74 Minn. 215 | Minn. | 1898
John L. Merriam, by his last will and testament, gave and bequeathed to his wife, Helen M. Merriam,
“An annual allowance of the sum of eight thousand dollars per year for and during her natural life, and which said annuity shall be provided for and paid over in the manner following; that is to say: My executors shall set apart from or provide out of my estate such interest or dividend-bearing securities as shall be sufficient to produce a certain annual net income of at least $8,000 per year, and which said net income they shall collect, and pay over to my said wife therefrom the sum of $8,000 per year, in quarterly instalments, for and during her natural life, for her absolute use and disposal.”
“The said securities shall be held by my said executors, or their successors, as a part and parcel of the rest and residue of my estate, to be hereinafter disposed of.”
The testator thereinafter devised and bequeathed the rest and residue of his estate to the executors in trust, one of the trusts being that when and as each of the testator’s three sons, John, Robert and Alanson Wilder, should have attained the age of 28 years,
“The said trustees shall pay over, convey and deliver to such son, at that age, an equal one-fourth part of all the said rest and residue of my said real estate and personal property,” etc.
The will also provided that the executors, as such, and as trustees of the several trusts therein created, might, at their discretion, sell, lease, mortgage or otherwise incumber any of the real or personal property, either for the purposes of paying debts and legacies, or for the purposes of partitions or divisions, or for the purposes of investment or reinvestment, or otherwise providing for carrying out the true intent and trusts of the will.
The plaintiffs are the executors and trustees named in the will. In execution of the trust in favor of the widow of the testator, they selected out of the assets of the estate certain corporate stocks and bonds, to an amount the income from which they thought would be sufficient to pay the $8,000 a year to the widow; but, owing to a subsequent decrease in dividends and interest, the income from them is less than $8,000 per annum. The widow is still living. The estate has been fully administered, and distributed and assigned, under a final decree of the probate court, by which the stocks and bonds above referred to were assigned to the plaintiffs as trustees for the purposes of the trust in favor of the widow. These securities are still held by the trustees, who are paying the income therefrom to the widow, in accordance with the provisions of the will. Robert H. Merriam is one of the residuary legatees and devisees under the will, and had attained the age of 28 years before the death of the testator. One Morse, a creditor of Robert, brought an action against him in this state; and, under a writ of attachment issued
The plaintiffs brought this action to set aside the levy; claiming that Robert H. Merriam had no attachable interest in the securities, and that the attachment levy was such an interference with the rights of the plaintiffs in the execution of their trust as entitles them to maintain an action to set it aside.
1. The first question presented is whether Robert H. Merriam, as one of the residuary legatees, has an attachable interest in the specific securities in the hands of the trustees.
It is very clear to us that the title to, as well as the dominion over, the securities, is vested in the trustees, and must so remain until the death of the testator’s widow, when it will become their duty to distribute the residuum among the residuary legatees according to the provisions of the will. It is also clear that the trustees have the power to sell the whole or any part of the securities, at least for the purpose of reinvestment. It is equally clear that Robert H. Merriam has a vested interest in this trust fund. That interest became vested, under the will, upon the death of the testator. But he has no title or estate to or in the corpus of these specific stocks and bonds. In the execution of the trust in favor of the widow they may be all sold, and the proceeds reinvested in some other form. His interest is in the residuum of the trust fund, in whatever form it may be invested, after the trust in favor of the widow has been fully executed. This interest is doubtless alienable. It is also true that this interest can be reached by creditors in an appropriate action. See Ricketson v. Merrill, 148 Mass. 76, 19 N. E. 11. It may also be subject to attachment. But it does not follow that he has an attachable interest in any of these specific securities. Our statute provides that
“All goods and chattels, real and personal, all property, real, personal and mixed, including all rights and shares in the stock of any corporation, all money, bills, notes, book-accounts, debts, credits « and all other evidences of indebtedness, belonging to the defendant, are subject to attachment.” GL' S. 1894, § 5292.
This is much broader than the common-law rule, but not broad
2. While it is undoubtedly true that the attempted attachment would not in law prevent or interfere with the performance of the trust by the plaintiffs, yet it might, and naturally would, in practice, seriously embarrass them in so doing, especially if they should have occasion to sell the trust securities. The attachment would be liable to cast such a doubt and cloud upon the exact condition of the title to the securities as would deter intended purchasers, or reduce their value in the market. For this reason, if no other, we think the plaintiffs are entitled to maintain this action.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to the court below to order judgment for the plaintiffs as demanded in the complaint.