Hoffman v. New England Trust Co.

187 Mass. 205 | Mass. | 1905

Hammond, J.

In the original will the only provision relating to the bonds was that contained at the end of the seventh item, as follows: “ And I direct that any Bonds owned by me shall not be collected or sold until they become due and payable.”

In the first codicil the only provision as to the bonds is the following: “ And I modify my said Will in relation to the Bonds that I may own at my decease, as follows — I now hereby direct that the Bonds of the City of Cambridge — the Bonds of the City of Providence — the Bonds of the City of Springfield—- and the Six per Cent Bonds of the Boston and Albany Railroad Company, be set apart by my Executor, to meet the income of One third of my Personal Estate, held in trust for Mary Louisa Peirce and also for the One fifth income of the remaining two thirds of my personal estate held in trust for Laura C. G. Peirce, so far as may be necessary for that purpose. And all the other Bonds that I may own at my decease are to be held by my Trustee, the New England Trust Company until the decease of my Nieces, Mary L. Peirce and Laura C. G. Peirce, the interest on the same, to be paid to my said Executor, for distribution to the parties entitled to receive the same by said Will. And at the death of both the said Mary Louisa Peirce and Laura C. G. Peirce, the said Bonds may be sold and distributed with all accumulations, although not then due, to the parties entitled by my said Will to the residue of my Personal Estate.”

In the second codicil there is no mention of the bonds; and it is suggested by the petitioners that since the only provision in the original will concerning the bonds was at the end of the seventh item, the substituted provision contained in the first codicil must be regarded also as a part of the seventh item as thus modified, and further, that, since the second codicil modifies the seventh item and says nothing about the bonds, the provisions of the first codicil in relation to the bonds are by necessary implication annulled by the second codicil. But we do not so read the will. The manifest purpose of the second codicil was not to change the provisions of the first codicil as to the bonds, but to change the provisions of the will as to the persons to whom the estate named in the seventh item should go. The provisions of the first codicil as to the care of the bonds by a *207trustee and the time when they shall be sold and distributed among the residuary legatees must be regarded as still standing.

The main question is whether the trust should be terminated. It is to be observed that the petitioners comprise only three of the beneficiaries, the fourth beneficiary and the trustee appearing in opposition ; and, under such circumstances, to declare the trust terminated would be going further than this court has gone.

But there are other grounds for refusing the petition. Plainly the testator intended that the trust should continue until the death of both of his nieces Mary and Laura. And, whatever may be the law elsewhere, that provision in this Commonwealth is legal. Claflin v. Claflin, 149 Mass. 19. It is also plain that nothing has happened which the testator did not anticipate, and for which he has not made provision. The language used by Field, J. in the case above cited is applicable here: “ It cannot be said that these restrictions upon the plaintiff’s possession and control of the property are altogether useless, for there is not the same danger that he will spend the property while it is in the hands of the trustees as there would be if it were in his own.”

For reasons stated in that case and in Young v. Snow, 167 Mass. 287, with reference to the general doctrine of the termination of such a trust, which it is unnecessary to repeat here, no sufficient reason is shown for the termination of the trust.

Petition dismissed.

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