174 Mass. 132 | Mass. | 1899
The first suit is by the trustees under the deed of trust executed by Francis B. Hayes on June 12,1889, for instructions in regard to their duties under such deed. The second suit is by the executor of the will of Francis B. Hayes, for instructions in regard to his duties under the will. Both cases were reserved on the pleadings, agreed statement of facts, and a stipulation on file', and the same questions arise in each case. The agreed statement of facts is as follows.
“ The trustees under the trust of Juhe 12, 1889, have paid all the pecuniary legacies appointed in Mr. Hayes’ will except those to Blair, Boring, Miss Shurtleff, two of Comley’s children, Comley’s wife, and that for the benefit of poor children, which are the legacies about which instructions are asked in the bill. They have also paid out of the trust fund to the executor of the will, towards his expenses incurred in establishing the will, the sum of sixty-six thousand dollars ($66,000), this payment being made with the consent of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, to whom the residue of the trust is appointed; they have paid to the Horticultural Society on account of the residue, two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000); they have retained in their hands, awaiting the decision of the questions raised by this bill, and the decision of the full court on the question whether interest is payable on legacies, the sum of
“ The executor holds in his hands, from the trust fund established by the testator’s mother, over which he had general power of appointment by will, about $7,000, and also holds as assets of the estate never in any trust about $6,900, and a claim on real property of the estimated value of $2,500, making in all, money and property held by the executor to the amount of $16,400.
“ In 1891 Hayes, acting with the consent of the trustees under the trust of June 12, 1889, set apart his library, which had previously formed a part of that trust, upon a new and specific trust for the payment of such debts as he might owe at his death. This library was supposed to be worth from twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) to forty thousand dollars ($40,000). The debts due from Hayes’ estate at his death in 1895 were about seventeen thousand dollars ($17,000), all of which had been incurred since the trust deed of 1889 was executed. Since the bill in this cause was filed the library has been sold, and has yielded only about ten thousand dollars ($10,000), which will be insufficient to meet his debts and the interest thereon by about "ten thousand dollars ($10,000).
“ During the lifetime of the testator Francis B. Hayes, and in or about the years 1889 and 1890, said Hayes, being then engaged in litigation with the family of his wife and others, and being desirous of purchasing a residence at Ascutneyville, State of Vermont, Mrs. Margaret M. Hayes, his mother, purchased a certain estate in said Ascutneyville for the use of the testator, taking a conveyance to herself, and the testator then entered on said estate, expended large sums on improvement thereof, lived thereon and had his residence and paid taxes thereon for some time afterwards.
“ After the death of Mrs. Hayes this title descended to her heirs at law, or was devised to her residuary legatees, who are the half brothers and sisters of the testator.
“ There being some doubt as to the question in what manner this property should be treated, it was referred by the executor to arbitration, and the arbitrator found that the amount expended
“ The arbitrator also found that on the payment of said indebtedness to said heirs at law or residuary devisees the executor would then be entitled to conveyance of said real estate, and this amount is also referred to in said agreed' statement of facts, as ‘a claim on real property of the estimated value of twenty-five hundred dollars.’ The title has not yet been conveyed by the heirs or devisees of Mrs. Hayes, but they are ready to convey it to the executor, or as he may direct, on receiving payment of the sum found by the arbitrator, and when conveyed it will be a part of the general assets of the testator not covered by any trust.
“ There also remains unpaid a balance of about $15,000 of the expenses incurred by the executor in establishing the will.
“ Of the money spent by the trustees since the testator’s death in the care of the property at Lexington known as Oakmount (over $18,000), a part was spent in necessary repairs on the buildings, taxes and insurance, a part in the care of chattels, plants, and shrubs which never formed a part of the trust of 1889, were not attached to the estate, and did not pass by the appointment of Oakmount, and the remainder was spent in maintaining the grounds about the mansion house or the extensive ornamental grounds surrounding a gentleman’s residence with trees and shrubs, lawns, drives, walks, and the surroundings of an expensive country seat.”
The stipulation is as follows :
“ It is agreed by the several parties as follows :
“ 1. The legacies or gilts bequeathed or appointed in the will of Francis B. Hayes to Thomas Blair, Augustus P. Loring, Sarah Shurtleif, Eliza J. Comley, and Antoinette J. Horch, respectively, are not within the limits of the power of appointment reserved by said Hayes to himself by his trust deed of June 12,
1889; and the said legatees respectively'waive and abandon all claim to have said legacies or gifts charged upon any óf the real
“ 2. The expenses incurred in the care and preservation of the furniture and other chattels at Oakmount since the death of Mr. Hayes shall be repaid to the trustees out of the proceeds of those articles now in the hands of the executor.
44 3. The entire expenses of establishing the will shall be borne by the three funds interested in setting up the will, in proportion to their size; that is, by the general assets of the estate never in any trust, the proceeds of property in the trust established by Margaret M. Hayes, and the fund in the trust of 1889 (not including in this fund the real estate called 4 Oak-mount,’ which is specifically devised).
"4. An agreement having been made by the parties in interest disposing of all questions concerning the provision made in said will for the benefit of James Comley, and Harriet E. Comley his wife, and disposing also of the question respecting the payments made by the trustees since the death of said Hayes in the care and maintenance of his real estate, no question respecting these matters now remains for argument in this case.
"5. The only questions presented by the bill for instructions in this cause, or by the bill in the cause of Loring, executor, against Blair and others, which now remain to be passed upon by the court, are,—
“ First.. The question respecting the bequest for excursions for poor children.
“ Second. The question whether the legacies to Blair, Loring, Miss Shurtleff, and the daughters of Comley are to be satisfied out of the fund covered by the trust of 1889, though not within the powers of appointment reserved by the testator over that fund.
“ Third. The question raised by the amendment to the bill respecting the payment of a sum from the trust fund to the executor to satisfy the debts of the testator, or some part of them, so as to exonerate the general assets of the estate.
“Fifth. The question how the cash and the residue of the proceeds of the furniture and chattels included in the trust established by the will of Margaret M. Hayes shall be applied to the satisfaction of debts and legacies, including the question whether the furniture and chattels were specifically bequeathed with ‘ Oakmount.’ ”
The deed of trust of June 12, 1889, contains no power of revocation on the part of Francis B. Hayes without the consent ' of the trustees, and therefore we think that it is valid against Hayes himself and against the devisees and legatees found in his will. In that deed of trust it is provided that “ upon and after the death of the said Francis B. Hayes,” the trustees are “ to hold the said trust property, original and substituted, and any accumulations thereof and any additions thereto, and also said homestead estate and books and library, to the use or for the benefit of such one or more of the following persons and corporations, and in such manner as the said Francis B. Hayes may by will appoint, namely: any wife of his, his blood relations, their husbands and wives, the children of said husbands and wives, persons at any time employed as domestic servants or gardeners by himself or by his parents, and also charitable corporations, and in default of such appointment,” etc. This limited power of appointment Francis B. Hayes executed by his will in the manner hereinafter mentioned.
By the will of his mother, Margaret M. Hayes, certain property of hers was given to a trustee for the use of Francis B. Hayes during his life, and “ upon and after the death of said Francis B. Hayes to hold such trust fund or property, original or substituted, or any accumulation thereof or any addition thereto, to the use and for the benefit of such persons or corporations as my said son may in whole or in part by will, or any instrument in the nature of a will, appoint, and in default of such appointment,” etc. This general power of appointment Francis B. Hayes also executed by his will.
In his will, in the clause before the first article, Francis B. Hayes proposes to dispose of the property referred to and des
The third section under this article is as follows: “ Third, I give to the said James Gomley, my gardener, ten thousand dollars, and to each of his children living at my decease five hundred dollars. And I further direct that the said James Comley and his wife be allowed to continue to occupy free from all rent or other charge the dwelling-house now occupied by them on my estate in Lexington during their joint lives and the life of the survivor of them.”
The fifth section under this article is as follows: “ Fifth, I give to Sarah Shurtleff the sum of two thousand dollars.”
The nineteenth, section under this article is as follows : “ Nineteenth, I direct my executor hereinafter named to appropriate and use the sum of five thousand dollars in such amounts and at such times, not exceeding three years from the date of his appointment, as he shall determine in providing free excursions for poor children in the city of Boston.”
The twenty-second section under this article is as follows: “ Twenty-second, and I give and bequeath to Augustus P. Loring, my executor hereinafter named, the sum of five thousand dollars if, but not otherwise, he shall accept the office of executor of this my will.”
The first question is whether the bequest for free excursions for poor children is valid as being within the power reserved to Francis B. Hayes in the deed of trust to appoint to charitable corporations. The executor is not a charitable corporation, but
The legacies given to each of the children of James Comley by the third section, to Sarah Shurtleff by the fifth section, and to Augustus P. Loring by the twenty-second section, are to persons not within the power of appointment reserved to Francis B. Hayes in the deed of trust. They cannot, therefore, be paid out of the property comprised in that deed, and we are of opinion that they cannot be paid at all, except as hereinafter stated.
The legacy given by the first article of the will to Thomas Blair is given out of his own property and that of his mother, over which he had a power of appointment, and must be paid, except as hereinafter stated, subject to the debts of the testator, and certain specific bequests to Wilson hereinafter named, out of these properties.
Some of the chattels given to William Power Wilson by the first section under the third article of the will are not property included in the deed of trust, but are property which formerly belonged to the testator’s mother, and were included in the trust for his benefit in her will, and over which he bad a general power of appointment; and one of the questions is whether these articles passed to Wilson under that section.
We are of opinion that they did so pass. The testator starts out at first to dispose of his own property and that over which he had a testamentary power of appointment under the will of his mother; and after some special bequests gives the residue to the Massachusetts Horticultural Society.
Evidently supposing that there is nothing further to be done as to that property, he goes on to act under the power reserved in the trust deed. He begins specifically, and the very first thing which comes to his mind is Oakmount and the personal property used and connected therewith ; and then, in plain and explicit terms, he declares his will to be that Wilson shall have the articles particularly described by classes in this section. It
He was mistaken in the nature of the title under which he held them, but his intention to pass to Wilson whatever title he could stands out plainly and distinctly, and is not overcome by the mere fact that the clause wherein the intent is manifested comes after the clause where another intent is supposed to be lurking in general language. He was thinking rather of what he should do with the property than of the particular power under which he was acting. The dominant intent was that Wilson should have that specific property, and we think that intent can be carried out without violating any sound rule of construction.
But this bequest of Oakmount and the chattels connected therewith was encumbered with the condition (“ so far as [the testator] could impose such a condition ”) that Wilson should “ pay or cause to be paid any legacies bequeathed by this my will which from any cause whatever cannot be paid to the respective legatees out of the property and in the manner in which such legacies are or purport to be bequeathed by this my will.”
The various legatees “ waive and abandon all claim to have said legacies or gifts charged upon any of the real estate which is devised ” by this section of the third item, or to have them “ satisfied out of said real estate or out of any chattels included in said trust ” created by the deed¡ or “ to have the payment of them made a condition to the conveyance of such real estate to the devisees named in said paragraph.”
But this waiver does not apply to such of the chattels as were the property of the mother over which the testator had the general power of appointment. And as to such chattels, we think they pass to Wilson subject to the condition that the legacy to
The debts of the testator we think are primarily payable out of the property of which he died seized and possessed, and out of the property w'hich he derived from his mother’s will, over which he exercised the general power of appointment. These properties are more than sufficient to pay all the debts in full.
One contention has been that for the sake of paying debts the deed of trust of June 12, 1889, is voidable by the creditors of Francis B. Hayes, and that they should first be paid out of the property comprised in this deed of trust in order that Blair may receive his legacy in full. But whether, if there were no other property for the payment of the debts of Francis B. Hayes the property included in the deed of trust could be applied to the payment of his debts, we find it unnecessary to decide, because the property of which he died seized and possessed, and the property of his mother over which he had and exercised a general power of appointment, are sufficient to pay all the debts, and we think the debts are primarily to be paid out of these properties. There must be included in this property of the mother certain chattels mentioned in the devise and bequest in the third article to William Power Wilson. The debts must first be paid out of the testator’s absolute property, then out of the property of the mother over which the testator had a general power of appointment which he exercised; then the bequest of the specific articles formerly belonging to his mother’s estate, which in the third article is made to Wilson, is to stand; then the legacy to Blair must be paid out of these properties, so far as it can be paid, and if anything is left of these properties it falls into the residue and is payable to the Massachusetts Horticultural Society. Olney v. Balch, 154 Mass. 318. See Loring v. Massachusetts Horticultural Society, 171 Mass. 401; White v. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 171 Mass. 84, 96 ; Emmons v. Shaw, 171 Mass. 410.
The debt due to the estate of the mother of Francis B. Hayes under the arbitration had with reference to the real property at Ascutneyville in Vermont, stands on the same footing as any other debt, and that estate when conveyed to the executor
The legacies out of the property included in the deed of trust to Augustus P. Loving, executor, by the twenty-second section, to the children of James Comley by the third section, to Sarah Shurtleff by the fifth section, are void. •
Decree accordingly. ■