152 A. 886 | Conn. | 1931
This reservation brings before us for construction certain provisions of the will of Constand A. Moeller who died June 1st, 1914. The will was executed February 18th, 1913. After making provision for the payment of debts and funeral expenses it gives, devises and bequeaths all the residue of the testator's property to trustees "to hold the same upon the following trust, with power to sell all my real and personal property (except my stock in The Narragansett Brewing Company of Providence, Rhode Island, which I direct shall neither be sold nor exchanged) and to invest and reinvest the avails thereof for the purposes of this trust; all surplus income and all avails of sales of personal property or real property shall be invested in mortgages on improved real estate in the New England States, the same to be double security for the amount loaned, and interest to be paid semi-annually in cash, and insurance and all taxes to be paid by the mortgagor." The trustees are then directed to pay an annuity to each of the testator's nine children, $2500 during the first year after his death and increasing thereafter at the rate of $100 a year until the sum of $4000 is reached, "beyond which amount their annual payments are not to be increased; said income is to be paid to each one of said children as long as any one of them survives; in other words, the incomes as above directed, not exceeding four thousand ($4000) dollars a year, are to be paid to each of my said children up to the death of the last survivor, but none of the survivors is to receive more than is above directed." If any child died before the death of the last survivor his or her child or children or their issue were to receive *484 the annuities provided for their parents, share and share alike. Upon the death of the last survivor of his children the testator gives all the rest and residue of this estate to his grandchildren per capita, and if any grandchild shall have died before the time of distribution leaving children the share of the parent is to be divided among them.
All nine children were alive at the testator's death, six were married and each had one or more children, and one had been married and divorced and had a living child. Since his death one daughter has died unmarried, one child has married, and a number of grandchildren of the testator have been born to the various children. At the time the will was made the ages of the testator's children varied from about forty-two years to about twenty-five years. The inventory of his estate amounted to slightly over $1,000,000 and his property was at his death substantially the same as at the time of the execution of the will; and assets to about the same amount stated in the inventory were delivered to the trustees in July, 1916. During the first year of the trust the gross income was $154,170.61, the net income was $66,456.63 and the surplus net income, $42,426.33. For the next two years the gross income was somewhat larger, while the surplus net income was $37,295.77 and $22,817.06, respectively. In the fourth year of the trust there was a large increase in the amount of income, the gross income amounting to $271,684.14 and the surplus net income to $123,171.14. Thereafter there was a very considerable shrinkage of income and the amount varied from year to year, in one year the income not being sufficient to pay the expenses of administration and the annuities. The trustees have invested the surplus net income as it accrued from year to year, and the approximate total now amounts to more than $350,000. We are asked to *485 answer eight questions, but they may be summarized into two, first, is the net income of the trust above that needed to pay the annuities intestate estate and to be distributed as such from time to time or is it to be accumulated until the termination of the trust and then distributed under the will as a part of the principal; and secondly, if the latter, is such an accumulation illegal and void.
In Colonial Trust Co. v. Brown,
This view is confirmed by the further statements in the will in connection with the increase in the amount of the annuities which emphasize the direction that the children are not to receive more than $4000 a year, showing that the testator not merely anticipated an excess of income but wanted to make it clear that his children were not to share in it. Indeed, he must have known that there was every likelihood of a very substantial surplus income; when he made his will his estate amounted to a little over $1,000,000, and this was also true at his death, while the total of the *487 annuities he created would for the first year amount at most to $22,500 and they were to increase until a total of not over $36,000 was reached, beyond which amount he emphatically stated that they were not to go. It is evident that the likelihood of a surplus income above that needed for the annuities was in the testator's mind, that he could hardly have failed to realize that it would amount to a very substantial sum, and that, by his direction for its investment along with the avails of the sale of the property in the trust fund in the long term securities, he intended to incorporate it in the principal of that fund.
It is very likely true that the testator did not except that there would be such a large increase in the income of the estate as actually accrued, or that there would be such a decrease in the purchasing power of the dollar as decidedly to shrink the real value of the annuities he gave. These circumstances cannot, however, justify a disregard of the plain words of the will and the intent he has expressed in it. Bartlett v.Sears,
The trust is to terminate and the principal of the fund is to be distributed at the death of the last survivor of the testator's children, and that creates a like limitation upon the period of accumulation. It cannot therefore be extended beyond the time allowed by the rule against perpetuities for the vesting of estate.Colonial Trust Co. v. Brown, supra, p. 272. By analogy to that rule, where statutory provisions do not control, the same limitations fixed by it are generally applied in determining the period over which funds are permitted to accumulate. Thus in Hoadley v. Beardsley, *489
The facts of the case before us certainly do not bring it within any exception to the general rule. The accumulation of excess income is large, but almost two-thirds of it accrued in the first four years of the trust, and that which has of late accrued from year to year has been relatively small in amount; indeed, if the interest earned upon the surplus income which had accrued in the early years of the trust and was then added to the principal were to be disregarded, there would be undoubtedly a much smaller surplus during the later years. Nor is the probable duration of the joint lives of the testator's children as fixed by the mortality tables, stated by counsel to be thirty-nine years longer, a time so unreasonable as to justify a defeat of the testator's intent.
To questions 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 7, we answer that the will does provide for the accumulation of the surplus income during the period of the trust and at its termination that income is to be distributed to those then entitled as a part of the principal of the *491 fund, and that it is not therefore intestate estate to be distributed as such; and to question 5, we answer that the provision for the accumulation of the surplus income is not illegal and void. Question 8 is too general to justify an answer.
No costs will be taxed in this court to either party.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.