Ampere Bank and Trust Co. v. Esterly

49 A.2d 769, 139 N.J. Eq. 33, 1946 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 10, 38 Backes 33
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 26, 1946
DocketDocket 147/196
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 49 A.2d 769 (Ampere Bank and Trust Co. v. Esterly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ampere Bank and Trust Co. v. Esterly, 49 A.2d 769, 139 N.J. Eq. 33, 1946 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 10, 38 Backes 33 (N.J. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

Marian B. Heath of Mountain Lakes, Morris County, New Jersey, died on or about the 21st day of December, 1945, *Page 34 leaving a last will and testament. On January 3d 1946, it was probated before the surrogate of Morris County, and letters testamentary were issued to the complainant, the executor named in the will. Subsequently, letters of trusteeship were issued also to complainant.

In and by her last will and testament the decedent divided her residuary estate into five equal parts. One part thereof was bequeathed to the defendant Douglas M. Esterly, and reads as follows:

"(c) To my trustee hereinafter named in trust nevertheless for the following uses and purposes:

"Subject to the withdrawals hereinafter provided for, to invest, re-invest, and keep the same invested and to collect the income therefrom, and after paying out of said income all the necessary and proper expenses incident to the administration of the trust hereby created,

"(1) To pay over the entire net income to my nephew Douglas M. Easterly, now of 1011 Cortlandt Street, Peekskill, New York, during the term of his natural life.

"(2) I give and bequeath to my said nephew, Douglas M. Easterly, the further power, authority and right in each period of twelve (12) months succeeding the date of the setting up of this trust to withdraw from the corpus of this trust fund a sum not to exceed in any twelve (12) month period ten percent (10%) of the value of said corpus computed as of the first day of such period. The said Douglas M. Easterly shall not have the right to carry over to the following period any unexercised option in whole or in part, it being my intention that there shall not be withdrawn in any one period more than ten percent (10%) of the market value of the corpus of this trust fund computed as of the first day of such period. I hereby direct my trustee to pay over to said Douglas M. Easterly from the corpus of this trust fund upon his evidencing in writing the exercise of the aforesaid option such monies as become payable to him under this paragraph of my will.

"(3) Upon the death of said Douglas M. Easterly this trust shall cease and come to an end and I give and bequeath the principal of said trust fund to the executor or administrator of my said nephew, Douglas M. Easterly."

The beneficiary Douglas M. Esterly's name is misspelled "Easterly" in the will. The sixth paragraph of decedent's will directs her executor to reduce the entire estate to cash.

Esterly made a demand upon the complainant, as executor, that it pay to him the one-fifth share of the residuary estate *Page 35 declaring that he is the sole beneficiary of the trust, that the same has vested absolutely in him, and that he is entitled to the full payment thereof.

The complainant seeks a construction of the will and a declaration of the rights thereunder of the defendant Douglas M. Esterly.

Douglas is married. He has four children, namely, a son, Howard, of full age; Douglas M., Jr., a minor of eight years; a son, Vernon Marshall, a minor of five years, and a son, Robert Augustus, a minor of two years.

The complainant opposes the attitude taken by Douglas that the trust fund should be terminated. It contends that the termination of the trust by this court would frustrate the intent, purpose and object of the testatrix.

Where in a trust estate the beneficiary has the entire beneficial interest, both in the income of property held by the trustees for his benefit and in the property itself, there being no limitation of the estate in any contingency to any other person, there being no discretion given to the trustees, and no provision that the income or estate shall not be alienable by the beneficiary or attachable by his creditors, our court has taken the position that he is entitled to a decree terminating the trust. See Newlin v. Girard Trust Co., 116 N.J. Eq. 498;174 Atl. Rep. 479. The law as expounded in Newlin v. Girard TrustCo. is not followed in some other jurisdictions. In the NewlinCase the testatrix by her will directed that the net income of her estate go to her children, and upon their deaths the corpus should be paid to their executors or administrators. Vice-Chancellor Backes there said: "The direction to pay their shares of the corpus to their executors or administrators at their death was in legal effect a gift to the children. They were the object of their mother's solicitude; their issue were not within her contemplation." And he also said that: "The gift of the life interest is absolute and there is no contingency to the vesting of the remainder; there is no gift over. There is no discretion in the trustees, either as to the payment of the income or the principal and no restriction upon the children against alienating the income *Page 36 or corpus; nor is there direction to keep the corpus intact to sustain the income and no hedging in of either the income orcorpus indicating a spendthrift trust. The entire beneficial interest in the estate being in the four children, and, as no one else, now, or in the future, has, or can have, any interest in it, and all being sui juris, they may bring the trust to a close."

Vice-Chancellor Backes found support for his conclusions in the English rule on the subject, and also in 3 Jarm. Wills (7thed.) 1590, wherein it is stated:

"Those cases in which legal personal representatives take by direct gift must, however, be carefully distinguished from those in which the words `executors and administrators,' or `legal representatives,' are used as mere words of limitation. As in the common case of a gift to A and his executors or administrators, or to A and his legal representatives, which will, beyond all question, vest the absolute interest in A. The same construction, too, in some instances, has been applied in cases of a more doubtful complexion; as where the bequest was to A for life, and, after his decease, to his executors or administrators or personal representatives. So, in numerous instances, where a testator has given a fund in trust for A for life (frequently a married woman), with power to appoint it after her death, and, in default of appointment, to the `executors or administrators,' or to the `personal representatives,' of A, the words have received this their proper interpretation. A was considered to be the only object of bounty, and the words were held to be in effect mere words of limitation."

A case in point and which has been approved by the courts of our state is Sears v. Choate, 146 Mass. 395; 15 N.E. Rep. 786;4 Am. St. Rep. 320. The court there declared:

"The present bill alleges that the plaintiff has the entire beneficial interest, both in the income of the property held by the trustees for his benefit, and in the property itself, and prays that this trust may be terminated, and the property conveyed to him * * *. There is in the will no limitation over of the estate in any contingency to any other person; there is no discretion given to the trustees, and there is no provision that the income or the estate shall not alienable by the plaintiff, or attachable by his creditors. It cannot be doubted that under this rule the plaintiff took an equitable *Page 37 estate, which he might alienate, and which equity would apply to the payment of his debts."

The complainant indicates that the case of Claflin v.

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Bluebook (online)
49 A.2d 769, 139 N.J. Eq. 33, 1946 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 10, 38 Backes 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ampere-bank-and-trust-co-v-esterly-njch-1946.