116 A. 344 | N.H. | 1921
Did the testator direct that the fund provided for the benefit of his sons should upon the completion of the trust be paid to his heirs then living to receive it, or did he instruct the trustee to pay the same to the heirs, assignees, or legatees of those persons who were his heirs when he died? The language of the will is, "and at the decease of both, the said remainder, with all *227 accumulations shall be paid to my heirs at law." At his decease two sons and two grandchildren, children of a deceased son, constituted his heirs at law; at the time of distribution three grandchildren survived. Ogarita, child of the last surviving son, claims two-thirds upon the ground that the share of another son came to her father by will, so that she is entitled to two of the three shares into which the testator's property would have been divided at his decease if he had died intestate, while Joshua B., 2d., and Ellen claim the distribution is to be made as if the testator's death occurred at the time of distribution, in which case the grandchildren would share equally. It is conceded that the question is what did the testator intend by the language used, and that his intention so expressed is to be found as a fact upon competent evidence and not by the application of arbitrary rules.
"This is so firmly established in this jurisdiction that a citation of authorities in its support is superfluous. It follows that former decisions upon the construction of wills are not to be given the force of binding authorities in a given case, unless the language of the will and circumstances are so far identical as not to admit of a reasonable distinction." Galloway v. Babb,
In this case when the testator died, the statutory distributees of his estate were his two sons and the children of a third son who died before the making of the will. That the testator did not then desire the division of the remainder of his estate into three parts is clear from the fact that he placed it all in the hands of a trustee to be held until the death of the two sons for whose benefit the trust was created, under which the income was to be paid them, but they were given no power or control over the fund itself. If, after excluding them from all power over the corpus of the fund while either lived, the testator had intended to vest in them the power of disposing of the same or a part of it after the death of both, it seems probable that in this carefully written document such power would have been plainly expressed. The testator knew of the existence of the grandchildren. He provided for them in his will. He was not controlled by the statutory principle which divides an estate per stirpes, for the provision made for the two children of the deceased son was threefold in amount that made for the single child of another. He knew that when the final distribution should be made all of his heirs of the first generation would be dead, for the distribution was not to take place until the death of the last surviving son. He knew that no descendants nearer than grandchildren could then be in existence. It is very improbable that when he directed the payment to his heirs he had in mind the son who died before he did and the two whose *229
death he required should precede the distribution. It is more probable he had in view a distribution among persons living to receive his bounty than that he intended to put upon the trustee the burden of discovering possible assignees or legatees of the dead. He probably intended to prevent just what is here claimed — the attempted transfer of the fund by the sons to whom he took care not to give it. The final clause, in which the testator states his reason for placing the fund beyond the control of his sons while living, has no tendency to show he intended to intrust its disposition to them when dead. So long as the ultimate owner of the fund remained undetermined, the trustee was obliged to keep the fund intact. It is very clear the testator intended this should be done. It is certain he did not intend to put the property in such shape that the owners of the life interest and remainder could by agreement terminate the trust. Who would be the testator's heirs when the last surviving son died could not be known until the event occurred. To hold that the testator meant by his heirs those persons who answered that description at his death would be to conclude he incorporated into his will a provision which could be used for the destruction of his main purpose. It is not probable he so intended. Whether this possible result was known to him or not, it seems more probable that he intended to leave the final distributees of the fund indefinite, to be ascertained when the distribution should take place; that he did not have in mind his immediate descendants, his sons, who would then be dead, but his grandchildren who, as he might reasonably anticipate, would then, or some of them, be living. A gift to A for life, remainder to A in fee is a gift of a fee. The testator did not intend to give his sons such an estate in the fund or to create an estate which could be so treated, hence the conclusion seems irresistible that he did not intend to give his sons the reversion of the fund. As the language he used is capable of a construction which will effect the testator's purpose, it is the duty of the court to give effect thereto. In the fifth clause of the will the testator creates a fund for the benefit of his grandson, and provides in case of the grandson's death before the time specified for payment of the fund to him, the fund shall be paid "to such persons as shall then be my heirs, according to the laws of distribution then in force in this state." By the sixth clause he created a fund for his granddaughters and in the same contingency provided that upon the death of either the portion of such decedent should be paid "to such persons as shall be my heirs according to the laws of distribution then in force in this state." It is argued that the expressions *230
used in these two clauses conclusively establish that when the testator said "my heirs at law" in the ninth clause, without the qualifying phrases before used, he meant those persons who were his heirs at his death and not those who might be at the time of distribution. While there is force to the argument, its weight is not sufficient to overbalance the inferences necessarily drawn from the general purpose of the testator in the ninth clause and his natural expectation as to the probable situation at the death of his last surviving son, inferable from the disclosures of the whole will: It is to be noted that the expression "who shall then be my heirs" of the fifth clause is not repeated in the sixth. Taken together these clauses seem to indicate an expectation of a possible change in the statute of distributions entertained by the testator or the scrivener (Hardy v. Gage,
Case discharged.
All concurred. *231