The facts appear to be that by the terms of a will the testator left all his property in trust to defendant herein as trustee for the benefit of the widow of the testator during her natural life, and at her decease (provided that she should live ten years after the decease of the testator), to be distributed equally among the three sons of the testator. Furthermore, if the widow were to die at any time before such ten-year period expired, each of the sons was to be paid ten dollars per month from the date of the death of the widow until the expiration of the said period of ten years. The will further provided that:
"If either of my sons, before such division, have died, leaving lawful issue, such issue to receive the parents' share; but if there be no issue, then such share to become a part of the balance of the estate and divided among the survivors in the manner before directed."
In the proceedings on the probate of the will, a decree was rendered by the court distributing the property of the *Page 680 testator "according to law and the provisions of the said will," excepting that the provision therein and hereinbefore set forth was omitted from such decree.
Before the expiration of the ten-year period following the decease of the testator, the widow died, and thereafter the sons brought this action against the trustee for the purpose of terminating the trust. On the hearing of the action it was stipulated that the plaintiffs were the only children and heirs at law of the testator and his widow; that each of them was competent, not a spendthrift, nor under any disability regarding the continuation of the trust; that each of them was able to care for his own property, and that they joined in the request that the trust be terminated and the estate of the testator be distributed to them. It also appeared that the difference between the income derived from the trust estate and the expenses of distribution thereof amounted to approximately the sum of $340 per year, which sum was invested and re-invested by the trustee and thus permitted to accumulate to the betterment of the trust estate.
The appeal herein is from a judgment rendered in the action in favor of the trustee, in effect denying any relief to the plaintiffs.
[1] Generally speaking, as established by many authorities, the decree of the court with reference to the terms of the trust, and not the will, is the measure of the rights of the beneficiaries. Even though incorrect, from the standpoint of following the terms of the will, nevertheless (in the absence of reversal on appeal), the decree is conclusive as to the rights of the interested parties. (Miller v. Pitman,
[2] As hereinbefore noted, by the terms of the decree the trust estate was distributed "according to law and the provisions of the said will, as follows: . . ." While from *Page 681
such reference alone, ordinarily it might be argued that the intention was to include within the decree all "the provisions of the said will," nevertheless the point appears to have been settled by judicial authority to the contrary. In the case ofKeating v. Smith,
[3] Considering the position of the trustee with reference to the accumulation of income of a trust, it will be noted that by the provision of section
In addition to the statutory provisions to which reference has been had, it is held in Estate of Yates,
The case entitled Estate of Whitney,
With such an array of authority it must be concluded that with reference solely to the question of the accumulation of income from the trust property herein, the plaintiffs were entitled to have such accumulation distributed to them.
[4] Considering the facts and the law as indicated by the authorities hereinbefore cited, it follows that the trust stands as though originally it had been intended that after the expiration of ten years the trust estate should be distributed to the beneficiaries therein named — the plaintiffs in this action — and the question then arises regarding the right of the plaintiffs to have the trust terminated before the expiration of such ten-year period.
In the case of Huber v. Donoghue,
It was held that the estate vested immediately in the widow and the children of the testator, and being sui generis *Page 683
they might successfully ask the aid of the court to declare the trust terminated. The court said, in part: "With the aid of the court, can an absolute title be transferred prior to the expiration of 10 years? First, is the interest given to the parties who ask for the sale a vested interest? In other words, do their rights include the entire estate, subject only to the power given to the executors to sell? If there were any doubts whatever upon this point prior to the determination of the court of errors and appeals in the case of Post v. Herbert,
The case of Hill v. Hill,
As is stated in 38 L.R.A. (N.S.) 198, in a footnote to the case just cited: "That the beneficiary of a dry, simple, *Page 684 or passive trust may compel the trustee to convey the trust property before the time fixed for the termination of the trust is a proposition from which there appears to be no dissent. . . ." (Citing many cases.)
And as appears in Sears v. Choate,
Some of the California authorities recognizing the principle, or supporting the rule, are Eakle v. Ingram,
Notwithstanding the weight of authority, which, on the whole, would indicate a reversal of the judgment herein, it is suggested by respondent that the question of the termination of a trust rests within the discretion of the trial court.
It may not be denied that, generally speaking, the rule obtains as announced in the case of Gray v. Union Trust Co.,
It is ordered that the judgment be and it is reversed.
Conrey, P.J., concurred.
York, J., being disqualified, did not participate in the foregoing decision.