Barret v. Berea College

137 A. 145, 48 R.I. 258, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 30, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 137 A. 145 (Barret v. Berea College) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barret v. Berea College, 137 A. 145, 48 R.I. 258, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 54 (R.I. 1927).

Opinion

Stearns, J.

This is a bill in equity for instructions, brought by complainants as executors of the will of Virginia Barret Gibbs, late of Newport and also in their capacity as trustees under a deed of trust made by said Virginia Barret Gibbs. The respondents are the legatees and beneficiaries *259 under the will. The cause being ready for hearing for final decree was certified to this court. (G. L. 1923, C. 339, s. 35.)

The facts are not in dispute. Testatrix, a resident of Newport in this State, died January 28, 1926. Her will dated February 22, 1913, with a codicil dated February 12, 1921, was duly admitted to probate in Newport and complainants were appointed and have qualified as executors.

The introductory clause of the will is as follows: “To all people to whom these presents shall come, be it known, that I, Virginia Barret Gibbs, of the City and County of Newport and State of Rhode Island, do hereby make, publish and declare my last will and testament to be, as follows: intending hereby to dispose of all my property and estate (now or hereafter acquired) and all property over which I have any power of appointment or disposition whatever, viz.:”

The first clause directs the executors to pay all debts, funeral expenses and obligations of every kind as soon'as possible. Then, after disposing of her real estate, jewelry and furniture, testatrix gave to the complainants, $250,000 in trust for Lily Brown, her grandniece, for life and thereafter to her issue with gifts over on failure, and $150,000 to Cecil Barret, her nephew, together with $100,000 in trust for said Barret for life and thereafter to his issue with gifts over on failure; she then gave some thirty legacies to relations, charities and employees and disposed of the residue of her estate in the following language: “Twelfth: All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate of every kind and description, whether real, personal, or mixed, and wherever situated and whensoever or howsoever by me - acquired, including all legacies that may lapse or fall into the residue, I give, devise and bequeath as follows:” and,divided the same among various charities and individuals; certain changes in the residuary legatees were made in the codicil whereby the residue was divided among five different charities and five persons named therein; a number of these residuary legatees also received specific bequests in the will.

*260 By the Eleventh clause of the codicil it was provided that all legacy, inheritance or transfer taxes should be paid by the executors out of the estate of testatrix, as a general expense of administration.

The deed of trust was executed December 24, 1866, by Virginia Barret Gibbs, then unmarried and a resident of Kentucky, and conveyed to trustees, residents of Kentucky, five hundred bonds of $1000 each of the L. & N. R. R. Co. maturing at different times up to January, 1877.. The purpose of the deed of trust as declared therein, was to secure to the maker the income and increase of said bonds free from the control of any husband she might thereafter have.

The trustees, after paying any taxes on the trust property, were directed to pay the residue of the income to the maker during her life. At her death the trust was to terminate, the trustees were then directed to transfer the bonds to any child or children, or their descendants, if any, living at her death and if she should die without child or children or their descendants then living., to such persons as she by her last will should direct; and in the event of her failure to exercise her power of appointment, at her decease, the bonds were to be transferred to such of her collateral kindred living at that time as would have taken under the laws of descent of the state of Kentucky. The trustees or their successors were empowered to collect the bonds as they fell due, and with the written consent of the maker to invest the proceeds in other bonds or stocks, to sell the same and hold the proceeds and new securities under the same trusts. The complainants, the successors of the original trustees, were appointed trustees, the one in 1905, the other in 1910, by the Circuit Court of Kentucky.

Virginia Barret Gibbs married after the creation of the trust. She never had any children. About 1880 she became a resident of Newport, where she continued to reside until her 'death. Her husband predeceased her. Her only heirs are her nephew and her grandniece.

*261 The value of her personal property when the will was executed was $390,000, at the time the codicil was executed $380,000 and at her death $887,000. The value of the trust estate in 1926 was $518,000. At the time of the death of testatrix the personalty, exclusive of that over which she had the power of appointment, was sufficient to pay all but $100,000 of the legacies, taxes and administration expenses. The two funds were kept by complainant Barret, who managed both in separate banks,.and the income of each was paid to testatrix by separate checks.

Complainants and certain respondents claim that it was the intention of testatrix by the use in her will of the introductory clause and by the general scheme of the will, to execute the power in favor of said executors and that the personalty subject to said power should be blended with the personalty which belonged to testatrix absolutely, to be administered and applied in accordance with the terms of the will to the payment of debts, administration expenses and legacies and the balance remaining to be paid into the residuary estate.

Other respondents claim that the power was exercised only by the residuary clause of the will and that the trust funds should be held to pass exclusively to the residuary legatees.

The questions with regard to which instructions are sought are:

1. Is the power of appointment exercised by the will in favor of the executors and does the trust property pass to them for the benefit’ .of the q/state of testatrix and to be administered as part thereof, or is the power exercised exclusively in favor of the residuary legatees so that it passes directly to them?

2. If the trust property passes directly to the residuary legatees, is it subject to the payment of expenses of administration, inheritance transfer, legacy and Federal estate taxes?

*262 All of the parties agree that the power was executed by the will. The only question is, how was it executed; was it by operation of the residuary clause, or without reference to that clause?

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 A. 145, 48 R.I. 258, 1927 R.I. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barret-v-berea-college-ri-1927.