173 Mass. 125 | Mass. | 1899
The executors of the will of Benjamin S. Botch obtained the instructions of this court as to the construction of his will in the case reported under the name of Rotch v. Loring, 169 Mass. 190. The testator left a widow, two sons, and three daughters. The petition in Rotch v. Loring was made after the death of the widow and of one son, the deceased son having died testate and leaving a widow and no issue. In that case the
Since the former decision, all the share and interest to which the deceased son at the time of his death was entitled in reversion or otherwise under the will in the shares of the residue of his father’s estate given by the father’s will in trust for his daughters has been sold and transferred by deed to the brother and the three sisters of the deceased son in equal shares. One of these three sisters, Edith Botch, has now died unmarried and without issue, leaving a will, which has been duly proved and of which the respondent Mary Carey is executrix, and under which, aside from certain legacies immaterial to the present petition, she is entitled to all the estate of her testatrix. Under the third article of the will of Benjamin S. Botch the sum of $100,000 was invested in a corporation for his daughter Edith, to be held by the corporation during her life. The direction of the will as to the disposition of this fund at the daughter’s death is that “ the deposit made as aforesaid for her benefit shall be transferred, conveyed, assigned, and paid over to her children then living, and the issue of any deceased child by right of representation; to have and to hold the same to them and their
The other matter upon which the petitioners ask the instruction of the court is as to the disposition now to be made by them of that share of their testator’s residuary estate which until the death of Edith Botch they held for her benefit under the fifth article of the will. The general effect of this article was to divide the residue of the testator’s property into five
The particular questions raised as to this share of the residue held for the benefit of Edith Rotch until her death are (1) whether the share shall be divided into three equal parts for the benefit of the original testator’s surviving son and of the
We see nothing in the language of the whole will, or in the circumstances of the testator so far as they are disclosed, which leads us to think that he used the phrase “ to my heirs at law” with different meanings in these three instances. The first of them disposed of the remainder in three trust funds of $100,000 each, invested for the benefit of the testator’s daughters respectively for their respective lives, and said that upon the death of a daughter who should die without issue then the same shall be “paid over to my heirs at law, as part of the residue of my estate in the manner hereinafter directed concerning the same.” The second, which is the one which has been before construed, disposed of the remainders in similar trust funds held by the same depositary for the benefit of the testator’s sons during their respective lives, and provided that,
The petitioners should therefore be instructed that they should pay over to Mary Carey as executrix and residuary legatee and devisee of the will of Edith Botch the one fifth part of the fund of $100,000 invested for her benefit in the Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company, concerning which one fifth of said $100,000 the petitioners now ask for instructions, and that Mary Carey as executrix of the will of Edith Botch is not now entitled to receive in the right of said Edith as an heir at law
The remaining question is whether the testator’s surviving daughters, Aimée Sargent and Annie L. Lamb, shall take their one fourth parts of this fund absolutely, or whether it shall be held by the petitioners in trust for them respectively. As to this fund, we regard the language of that paragraph of the fifth article of the will which directs that, in the contingency which has now occurred, the fifth of the testator’s residuary estate theretofore held by the petitioners for the benefit of Edith Botch shall go to the testator’s heirs at law, as clear and explicit, and uncontrolled by any other provision of the will. That language applied to the circumstances now existing directs the petitioners, upon the death of Edith Botch without issue, to deliver the trust property held by them for her benefit to the testator’s heirs at law, to hold the same to them, their heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns forever. In the contingency which has occurred, this is the final winding up of their trust so far as that property is concerned which at the death of Edith Botch they held for her benefit, and as to that property the two surviving daughters of the testator take not as cestuis que trust, but as heirs at law of the testator, and so free of trust.
The petitioners should be instructed further that they should pay over, transfer, and convey to Aimée Sargent, as her own property free of trusts, one equal fourth part of that share of the trust property held by them for the benefit of Edith Botch, and that they should pay over, transfer, and convey the other equal one fourth part of that property to Annie L. Lamb, as her own property free of trust.
So ordered.