23 A.2d 519 | Conn. | 1941
The questions to be decided are whether certain stock dividends received by the trustee belong to the life tenant or remaindermen and whether counsel fees may be allowed from the corpus of the estate.
The facts proved and found with reference to the first question were extremely involved but those *428 essential to the decision of this appeal can be simply stated. William Buchanan died in Norwalk, January 20, 1910, leaving a will creating a trust. The plaintiff is the trustee. The purposes of the trust have been accomplished. During the administration of the trust four stock dividends and a small sum in cash were received from the Westinghouse Air Brake Company and one stock dividend was received from the United States Steel Corporation. These are still held by the trustee. This action was brought by it praying for (1) a declaratory judgment determining whether this property is principal or income and (2) an allowance to the several parties for their expenses and counsel fees.
In the case of the Steel dividend, the amount transferred from earned surplus to capital for that purpose was much less than the difference between the amount of the earned surplus at the date of the formation of the trust and at the date of the declaration of the dividend. In the case of Westinghouse, the amount transferred from earned surplus to capital to pay the last two stock dividends was less than the difference between the balance of earned surplus after paying the second stock dividend and the net additions to earned surplus between that time and the declaration of the fourth stock dividend. It is admitted that all of these dividends, including the cash, were stock dividends, that the first two Westinghouse dividends were principal, that the rights of the parties are dependent on the construction of General Statutes, 4966,1 and that all of the dividends belong to two *429 named remaindermen unless the life tenant comes within the second exception in the statute. The remaindermen must, therefore, prevail unless the life tenant has proved that the corporation expressly declared that the dividend was from earnings made since the formation of the trust.
There is no statement in the annual reports or various votes declaring these dividends that they are payable from the earnings made during any particular period or since any particular date. The remaindermen claim that therefore the requirement of an express declaration is lacking and that the life tenant has not proved that she comes within the exception. This was the basis of the decision of the trial court. The life tenant, attacking the finding and conclusions, contends that the action of the directors in declaring stock dividends in connection with the published financial reports adopted by them as the reports of the corporations amounted to the express declaration required by the statute, in view of the earnings made since the formation of the trust.
In other words, the remaindermen claim that the statute gives a simple direction which can have but one meaning, while the life tenant claims that it is ambiguous and should be construed in the light of the facts of this case. This point is exhaustively briefed and many cases from this and other states are cited. We are, however, unable to see any ambiguity in the provision in question which requires us to go outside of the common and ordinary meaning of the words used. "Such language does not require the aid of rules *430
of construction or of interpretation to make the intention and meaning of the law-maker plain and clear. Interpretation and construction in the ordinary sense, in reference to such language, are alike out of place. `If the words are free from ambiguity and doubt, and express plainly and clearly and distinctly the sense of the framers of the instrument, there is no occasion to resort to other means of interpretation. It is not allowable to interpret what has no need of interpretation.' McCluskey v. Cromwell, 11 New York, 601." Lee Bros. Furniture Co. v. Cram,
A statute, quite similar to that now under consideration and containing substantially the same exception, was passed in 1889. Public Acts, 1889, Chap. 72. Subsequent to this time a considerable number of cases, most important of which was, perhaps, Smith v. Dana,
Central Hanover Bank Trust Co. v. Nesbit,
The conclusion of the trial court that these dividends belong to the remaindermen was correct.
The complaint claimed a declaratory judgment determining whether the dividends became a part of the principal of the trust or were income, and an allowance out of the estate to the several parties for expenses and counsel fees. There was no occasion for the bringing of an action for a declaratory judgment because a suit by the plaintiff for advice would have served every purpose. Indeed the trial court might have refused to entertain the action in this form and have at least required that it be amended so as to become one in the usual form where a fiduciary is seeking the advice of the court. Practice Book, 250(c); Woollard v. Schaffer Stores Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.