Bliven v. Borden

185 A. 239, 56 R.I. 283, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 6, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 185 A. 239 (Bliven v. Borden) 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
Bliven v. Borden, 185 A. 239, 56 R.I. 283, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 100 (R.I. 1936).

Opinion

*286 Baker, J.

This is a bill in equity brought by the complainant as executor under the will of John L. Borden, late of Portsmouth, for the construction of certain portions of such will, and for instructions. All other parties in interest are properly before the court as respondents, necessary representatives of minors have been appointed and the pleadings closed. Testimony was taken pursuant to a decree entered by the superior court, and the cause then being ready in that court for hearing for the entry of final decree, it was certified to this court for determination, in accordance with the provisions of general laws 1923, chapter 339, sec. 35.

The testator died August 21, 1933, leaving the above-mentioned will which was dated January 2, 1933, and was admitted to probate in Portsmouth, September 25, 1933. Added to the will were two codicils, one bearing the same date as the instrument itself, and the other the date of March 6, 1933.

The bill alleges that certain questions have arisen concerning the. first, seventh and ninth paragraphs of the will and the second codicil.

The first five of these questions have to do with the validity and effect of the bequest of $25,000 in trust for *287 the maintenance of the homestead farm, and the gift over of such sum for the benefit of the poor and needy of the town of Portsmouth, as set out in the first paragraph. The next question relates to the bequest of $50,000 mentioned in the seventh paragraph, and the last three questions concern the disposition of the testator’s tangible personal property, as referred to in the ninth paragraph and in the second codicil.

The material portions of the first paragraph of the will are as follows:

“First: I give, devise and bequeath my Homestead Farm, where 11 now reside with all the buildings and improvements thereon, together with with the Lake Land, now called the Dennis Place with the buildings thereon, to Alonzo E. Borden, In Trust, however, for the use and benefit of his grandson, Richard C. Borden, to come into his possession when he attains the age of twenty-five years, Further: I give and bequeath to Alonzo E. Borden, Trustee as aforesaid; the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, ($25,000), to be safely invested and the income to be used in the maintenance of said Homestead Farm; If ' said Homestead Farm shall be conveyed or allowed to pass out of the family name of “Borden,” by the said trustee or devisee, then in that event, the said maintenance Fund of $25,000, shall cease, and become a Fund, the income to be used under the direction of the Town Council of the Town of Portsmouth and their successors in office, *288 for the comfort and well being of the poor and needy people of said Town of Portsmouth.”

In construing a will, unless a contrary intent clearly appears, language employed by a testator must be given its natural and ordinary meaning; and his general intent must be gathered from the will or clause as a whole, and not from any single expression apart from the context. Further, the intent must be ascertained only from what is actually expressed in the will itself and from implications necessarily following from the language employed, but conjecture is not permitted. Facts and circumstances surrounding the testator at the time his will was executed, as-they appear of record, may be considered by the court as an aid in discovering his intent, and when such intent is-once determined, the court should, if possible, give it effect. Matteson v. Brown, 33 R. I. 339; Metcalf v. Gladding, 35 R. I. 395; Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Davis, 41 R. I. 386; Thurber v. Thurber, 43 R. I. 504; Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Egan, 52 R. I. 384.

Certain pertinent facts appear from the testimony taken. The farm involved herein contains about thirty-two acres. On it are two houses, one a large building of twenty-one rooms, one portion having three and the remainder- four stories, with steam heat for the first and second floors, and the other a cottage of about eight rooms. In addition, the farm has a large three-story barn which needs certain repairs and improvements to make it available for dairy purposes, another smaller barn, a hothouse, and several sheds and outbuildings. At the time the will was executed, Richard C. Borden, who comes into possession of the farm when he reaches the age of twenty five, was fourteen. He is the grandson of Alonzo E. Borden, now more than seventy years old, a distant relative of the testator, and named as trustee in the first paragraph of the will. Richard is an orphan, his parents having predeceased the testator by several years. Soon after the *289 death, of Richard’s father, the boy went with his mother to live with her family in Illinois, and after her death he remained there with his maternal aunt and grandmother and is now attending school. He usually spends the summer in Portsmouth with his grandfather, Alonzo E. Borden. Richard’s only estate consists of a small bank account of less than $100, and a one-half interest in a fund of $3,800 derived from life insurance. The testator had at times financially assisted Richard, his brother and his mother, following the death of the father.

The first paragraph of the will provides for two separate trusts. The first concerns the farm itself, and all parties hereto are agreed that under this trust Richard received at the death of the testator a vested equitable estate in fee, immediately alienable and transmittable, followed by complete legal title and enjoyment when he becomes twenty-five years of age, at which time this trust terminates and he receives full possession of the farm. An estate will be construed as vested when the futurity connected therewith relates only to the time of possession and not to the substance of the gift itself as a condition precedent, because the vesting of estates is favored. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Noyes, 26 R. I. 323. The second is of a fund, the income of which is to be used for the maintenance of the farm, with a gift over to a charitable purpose upon the happening of a certain named contingency. The questions in the bill of complaint dealing with the scope and effect of this second trust are difficult to answer, largely because the testator has used language in relation thereto which is not sufficient to make his entire meaning and intent clear, but which, nevertheless, raises issues involving the proper application of recognized legal principles to this portion of the will.

The guardian ad litem for Richard maintains, first, that the bequest of $25,000 constitutes an outright gift of that amount to the minor to come into his possession when he reaches the age of twenty-five, and that the gift over is *290

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Bluebook (online)
185 A. 239, 56 R.I. 283, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bliven-v-borden-ri-1936.