Boal v. Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York

19 F.2d 454, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2266
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 9, 1927
Docket228
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 454 (Boal v. Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boal v. Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York, 19 F.2d 454, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2266 (2d Cir. 1927).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

Theodore M. Davis died at Newport, R. I., leaving a will, dated August 14, 1911, and a codicil, dated October 4, 1911, which were probated in the probate court of Rhode Island on April 5, 1915. Later, on May 24,1926, by a decree of the probate court of Rhode Island, a trust deed executed- upon the same day as his will was admitted to probate as a component part of the will. Merrill v. Boal, 47 R. I. 274,132 A. 721, 45 A. L. R. 830. By a later decision of the highest court of Rhode Island, both of these instruments were held to constitute the testamentary disposition of Davis, and paragraph ninth, in so far as it passed real estate, was held to be valid. Merrill v. Atwood (R. I.) 135 A. 402. The will of August 14,1911, provided in paragraphs seventh and ninth as follows:

“Seventh. Subject to the life estate therein of Mrs. Andrews, and with proviso hereinafter made, I give and bequeath to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, of the City of New York, all the pictures and frames not herein otherwise disposed of, all works of art in bronze, silver, metal, marble, ivory or other materials, pottery, antique mgs, velvets, silks, tapestries, antique glass, and the Egyptian collection of any and all kinds which’ may belong to my estate. I request the Museum, when it shall come into possession of the same, to exhibit in cases by themselves the Egyptian collection and all other collections which in the opinion of the trustees are suitable for cases. I also request that the pictures be associated if hung in one room, but if hung according to their schools they should be grouped; and I request that my entire collection herein given shall be designated as the ‘Theodore M. Davis Collection.’

“The foregoing bequest to the Metropolitan Museum of Art is subject, however, to the condition, and I do hereby will, provide, and declare, that if the principal of my trust estate held by the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company of Providence in said state of Rhode Island under trusts created by me, shall not be sufficient to make each part into which sueh principal is to be divided upon the decease of the survivor of my said wife and the said Emma B. Andrews equal at least to fifty thousand dollars ($50)000) then I give and bequeath to said Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company for the purposes of sale, and *456 at either public or private sales sufficient of said pictures and articles to realize a net amount equal to the deficiency in said trust estate — that is to say, sufficient to increase the value of the principal of my said trust estate so that each part thereof shall equal at least fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) — the Metropolitan Museum of Art, however, to have the right to pay any such deficiency and thereby avoid the sale of any of said pictures and articles ; and should the time for delivery of said pictures and articles to the Metropolitan Museum of Art arrive before the time for the distribution of said trust estate by said trust company, the said Metropolitan Museum of Art, before taking possession of said pictures and articles, shall enter into an agreement with said trust company to make good any deficiency aforesaid or turn back to said trust company sufficient articles and pictures for sale as aforesaid.

“Ninth. I give, devise and bequeath all the remainder of the property, real and personal, of which I die possessed or over which I have any power of disposition, including any of the foregoing gifts which shall fail for any reason, but excepting the remainder in my real estate in said Newport after the decease of my said wife and the said Emma B. Andrews, to my said executors, or any duly appointed administrator of my estate, in trust nevertheless, to convert the whole of said property into cash as soon as reasonably possible, with power for this purpose to sell the same or any part or parts thereof at either private or public sale, and the net proceeds of such sale or sales to pay over to the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company to be held, managed and disposed of as a part of the principal of the estate and property held by it in trust for my life and the lives of others in the same manner as though the proceeds of such sales had been deposited by me as a part of said trust estate and property; and the receipt of said trust company shall be a full discharge to my said executors or administrators relieving.them from all further liability or accountability in respect thereof. 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 estate, hereby empowering said trust company in the discretion of its officers or committee having the charge of trust estates 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 public sale, and to add the net proceeds of any such sale or sales to the principal of the trust estate and property1 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 same proportions as they are entitled to the principal of my said trust estate under the terms of said trusts. * * * ”

Eor the appellees to prevail in their claim that the deceased died intestate as to the art collection, referred to in the will, it is necessary to hold that both the seventh and ninth paragraphs are still invalid.

The question now presented here is the proper interpretation and legal effect of these clauses of the will, in view of the probate of the trust deed and the later decisions of the Rhode Island courts. In a prior decision of this court, it was held that Metropolitan Museum of Art of the City of New York (hereafter called the Museum) could not take the collection; that any gift to the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company (hereafter called the Trust Company) as trustee was ineffective; and that the art collection fell into the residue of the estate, which was attempted to be disposed of by the ninth clause of the will. Boal v. Metropolitan (C. C. A.) 298 F. 894. We agreed with the decision in Atwood v. Trust Co., 275 F. 513, 24 A. L. R. 156 (1st Circuit), which held that the trust sought to be created by the testator under the ninth clause of his will was void because, by the plan disclosed in the will and the trust deed together, the testator attempted to create prospectively for himself, a power to dispose of his residuary estate otherwise than by the instrument executed as a will or codicil with the formalities required by the statute of wills of Rhode Island and in violation thereof. We held that the will and deed of trust, executed on the same day, were intended to remain in effect after the testator’s death, and reserved the right in the testator during his lifetime to change or abrogate any of the trusts created, and was therefore void under the statute of wills of Rhode Island as an attempt to create a power to change the testamentary disposition of property without the formal statutory requisites of a will or codicil. We said that the entire seventh clause was invalid because the gift to the Museum and to the Trust Company were interdependent and that the clause failed altogether, saying:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 454, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boal-v-metropolitan-museum-of-art-of-new-york-ca2-1927.