139 N.J. Eq. 71 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1946
This case has been submitted on the pleadings, a stipulation of facts and the briefs of counsel.
The bill seeks the construction of the last will and testament of Margaret S. Wallace, deceased, specifically of the "6th" clause of the will and the fourth numbered paragraph thereof, which reads as follows:
"With power in my Executor and Trustee":
"4. To invest and reinvest, alter, vary and change investments and reinvestments, at discretion, not being confined to what are known as Legal Investments; any Statute to the contrary notwithstanding." *72
But one word of this paragraph needs interpretation. That is the word "investments." The question is whether that term is broad enough to include common and preferred stocks of private corporations. The answer is not difficult in view of the accepted definitions of the word "investment" in standard dictionaries and previous constructions of the word by courts and legislative bodies. In Blanchard v. Blanchard,
I will advise a decree accordingly. But, to repeat the statement which I made at the conclusion of my opinion inFidelity Union Trust Co. v. Lowy, supra, "The trustee is admonished, however, that the modern construction of the word in no sense relaxes the rule of duty or the standard of care and prudence required of the trustee, and is not a license for speculation, carelessness of administration, or an excuse for unfaithfulness to duty."