This case involves an inter vivos trust which was established in 1928. Under the trust agreement, the lifetime income beneficiary is the settlor’s son, and the remaindermen are “the children born or to be born” of the son. When the trust was established, the settlor’s son was married, and there was one child born of this marriage. However, the son subsequently divorced, and he and his new wife adopted two children. The trust terminated at the son’s death in 1979. This suit was brought by the trustee for direction concerning the question of whether the two children adopted by the son qualify as remaindermen of the trust. The superior court ruled that they do not. For reasons which follow, we agree.
1. “In construing a trust instrument, it is the duty of a court to find the intention of the settlor and to effectuate that intention in so far as the language used and the rules of law will permit.” Love v. Fulton Nat. Bank,
In order to effectuate the testator’s intent, it has been held that the adoption laws in effect at the date of the testator’s death will determine the class of beneficiaries entitled to take under a testamentary trust in the absence of an express contrary intent. Warner v. First Nat. Bank,
2. In addition, the previously-quoted language employed in the trust instrument leads unmistakably to the conclusion that the settlor intended to include only natural children of the son as remaindermen of the trust. See Faulk v. Faulk,
In ascertaining the settlor’s intent, it is also relevant that the adoption laws of this state were amended in 1949 so as to provide as follows: an adopted child shall be considered in all respects as if it were a child of natural bodily issue of the adopting parents, and shall enjoy every right and privilege of a natural child; and shall be deemed a natural child of the adopting parents to inherit under the laws of descent and distribution in the absence of a will and to take under the provisions of any instrument of testamentary gift, bequest, devise or legacy unless expressly excluded therefrom. Code Ann. § 74-414 (Ga. L. 1949, p. 1157); Warner v. First Nat. Bank, supra. With presumptive knowledge of this change in the law, the settlor in 1950 executed a codicil to her will reemphasizing her desire to include only natural children of her son as remaindermen of the trust. This is a clear expression of the settlor’s intent, regardless of whether the execution of the codicil to her will was effective to amend the provisions of the previously-executed, nonrevocable, inter vivos trust.
Judgment affirmed.
