91 W. Va. 398 | W. Va. | 1922
Plaintiff brought this suit for the purpose of having declared invalid the provisions of his father's will devising’his estate to a trustee for certain uses, as well as for other relief in connection with the administration and distribution of said estate. From a decree denying him any relief he prosecutes this appeal.
“It being my desire, request, intention and will and direction that my whole estate, real, personal and mixed, and the profits and income thereof shall, after the death of my wife, said Sarah Belle Prichard, be confined, go to and distributed at the final settlement and distribution thereof to my said living sons, one-third (1/3) each, and the remaining one-third to my said grandsons equally, or to the survivor in case of the death of either without lineal descendants; and to the lineal descendants of the said several parties taking per stirpes.
“And if there be no lineal descendants of any of said parties, then to the survivors of their lineal descendants, taking their shares per stirpes.”
By the fourth clause of the will the testator provided that an annuity of five thousand dollars a year be paid to the widow of his deceased son, Henry Lewis Prichard, so long as she lives, or until she remarries, this annuity to be paid out of one-third of the income arising from the one-
In April, 1918, the testator executed a deed conveying all of his estate to his two sons Fred C. Prichard and A. M. Prichard and his daughter-in-law, Emma W. Prichard, as trustee, the purpose of said conveyance being, as recited therein, to hold the said estate, and to pay the income arising therefrom to the testator during his life. This conveyance, it is recited, is made because of fear of the testator that he might become incapacitated and might dissipate his estate, or some part thereof, so that the same would not remain intact at his death to be administered under his will.
The testator’s wife died in the year 1917, and the testator died in July 1920. Two of the trustees mentioned in the deed above referred to took possession of the testator’s property and administered the same under that deed during his life. At his death the whole of the estate was turned over to his son, A. M. Prichard, the executor and trustee named in the will, who has had possession and control thereof ever since.
The plaintiff contends that the scheme or plan of the testator for the distribution of his estate violates the rule against perpetuity because the testator attempts to control the devolution of the property to a period beyond that permitted by that rule. In other words, he insists that the real purpose and intent of the testator was to cast his estate upon and vest the same in his lineal descendants living upon the first of January, 1950, and it is admitted that if this is the meaning of the will, then it does violate the rule against per-petuities. The defendants, however, contend that the testator’s two sons and two grandsons take a vested estate
The rule against perpetuities is an arbitrary one applied for the purpose of preventing an owner of property from controlling its devolution beyond a certain period. It is not a rule of construction. In the application of the rule every provision of the will or deed is to be construed as if the rule did not exist, and then when the real intent of the testator in a will, or the grantor in a deed, is determined, the rule is remorselessly applied, and 'if the paper thus construed offends against the rule it will not be allowed to stand. Gray on the Rule against Perpetuities, § 629. The issue, therefore, and the main question involved in this case is clear cut and single. The plaintiff insists that the clear intention of the testator as expressed in the will is that his estate should pass to and become the property of his two sons and two grandsons, should they be living on the first day of January, 1950, and if not, then to such of their lineal descendants as might be living at that time, in the proportions mentioned in the will; that the clear purpose of the testator was to control his estate until the first of January, 1950, and on that date pass it to such of his lineal descendants as might then be living. If this is the proper construction of the paper, then admittedly .it violates the rule. The defendants, on the other hand, contend that the true construction of the will is that each of the testator’s sons and the two grandsons took a vested estate upon the death of the testator, subject to be defeated should they die without issue, and that the estate would completely vest without any further control thereof as to who should be the owner of it at the death of each of the two sons and the grandsons ; that there is no attempt to control the devolution of the estate beyond the life of testator’s two sons and his two grandsons in being at the time of his death; and admittedly, if this
Clause 3 above quoted is the one to which we must look for guidance. It is the clause of the will which defines the trust upon which the estate is devised to the executor and trustee. It will be noticed that the -first provision in this clause for distribution of any of the estate is in favor of the testator’s wife. She having died, however, before the testator, that provision is inoperative. After the death of the testator’s wife this clause provides that the income arising from the estate he divided in three equal parts, and be paid: one of said parts to the plaintiff, one to A. M. Prichard, and the other to the two grandsons of the testator, children of his deceased son, or to the survivor, either of them being dead without lineal descendants, if they all be then living; and if any be then dead leaving lineal descendants, his or their share should go to their lineal descendants, and after the death of either or any of them before final distribution under this will his part be paid to his lineal descendants. It is further provided that in case either of the testator’s sons or grandsons shall die before final distribution without lineal descendants, his part of the income and of the. estate at distribution shall be paid, in the case of the death of Frederick C. Prichard, one-half to the said A. M. Prichard and the other half to the grandsons equally; and a like provision is made in case of the death of A. M. Prichard or the two grandsons without issue before the final distribution. In this provision there is no intimation as to how the testator desires the corpus of his estate to be divided, nor is there any suggestion as to when the income shall be paid to the parties mentioned. Both parties to this suit seem to agree on the conclusion that the income is to be paid annually to such persons as may be living from year to year as the will provides should take it at such time. The only provision in the will for the payment of the income annually is to the testator’s wife should she survive him. After her death it is provided that the income shall be paid in a certain way as above .pointed out, but there is nothing in the will to indicate that it 'should be paid annually, or should be paid at all in advance of the
The defendant relies upon a number of cases which it is contended control this ease in favor of the validity of the trust. One is McArthur v. Scott, 113 U. S. 340. In that case the testator devised his property to a trustee and directed that the income, until his youngest grandchild, who might live to be 21 years of age, should arrive at that age, should be divided equally among the testator’s children, and should the issue of any child die, among the grandchildren also as they successively became of age; and that after the decease of all of his children, and when and as soon as the youngest grandchild shall arrive at the age of 21 years, the estate shall be divided equally among the grandchildren per capita. It is quite apparent that this case has no application here, for the reason that the time fixed for determining who should take the estate was within the life or lives of those in being and 21 years and 10 months thereafter. It is quite apparent that the testator’s youngest grandchild must become 21 years of age within 21 years and 10 months after the death of its parent, who, being a child of the testator, would be the person in being .at his death. In the case of Bowling v. Miller (Ind.), 33 N. E. 354, cited and relied upon, the same situation existed. The persons entitled to the estate under the will were clearly determinable within the prescribed period.
It is argued that the fact that one entitled to an estate may not come into possession of it until after the time limited by the rule against perpetuities does not make the estate invalid, and to this we readily agree, but in order for a devise of this kind to be valid the persons who will eventually take it under the devise must be determinable within the period prescribed. The time when they shall come into the possession of it makes little difference, so that their ownership of it is fixed within the period. A very instructive case is Johnston’s Estate, 185 Pa. State, 179, also reported in 64 Am. St. Rep. 621, to the report of which is appended a monograph collating many of the authorities. The case of Andrews v. Lincoln, 95 Me.
There is, however, another provision of the will- which is entirely valid, and which must be given effect, and that is that provision by which an annuity is provided for the widow of the testator’s deceased son. It is also provided in the will that in case the wife of either of the testator’s living sons should survive her husband, an annuity should be paid to her out of the income from the share of her husband in lieu of dower in the estate. This provision, however, was simply a part of the testator’s scheme to control the devolution of his estate on the first of January, 1950, and would necessarily fall with the other provisions. The provision made, however, for the defendant Emma W. Prichard, widow of testator’s deceased son, has no relation whatever to the scheme of the testator for controlling the devolution of his estate, and the will creates a charge against the one-third going to the two grandchildren in favor of their mother, the defendant Emma W. Prichard. So far as this interest is concerned, the trustee has some active duties to perform, and the will must be given effect so that this part of it may be executed.
As to the one-third of the estate going to the plaintiff and the one-third going to the defendant A. M. Prichard, they
There is a great deal of argument indulged in on the question of whether the trust created by the will should be administered by the three trustees mentioned in the deed above referred to, or by the executor and trustee named in the will. The conclusions we have come to would render this an academic question were it not for the fact that the trustee still has some duties to perform in respect to the annuity provided for the defendant Emma W. Prichard. The contention of the plaintiff is that the effect of the deed is to substitute the three grantees therein named as trustees for the executor and trustee named in the will, while the contention of the defendants is that this deed only created a trust during the life of the testator, and was only for the purpose of preserving his estate so that it might pass to the trustee and executor named in the will. This construction, we think, is correct. The only beneficiary in the deed was the grantor himself. The deed provided that all of the income accruing to the estate during his life be paid to him, and the only duty charged upon the trustees in that deed was the collection of this income and the payment of it to the grantor. Upon his death this duty ceased, and the trust was at an end. By the clear intention expressed in the deed there was no purpose that it should continue longer. When
This leaves remaining the question whether or not the sums paid to the plaintiff by his father after the execution of the will are to be treated as advancements and accounted for by him in the distribution of the estate, or as absolute gifts not to be so accounted for. The rule is well established that such payments are prima facie advancements, and will be so treated, unless the presumption in that regard is overcome. In this case there is nothing to overcome this presumption. The plaintiff relies upon the fact that while these advancements were made to him after the will was executed, and before the deed referred to above was made, no mention thereof is made in the deed. This we do not think tends in any way to show an intent upon the part of the testator that they should not be treated as advancements. The deed was a mere temporary device by which the property was to be cared for until the testator’s death. On the other hand, the fact that the testator very carefully provided in his will that all of the advancements made to his several children should be taken into consideration in the distribution of his estate clearly indicates the- purpose on his part to establish equality among them in its distribution. This circumstance, however, is not necessary in order to determine the character of the advancements made. The presumption that they were intended as advancements is not overcome, and this is sufficient ground for treating them as such.
We will reverse the decree of the lower court so far as it holds that the trust created by • the will in favor of the testator’s lineal descendants is valid, and enter a decree here holding that such provision is invalid and ineffectual to accomplish the purpose intended by the testator, and that each of the testator’s two sons is entitled to -receive a one-third portion of the estate, subject to the advancements made to them respectively by their father in his lifetime; that the
Affirmed in 'part. Reversed in part. Remanded.