The case arises upon demurrer to a complaint at law to recover income taxes collected over the plaintiff’s protest. The facts as alleged were as follows: Sumner, the testator, domiciled in Connecticut, made a will in which he bequeathed the residue of his estate of over $1,000,000 to the plaintiff as trustee, to pay the income to his wife during her life, remainder to certain charities. This bequest contained the following clause:
“I further give to my said trustee power to pay over to or for the benefit of my said wife any part of the principal of the trust fund whieh it may deem necessary or advisable for her comfortable maintenance and support.”
The widow lived in a “modest way,” considering the income of her husband’s estate and her own resources, and “her character, taste,” and “standard of living” were such “that there was at no time any reasonable possibility that the plaintiff as trustee would deem it necessary or advisable to use any part of the trust fund for her comfortable maintenance and support.” During the year 1926 the trustee sold some securities from the residue and realized a profit. The question was whether it should have returned this profit as part of the income accruing during the widow’s life.
We need only consider whether Ithaca Trust Co. v. U. S.,
In the case at bar the phrase, “proper support and comfort,” is not so limited, and the question depends upon how the courts of Connecticut interpret such a provision. In Hull v. Culver,
Reed v. Reed,
It will be observed that in all these eases the determination of the amount was either left to the beneficiary or he was made fiduciary by the will. Yet, with the exception of Reed v. Reed, in all the court imposed a limitation, couched generally in such clauses as that the withdrawal must be necessary according to the circumstances or station of life of the benefieiary. We can understand this in no other way than as importing the condition that, with due regard to changes in cost, the power is intended only to secure to the benefieiary the kind of living to which he is used and as interpolating the words expressly used in the will under consideration in Ithaca Trust Co. v. U. S. Indeed, it is patent that in the ordinary ease this is all that a testator really wants, and all that the benefieiary needs. Reed v. Reed, we think, depends upon the particular facts there involved.
In the ease at bar the power was not granted to the widow, nor was she the trustee. Moreover, it was not personal to the plaintiff (Russell v. Hartley,
Certainly the grant of sueh a power to the benefieiary implies more than when the trustee is the donee; he is to exercise some control. Hence it cannot be that, if the beneficiary is limited, the trustee is not. The eases we have cited are therefore in point — more in point, so to say, here than when the beneficiary is donee. They decide, we think, that while there was, of course, some latitude of choice with which the remaindermen could not interfere, the trustee was limited to the support of the widow according to her “station in life”; that is, according to her wont. The *712 fact that the remaindermen were charities is indeed material, but it is not controlling; Sumner’s purpose was to provide for his wife as she had been living, but to give the rest of his estate to these institutions. While the complaint is not, indeed, drawn to meet the critical issue as we view it, still we think that the allegation that the plaintiff would never have found it necessary to use the corpus for her support must be understood to mean that the income was enough for that support according to her habit.
Judgment affirmed.
