Bishop Trust Co. v. Cooke Trust Co.

39 Haw. 641, 1953 Haw. LEXIS 18
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1953
DocketNO. 2866.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 39 Haw. 641 (Bishop Trust Co. v. Cooke Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bishop Trust Co. v. Cooke Trust Co., 39 Haw. 641, 1953 Haw. LEXIS 18 (haw 1953).

Opinion

*642 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

STAINBACK, J.

The facts in this case as they appear in the record by pleadings and stipulations of the parties are undisputed and simple but the question raised is not free from doubt and difficulties.

On June 15, 1933, Richard Smart, just after reaching his majority, conveyed (“assign, transfer and deliver”) certain bonds to Alfred W. Carter as trustee in trust for the following uses and purposes, that is to say: “To demand, receive and collect the interest arising from said bonds, and after deducting the usual trustee’s commission thereon, to pay the same to my grand-aunt Marion Worthington, residing at San Francisco, California, semiannually or at such other stated periods as shall be convenient, so long as she shall live, and upon her death, to assign, transfer and deliver said bonds to William Worthington, son of said Marion Worthington, together with any undistributed interest upon the same which said trustee may have in hand at the time of her death.”

The trustee was empowered to sell the bonds, or any of them, or to exchange the same for other sound securities and “in the event of any such sale or exchange the proceeds thereof shall thereupon become a portion of the corpus of this trust and kept invested as such, subject to the provisions hereof.”

The settlor reserved no power of modification or control over the acts of the trustee or over the disposition of the income or principal of the trust and there are no *643 express provisions regarding survivorship of remainder-man.

The trustee accepted his trust but is now deceased and the Cooke Trust Company, Limited, is the successor-trustee.

At the inception of the trust Richard Smart was twenty years old; his grand aunt, Marion Worthington, was forty-eight years old and her son, William Worthington, was then twenty-eight years old and unmarried.

William Worthington died during the continuance of this trust and was survived by both his mother, Marion Worthington, and the settlor, Richard Smart.

The petitioner, Bishop Trust Company, Limited, is executor under the will and of the estate of William Worthington, deceased, and brought this petition for declaratory judgment, declaring that it holds as an asset of the estate of William Worthington, deceased, disposed of by his will, a vested remainder interest in the corpus of this trust estate. The settlor claims that the gift to William Worthington was an equitable remainder contingent or conditional upon his surviving Marion Worthington and that there is a resulting trust in the settlor of the corpus after the death of the equitable life tenant.

The settlor’s argument is that the only gift to William is found in his direction to the trustee to “assign, transfer and deliver” said bonds to William Worthington upon the death of Marion Worthington, that this language imports a gift of the bonds at a future time, not presently, annexing to the gift itself the condition that William survive Marion.

There is also involved the question of the correctness of the trial court’s denial of motions by the petitioner and settlor for the allowance of reasonable attorney’s fees out of the trust estate. The settlor sued out a writ of error to review the rulings of the trial court holding that the *644 corpus of the trust is an asset of the estate of William Worthington, deceased, and denying an attorney’s fee out of the corpus of the trust.

The cardinal rule governing any trust requires that the intention of the settlor as expressed shall prevail unless contrary to some positive rule of the law. As stated by Mr. Justice Pitney in Chater v. Carter, 238 United States Reports 572, 59 Law Edition 1462, at page 1490: “The guiding principle must be, to seek the intention of the settlor. We mean, of course, his intention as expressed. Not, What did he intend to say? but, What did he intend by what he did say? must be the test.” (See also McCandless v. Castle, 25 Haw. 22.)

As the trust deed was voluntary and irrevocable and reserved to the settlor no control over the acts of the trustee or over the disposition of the income or principal of the trust and the settlor parted with complete title to or interest in the property, we might say that the trust deed for all practical purposes of construction may be considered similar to a testamentary disposition. (Bishop v. Kemp, 35 Haw. 1; Bertelmann v. Cockett, 24 Haw. 230.)

With a gift of property to “A” for life, with remainder to “B,” or a testamentary disposition of such nature, there would be no question that “B” would have a vested interest that is transmissible, whether he survived his life tenant or not, unless there are conditions of survivorship or other conditions expressly stated.

“A remainder is vested when it is limited to an ascertained person or persons with no further condition imposed upon the taking effect in possession than the determination of the precedent estate. * * * Wherever the preceding estate is limited, so as to determine on an event which certainly must happen, and the remainder is so limited to a person in esse, and ascertained, that the preceding estate may by any means determine before the expiration *645 of the estate limited in remainder, such remainder is vested’ has also been quoted widely.” (33 Am. Jur., Life Estates, Remainders, Etc., § 66, pp. 525, 526.)

“A remainder limited to one or more ascertained persons without words of condition, is vested. * * * In many cases the remainder is vested even though there is no certainty that it will take effect in possession. * * *” (1 Simes, Law of Future Interests, § 72, p. 109.)

“A testamentary gift to A for life or for a term or in trust for A’s life, and, at A’s death, or at the end of the term, to B, presumptively gives B an interest which is transmissible on his death prior to the death of A. The reason has already been elaborated in connection with the discussion of vested and contingent remainders in land. Where the words ‘at his death’ or ‘at the end of the term’ occur, it is natural to suppose that this was hut a popular, though at times inaccurate paraphrase of the statement that the gift over was to take effect in possession ‘at the termination of the preceding estate.’ If an interest is to take effect in possession at the termination of the preceding estate without other conditions precedent, it is vested. A group of cases apparently falling within this classification consists of those where the gift is contained only in a direction to divide and pay over to the legatee or group of legatees, but in which the court does not discuss the ‘divide and pay over’ rule as an independent rule.” (2 Simes, Law of Future Interests, § 354, pp. 98, 99.)

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Bluebook (online)
39 Haw. 641, 1953 Haw. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-trust-co-v-cooke-trust-co-haw-1953.