47 Conn. Supp. 618 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 2002
The testatrix died in 1997 and this action commenced in February, 1998. The plaintiffs Jane Long Smith and Jennifer Long Cleaver, executrix of the estate of the testratrix, are the testatrix' daughters; Brett Cleaver is her grandson.
The pleadings originally alleged that the quitclaim deed from the testatrix to Trinity was the product of undue influence, dominion and control, and fraudulent inducement. That allegation was specifically withdrawn at the commencement of trial. The plaintiffs also alleged that the aforementioned quitclaim deed was a legal nullity and, therefore, invalid. The validity of the deed is the issue before the court. In support of their arguments the plaintiffs have briefed the following claims.
The court disagrees. The case law in Connecticut states that when arriving at the intent of a grantor, it is permissible to consider the circumstances connected with the transaction. Bartholomew v. Muzzy,
The evidence adduced in the present case clearly established that the testatrix intended to create a life interest in herself and to leave a remainder interest to Trinity. Attorney Arthur D. Machado, who drafted the deed in question, testified that was her expressed intention, that she was estranged from her daughters and wished the property to go to Trinity upon her death. That was corroborated by the testimony from Edward Lindberg, a member of Trinity's board of trustees, who met with the testatrix and Machado concerning the gift, and Mark Good, the senior pastor of Trinity at the time.
The language of the quitclaim deed's granting clause, while perhaps not the routine language one might see in such a transaction, expresses the testatrix' proven *621 intent to create a life use in herself with a remainder interest in Trinity.1
There was no expressed intention that the testatrix was granting a present possessory interest to Trinity. The language of the habendum clause is not relevant to the nature of the estates intended and created by the deed. If the court is to construe a deed so as to achieve the intent of the grantor, it would be unjust to thwart that clearly expressed intent because of an ambiguous reference to "survivorship" which is not germane to that clearly expressed intent.
Faiola v. Faiola,
The language cited by the plaintiffs in their posttrial brief does not contradict that intent; in fact, several quotes by church officers and Machado in the plaintiffs' brief support the clearly stated intent of the testatrix.
"That an instrument is in the form of a deed, as this on the whole was, is some indication of the transferor's intention presently to convey an interest." Dennen v. Searle,
The plaintiffs further argue as evidence that the testatrix considered the deed as ambulatory or testamentary the fact that she subsequently deeded a portion of the same property to her grandson. On May 27, 1997, the testatrix did quitclaim a portion of the property to her *623 grandson, Brett Cleaver, for no consideration, reserving for herself, "so long as she shall live or until she releases her interest, the use and occupancy. . . ." This conveyance to Brett Cleaver was approximately two years and three months after the deed to Trinity.
The court is not persuaded that this quitclaim deed to Brett Cleaver disproves her intention to convey a present remainder interest to Trinity in 1995. When, in 1997, the testatrix quitclaimed a portion of the property previously conveyed to Trinity, she had only a life interest in it and, legally, could not convey more than that. Trinity, however, may or may not have an objection to Brett Cleaver taking a fee interest in the piece quit-claimed to him, especially in view of the fact that it paid no consideration for the property deeded to it. If Trinity has no objection, presumably corrective deeds can be drafted. If Trinity questions the validity of the deed granting Brett Cleaver a remainder interest in a piece of the property, that would be a matter for another day. The conclusion of this court is that when the testatrix conveyed the remainder interest to Trinity in 1995, it was not a testamentary or ambulatory transaction. Her intention at the time was clear and unequivocal. Her unexplained later actions do not alter what her intent was in 1995.
This argument requires little comment. The court, having concluded that the deed to Trinity did convey a present interest in the property, and not a contingent remainder, the plaintiffs' argument fails. The plaintiffs *624 misstate that attorney Michael D. O'Connell, Trinity's expert, characterized the deed as creating a contingent remainder. In his affidavit, O'Connell posited that the deed established a possessory interest in the testatrix during her lifetime, followed by a vested, unqualified fee interest in Trinity thereafter. It was attorney Stephen G. Utz, the plaintiffs' expert, who posited the deed purported to convey a contingent remainder.