Atwood v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co.

30 F.2d 707, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 994
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 29, 1929
DocketNo. 96
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 F.2d 707 (Atwood v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atwood v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co., 30 F.2d 707, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 994 (D.R.I. 1929).

Opinion

LETTS, District Judge.

There is before the court a supplemental bill of complaint, brought, as is alleged, to protect and effectuate a former decree of this court and to restrain the respondents from continuing certain proceedings alleged to be in derogation of the complainants’ rights under that decree, to the residuary estate of, Theodore M. Davis, deceased.

The relevant facts and events may be summarized as follows:

On April 5, 1915, there were admitted to probate in the probate court for the city of Newport, state of Rhode Island, two instruments as together constituting the will of Theodore M. Davis, deceased. The first of these referred to as the will hears date of August 14, 1911; the second instrument referred to as a codicil to the will bears date of October 4, 1911.

A portion of the ninth paragraph of the will provided as follows:

“And I devise to the said Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company after the deaths of my said wife and the said Emma B. Andrews the estate in said Newport hereinbefore given to them for their lives, but in trust nevertheless for said Trust Company to convert said estates into cash as soon as reasonably possible after it becomes entitled to the possession of said estates, hereby empowering said Trust Company in the discretion of its officers or committee having charge of trust estates and with the approval in writing of the said Thomas L. Manson and Herbert Parsons or the survivor of them so long as both or either of them, is living, to sell said estates from time to time at either private or publie sale, and to add the net proceeds of any such sale or sales to the principal of the trust estate and property then held by it under the trusts theretofore created by me, and to divide and distribute said net proceeds to' the same persons and in the ‘¡ama proportions as they are entitled to the principal of my said trust estato under the terms of said trusts.”

On July 10,1918, a bill in equity was filed in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island by Kate Atwood, individually and as administratrix of the estate of Gertrude Galloway, and by Theodore Davis Boal, as executor of the Estate of Annie B. Davis, against the Rhode Island Hospital Trust company, both as administrator d. b. n. e. t. a. of the aforementioned will of said Davis and also in its capacity as trustee under another certain instrument referred to as a deed of trust.

After various pleadings, an amended hill was filed January 28, 1919. The bill alleged that the ninth paragraph of the will of Theodore M. Davis was inoperative, being an attempt on the part of the testator to dispose of Ms residuary estate without the formali[708]*708ties required by the statute of wills of the state of Rhode Island; that the trust sought tó be created under said ninth paragraph therefore failed; and that the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company, as administrator d. b. n. c. t. a., held the residue of the personal property of the decedent on a resulting trust to distribute the same to the persons entitled thereto under the statutes of distribution of the state of Rhode Island.

The hill prayed that the rights of the complainants be determined subject to an accounting in the probate court of the city of Newport,-and that a resulting trust in the residuary estate he declared in favor of the complainants, according to their respective interests as in ease of intestacy. Answers were filed, and the case went to hearing.

The intervening travel of the cause is not essential to the present consideration until the entry of a final decree therein pursuant to a mandate from the Circuit Court of Appeals, First Circuit. It is this decree which the complainants now contend in the supplemental hill before the court fixed and determined their rights. Without setting forth the decree in its entirety, the following are the important provisions relating to the present controversy:

The second paragraph of the decree recited that the said defendant administrator (Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company) “ * * * Now holds the residue of personal property on a resulting trust to distribute the same to the widow and next-of-kin and their successors in title conformably to the laws of the State of Rhode Island governing the distribution of intestate property, and the residuary real estate of said deceased descends as intestate property.”

The third paragraph of the decree provided that:

“ * * * The Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company, administrator d. b. n. e. t. a. now holds the residue of the personal property of said deceased on a resulting trust to distribute the same as intestate property conformably to said laws of the State of Rhode Island governing the same as follows: One-fourth to the plaintiff Kate Atwood individually. One-fourth to the plaintiff Kate Atwood as administratrix of the estate of said Gertrude Galloway, deceased, intestate. One-half to the plaintiff Theodore D. Boal as executor of the will of said Annie B. Davis.”

The fourth paragraph of the decree provided that: “The distribution to the plaintiffs * * * is subject to an accounting to the plaintiffs to be taken and had in respect of the acts, doings and proceedings, in regard to the said residuary estate of the defendant, the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company, as administrator as aforesaid * * * but without prejudice to and in observance of the rights hereby established.”

The opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals, under date of October 14, 1921, is reported under the title of this cause in 275 F. 513. The deeree entered by this court on April 28, 1922, in harmony with the opinion and mandate of the Circuit Court of Appeals stands unreversed, and to the present time no bill of review has been filed.

On February 20, 1922, after the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals, hut before the entry of the decree in question, Annetta S. Merrill filed a petition in the probate court of the city of Newport praying that the trust deed executed by Theodore M. Davis on the same date as the original will, namely, August 14, 1911, he admitted to probate as a part of the will.

The intervening travel of this petition is not important until its review upon appeal by the Supreme Court of the state of Rhode Island in the case of Merrill v. Boal et al., 47 R. I. 276, 132 A. 721, 45 A. L. R. 830. In its opinion the court, speaking through Rathbun, J., in part said:

“It must be admitted that said instrument was intended to, and did, create a valid inter vivos trust operating in prassenti and that the instrument does not refer to the residuary estate mentioned in the will. The will, however, does refer to the trust instrument, indirectly we admit, but with sufficient clearness so that there is, and can be, no question as to the identity of the instrument which the tes- ° tator had in mind, and the will directs that the residue of the property mentioned in the will be reduced to cash and paid to the Trust Company to he finally distributed in accordance with the terms of the residuary clause of the trust instrument. As we have said, the will and the trust instrument were prepared at the same time by the same person and there can be no doubt whatever that Mr. Davis intended that the two instruments should, after his death, operate together to dispose of property left by him at Ms decease.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F.2d 707, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atwood-v-rhode-island-hospital-trust-co-rid-1929.