffs’ petition to the Probate Court for instructions construing the trust instrument requires the Probate Court to adjudicate the appellant’s liability to an estate for a debt discharged in bankruptcy, and therefore constitutes the institution of an action or employment of a process to “collect such debts as personal liabilities of the bankrupt” in contravention of § 14 (f) (2) of the Bankruptcy Act.
9
The appellant argues further that by determining that the appellant’s discharged indebtedness should be deducted, the Probate Court has improperly placed its imprimatur upon an action or process enabling a creditor to collect a discharged debt as a personal liability of the bankrupt. The appellant places primary reliance for this position on the Supreme Court decision in
Perez
v.
Campbell,
We do not believe that the plaintiffs’ petition or the judge’s ruling in this case contravenes either the letter or the spirit of the Bankruptcy Act. The 1970 amendment to the
*339
Bankruptcy Act relied upon by the appellant was enacted to curtail the prior widespread practice of creditors instituting State court actions on discharged debts in the hope that the debtor would fail to plead affirmatively the discharge, thus, under prior law, enabling the creditor to obtain a judgment. See
Girardier
v.
Webster College,
In view of our conclusion we need not consider the argument of the appellees, Vincent J. Kelley, Jr., and Stephen E. Kelley, that the doctrine of “equitable retainer” is applicable in this case and requires deduction of the appellant’s debt from his distributive share. 10
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The pertinent language of the trust provides: “If any of the Donor’s children are indebted to him and/or his wife, NATHALIE M. KELLEY, at the time of distribution of the principal, such indebtedness shall be considered as part of said principal, but shall be deducted from the share of such child.”
The requirement to construe the instrument to give effect to the intention of the donor is essentially identical in the case of both trusts and wills. Compare
Dana
v.
Gring,
We note that no motion to strike appears in the record as to this evidence. Had such a motion been made, it would have been proper to allow it. The probate judge apparently properly disregarded such evidence in reaching his findings and conclusions.
The appellant assumes, and we agree, that for purposes of this rule, a debt barred by the statute of limitations is analogous to a debt barred by a discharge in bankruptcy.
In Allen the court construed the statutory predecessor of G. L. c. 197, § 25, as requiring the deduction from a legatee’s distributive share of only legal debts in the face of a testator’s silence with regard to deduction of indebtedness. Underwood likewise recognized this rule. Thus, these cases rejected as the law of Massachusetts the common law doctrine of “equitable retainer” which requires the deduction of a beneficiary’s debt, whether legal or barred, despite the testator’s or donor’s silence.
In rejecting the appellant’s suggested rule, we observe that in
Rogers
v.
Daniell,
Section 14 (f) of the Bankruptcy Act (11 U.S.C. § 32 [f] [1970]), in effect at the time of the appellant’s discharge, provided: “An order of discharge shall —
“(1) declare that any judgment theretofore or thereafter obtained in any other court is null and void as a determination of the personal liability of the bankrupt with respect to any [discharged debts]; and
“(2) enjoin all creditors whose debts are discharged from thereafter instituting or continuing any action or employing any process to collect such debts as personal liabilities of the bankrupt.”
This section was added by Pub. L. No. 91-467, § 3, 84 Stat. 991 (1970). The present version is found in 11 U.S.C. § 524 (a) (Supp. II 1978), added by Pub. L. No. 95-598, 92 Stat. 2592 (1978).
See note 7, supra.
