268 Mass. 318 | Mass. | 1929
By the fifth clause of his will executed January 21, 1907, W. P. Hancock gave the residue of his estate in trust to pay the income, first, $25 monthly during her life to his mother Olive, and, second, the balance to his wife, Julia, during her fife; and provided that, if the mother died before the wife, the latter should receive the entire income. The clause provided further that in certain events the trustee should use the principal for the benefit of the wife, but made no other final disposition of the principal. By the sixth clause he gave the entire income to his mother if she outlived his wife, but made no provision in regard to the principal. By the seventh clause, “In the event of the death of both the said Olive S. Hancock and Julia M. Hancock,” he provided that “the income of the said trust fund shall be paid monthly to my only brother, Harry H. Hancock, or to his legal representative or representatives for his benefit and in the event of his decease, the residue of my estate then remaining shall be distributed among my legal heirs and by the said trustee if it can and will act in that capacity; otherwise I would request my said trustee to petition the Probate Court that this distribution be made.” The will contains no other disposition of the principal of the trust fund.
The only relations of the testator by blood or marriage living at the date of the execution of the will were his mother, then seventy-two years of age, his wife, then forty-nine years old, his brother Harry H. Hancock, then thirty-eight years old, and his niece Alice C. Hancock, daughter of Harry H., then fourteen years of age. The mother died in 1914. The testator died in 1917, the brother in 1927, and the widow in 1928. The trustee prayed instructions to whom to make
There is no error in the decree. The heirs of the testator at his death were his widow and his brother. His mother had died before him. We think that the testator intended to dispose of the principal fund after the death of the survivor of the three objects of his bounty in whom he was interested, his wife, his mother and his brother, and not to limit the disposition to the case of survival by the brother. The general rule, that where a testator provides for a disposition of property among “my legal heirs” he must be taken to mean those who are his heirs at his death, is well established. Abbott v. Bradstreet, 3 Allen, 587, 589. Jewett v. Jewett, 200 Mass. 310, 316, 317. Thompson v. Clarke, 264 Mass. 56. Although that rule must yield to the broader principle that the court will give effect to the intent of the testator if that can be clearly ascertained from the language of the will construed in the light of the circumstances, Temple v. Russell, 251 Mass. 231, 235, 236, and cases cited, we see nothing in the words of the will or the facts of this case to justify or require a different construction. The fact that the widow, life tenant of income and, potentially, entitled to principal, will share in the distribution is not controlling. Jewett v. Jewett, supra. Ball v. Hopkins, 254 Mass. 347. As was said in Crowell v. Chapman, 257 Mass. 492, 498, “Unless a clear intent to the contrary appears, the class will be determined as of the date of the testator’s death, and the life tenant will share if then a member of the class.” The widow, as a statutory heir, is one of the heirs at law.
The provision cutting off any beneficiary who opposes or contests the provisions of the will is without significance in
Decree affirmed with such costs of this appeal as between solicitor and client as the judge of probate may determine.