56 A. 854 | Conn. | 1904
This will creates an estate for life for the benefit of William E. Lewis. Its language plainly limits the trust estate to one for the beneficiary's life. There are no words appropriate to a gift absolute or in fee, which subsequent provisions attempt to limit, cut down, or condition. The gifts over which are contained in the sixth paragraph, assuming them to be operative and valid, are, in so far as they relate to realty, contingent remainders. Both gifts depend *451
upon events which may never happen. The right to enjoy the remainder estate, whether in the present or future, is wholly uncertain as to each class of persons named as possible beneficiaries. 4 Kent's Comm. (14th Ed.) 206; 2 Cruise's Digest, 269; Farnam v. Farnam,
There remains to be considered what interpretation and effect is to be given to the language of that portion of the sixth paragraph of the will which deals with the disposition of the trust property upon the death of William E. Lewis without issue of his body surviving. If it is to be understood as a declaration of intestacy, and that in the event specified the property should be treated and disposed of by the law as intestate estate, the result would be simple. As William E. was the testator's sole heir at law, the property would, upon the former's death, pass at once to his estate. If the language is to be construed as expressing a gift under the will, and that gift to the heirs at law of the testator to be determined at and as of the time of the vesting, to wit, the death of William E., the attempted gift would be in contravention of the statute against perpetuities and therefore void. Rand v. Butler,
The question of the interpretation of the concluding language of paragraph six need not be pursued further. It is evident that whatever construction be given to it the result must be the same, to wit, that the trust fund in the hands of the plaintiff at the time of the death of William E. Lewis passed by the will to the estate of said William E. Lewis to be administered as a part thereof. The ultimate destination of the property will be determined in the due course of such administration.
The Superior Court is advised that the trust property in the hands of the plaintiff administrator and trustee, as set out in the complaint, should be paid over to the administrator upon the estate of William E. Lewis, deceased, when one shall have been duly appointed and qualified, the same to be administered upon, divided and distributed as the estate of said deceased.
No costs in this court will be taxed in favor of either party.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.