208 Mass. 241 | Mass. | 1911
By her last will modified by a first and third codicil, Lydia Smith Russell left one third part of her estate to her son Jonathan for life without the intervention of trustees, with power in a contingency which took place to appoint his third “ among my lineal heirs, to have and enjoy the same upon such terms ” as he might prescribe. She died in 1859, leaving in addition to the son Jonathan a daughter, Geraldine, who was twice married, and Rosalie Russell who died a spinster. Jonathan died in 1875. By his will he appointed that part of his share of his mother’s estate here in question to trustees in trust for his two sisters during their respective lives and in case Geraldine died before Rosalie (which event happened) to divide her share into as many portions as there should be children of Geraldine living at the date of his will and living at Geraldine’s death; and to pay over to her son one third outright and to hold the portions set aside for daughters in trust to pay the income to the daughters for life, and upon the death of each daughter to transfer and convey that portion of the deceased daughter to and among her children and the issue of any deceased child (taking by right of representation) and upon the death of Rosalie to hold and pay over her half upon the same trusts. Geraldine left three children, George R. R. Rivers, Mary Rivers, and Rosalie G. Rivers who married Mr. Shields and later Mr. Sheffield.
All Geraldine’s children were born in the lifetime of Lydia Smith Russell, and the appointment to them for life and the appointment over as they should respectively decease is confessedly not too remote. Dorr v. Lovering, 147 Mass. 530. Minot v. Doggett, 190 Mass. 435.
The question which has to be decided arises from the fact that when Jonathan died Geraldine’s youngest daughter Rosalie, then Mrs. Shields, had one child, and after Jonathan’s death she married again and had eight more children; and the defendants other than these nine children of Mrs. Sheffield contend that the appointment over to the eight born after Jonathan’s death is invalid.
1. What gives rise to the first contention is the finding or findings made by a single justice in 1887, in a bill for instructions brought by the executors of Jonathan soon after his death in 1875. The question whether the contingency had happened on which Jonathan had a power of appointment seems to have occupied the first ten years next after the bill was brought. In 1885 a decree was entered declaring that the will of Jonathan operated as an effectual appointment of the residue of the fund for the lives of Geraldine (who had died while the suit was pending) and Bosalie. In addition the executors were directed to pay one half of the income then in their hands to the executor of Geraldine and one half to Bosalie; and further they were directed to transfer one half of the principal to certain trustees to hold for Bosalie for life, with liberty to any party to the suit to apply.
In 1887 the suit came on for hearing" on the disposition to be made of the share of which Geraldine had the income for life. On the conclusion of this hearing four findings were made by the single justice who heard the suit.
2. The second contention of these defendants is “that the language used shows no intention on the part of Lydia Smith Russell that the class to which Jonathan had the power to appoint should be determined by any other rule than the general rule that the time for determining the members of a class who may benefit by the exercise of a power is the time of the death of the donee of the power where he has a life interest in the property. Farwell on Powers, (2d ed.) 490. Paul v. Crompton, 8 Ves. 375. Thayer v. Rivers, 179 Mass. 280, at p. 290.” The short answer to that is that there is no such general rule. When a power is given to appoint among the lineal heirs (which in this case as matter of construction means descendants) of the testator there is no ground for confining it so as not to include any
A decree must be entered declaring that the will of Jonathan Russell operated as an effectual appointment of Mrs. Sheffield’s one third of her mother’s and her aunt’s thirds, and directing the trustees to transfer and convey it to and among her nine children. Decree accordingly.
On January 29,1910, after the death of Rosalie Russell and of Rosalie Gr. Sheffield, the trustees under the will of Jonathan Russell filed this bill for instructions as to what disposition should be made of a fund approximating $45,000 which they had held for the benefit of Rosalie Gr. Sheffield during her life. All the defendants admitting the allegations of the bill, Rugg, J., reserved the case upon the pleadings for determination by the full court.
“ 1. In the above entitled suit in equity, I find that the words 1 my lineal heirs ’ contained in the third codicil to the will of Lydia Smith Bussell were used by the testator in the sense of ‘ my lineal descendants.’
“ 2. I find that the class of persons among whom Jonathan Russell had by the will of Lydia Smith Russell power of appointing or disposing of his share under said will, included descendants or issue of said Lydia other than Geraldine I. Upton, and Rosalie Genevieve Bussell.
“ 3. I find that the death of the donee Jonathan was the time when the * lineal heirs ’ of said Lydia were to be ascertained and determined, and that this class included at the time of the death of Jonathan all the lineal descendants of Lydia then living and that they were the following persons viz: Geraldine I. Upton, Bosalie G. Bussell, Mary Rivers, George R. B. Rivers, Bosalie G. Shields (now Bosalie G. Sheffield) and Mary G. M. Shields.
“ 4. I also find that the will of Jonathan Bussell was a valid exercise of the power of appointment given to the said Jonathan by the will and codicils of Lydia S. Bussell.”