93 A. 535 | Conn. | 1915
The plaintiff, as trustee under the will of Cynthia M. Merrill, has in his hands property of her estate amounting to upward of $100,000 in value. It is in part real and in part personal, and is made up of the residue of her estate originally given in trust, and accretions thereto by reason of the net income having been in excess of the amounts thereof required to be expended in the execution of the trust.
The questions presented for advice all relate to the disposition of this property. The heirs at law of the testatrix contend that all of it is her intestate estate ready for distribution as such. The children of certain nephews claim to be entitled to it under a provision of the will which reads as follows: "And twenty-five years after my decease, all the remainder of my estate, both real and personal, including any funds arising from the failure of any of the above objects, shall be equally divided by the trustee, between the legal issue of my said nephews and of my said niece, Ella A. Treat to be theirs, to have and to hold forever."
The answers to all the questions propounded, save only a few of minor importance, are to be determined *277 by the construction and legal effect to be given to this testamentary provision. The contention of the heirs at law rests upon two propositions: (1) that the provision is void as being in contravention of the statute against perpetuities; and (2) that it is invalid as embodying a trust for accumulation covering a period not confined within the limits of the common-law rule against perpetuities.
The first of these propositions depends upon the meaning to be attached to the descriptive title "legal issue," as used in that portion of the will. Following the English rule, we have held that the primary and usual, and therefore presumptive, meaning of the term "issue," when used as a word of purchase, includes descendants of every degree. Bartlett v. Sears,
By reference to the codicil we find that the testatrix used the terms "issue" and "lawful issue" where the persons intended to be thus described were unmistakably children, and, as it happened, the children of the very persons referred to in the paragraph under consideration. There is nothing in the will to indicate, even inferentially, that their equivalent — "legal issue" — in the latter paragraph, were used more comprehensively. Here is a strong indication that the testatrix used the words there in the same narrow sense, limited to children, in which she used similar words in the codicil. Wood v. Wood,
But that is by no means all. She directed that the division in question be made "equally" among the persons described as the "legal issue" of the nephews and niece. This direction, in the absence of an indication of a contrary intent, looks to a per capita distribution.Bisson v. West Shore R. Co.,
The gift over to the children of the nephews and niece vested in interest immediately upon the death of the testatrix, with the right of enjoyment postponed for a period of twenty-five years. It vested in the children who were then living as members of a class, which would open to admit other members, as persons answering the class description should thereafter, and until the termination of the twenty-five year period, be born. Norton v. Mortensen,
The second proposition involves an appeal to the well-established common-law principle, impliedly recognized by us in Woodruff v. Marsh,
The rule against perpetuities forms a part of our *280
law. Bates v. Spooner,
This appeal to the common-law principle touching trusts for accumulation, assumes that the will before us embodies such a trust. We find no support for this proposition in the will. The existence of a trust to accumulate involves the presence of a direction, express or implied, by the creator of the trust, be he testator or settlor, for such accumulation. We examine this will in vain to discover such direction by Mrs. Merrill. By it she left all of her estate, save household goods and personal belongings, to form the body of a trust fund. The purposes for which the trust was created were many, and many benefactions were to be accomplished through its agency. Some of these benefactions called for payments of single gross sums, while others were in the form of periodical payments covering possibly long periods of time. Some of the payments were to be made upon the settlement of the estate; others were postponed in time three, ten and fifteen years. Some were in terms directed to be made in any event, although quite likely intended to be made out of the income; others had this intent more clearly indicated, in that they were made conditioned upon the accumulation of income being sufficient. Those of the latter sort total $12,500. The others include a few gross sums and semi-annual payments which might amount to $2,800 a year. These provisions made, she followed them with the one under discussion. Neither in that or elsewhere is there either an express *281 direction for the accumulation of unexpended income, or a gift of such accumulation, or of an accumulated fund from which a direction to accumulate might be implied. The paragraph simply gives to the legal issue of the nephews and niece the "remainder" of her estate, "including any funds arising from the failure of any of the above objects." The basic fund thus given, it is to be noted, is described as "the remainder of my estate," which is the identical term used by the testatrix in describing the principal of the fund originally given in trust. The accumulations referred to are those, and those only, "arising from the failure" of gifts for other objects, readily referable to her gifts of gross sums not made chargeable upon income.
There have been accumulations, and the fund now in the trustee's hands is partly due to them. But the reason for them is not that the testatrix commanded them, but that she provided such a generous fund for the satisfaction of her benefactions that the execution of the trust did not exhaust the income coming into the hands of the trustee, and this excess has remained in his hands undisposed of. Whatever accumulation there has been has been purely incidental and accidental. It has not resulted either from a compliance with the testatrix's directions, or, in so far as appears, in the execution of her plan or purpose. We have not, therefore, a trust for accumulation to deal with, but only incidental accumulations in fact, with the question to determine as to who is entitled to them.
This aspect of the case disposes of any controversy as to the disposition of the principal of the fund. The taint which might attach to it, and the fate which might have attended it had the testatrix incorporated it into a trust for a twenty-five year accumulation, with a gift of the accumulated fund, are thus escaped. It is not interwoven into a testamentary scheme in such *282
a way as to create a situation which the law frowns upon. The testatrix devoted it to certain legitimate trust uses for a period of twenty-five years. There was nothing unlawful in that. Loomer v. Loomer,
It remains to inquire concerning the income which has accumulated and is in the trustee's hands. To whom does it belong? The children had a vested interest in the fund during the whole period of the accumulation. The testatrix had not directed either that these sums should be used in the execution of the trust, or accumulated, or that they should pass at any time to any one. Naturally, being otherwise undisposed of, they would belong to those in whom the beneficial interest in the fund was vested, and, there being no provision for accumulation, the excess would be held by the trustee subject to the reasonable call of those entitled to it. The fact that the call had not been made would not change the rights of the parties. 1 Perry on Trusts Trustees (6th Ed.) § 396. The trust was one which concerned the residue of the testatrix's estate. The gift over was of that residue, and any unexpended income not otherwise disposed of went with it to the residuary beneficiaries. Thellusson v. Woodford, 4 Ves. Jr. 227, 340.
The children of the nephews are in disagreement as to the basis of division between them. Some contend that is should be per capita; others per stirpes. "The general rule is that by a bequest to the children of A. and to the children of B., the children take per capita
and not per stirpes, in the absence of words indicating a different intention." Hill v. Bowers,
The testatrix directs that the trust fund should be distributed to ultimate owners twenty-five years after her death. The termination of the trust at that time was by necessary implication thus decreed. This termination of the trust automatically placed a limitation upon the duration of the direction to make periodical payments to the nephews and niece. The fund gone, there would remain nothing to administer. The nephews and niece are not entitled to these payments subsequent to the close of the twenty-five year period.
The trustee has no power, in the absence of competent judicial authority, to sell, for the purposes of more convenient distribution, the real estate which forms a portion of the trust property in his hands.
The Superior Court is advised: (1) that by the words "legal issue," in said trust clause, the testatrix meant children; (2) that the trust created by said clause was a valid one; (3) that the children of the nephews, and the executors or administrators of such of them as are now deceased, are entitled to the fund, principal and income, now in the hands of the trustee, to be *284 divided between them equally per capita; (4) that all right to receive periodical payments by the nephews and niece of the testatrix in the execution of the trust ceased at the end of twenty-five years from and after her decease; and (5) that the trustee is without power, conferred by the will, to sell real estate for the purposes of the distribution of the fund in his hands.
No costs in this court will be taxed in favor of any of the parties.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.