Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Blanchard

81 N.E. 654, 196 Mass. 35, 1907 Mass. LEXIS 1040
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 18, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 81 N.E. 654 (Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Blanchard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Blanchard, 81 N.E. 654, 196 Mass. 35, 1907 Mass. LEXIS 1040 (Mass. 1907).

Opinion

Rugg, J.

This is a bill in equity for instructions as to the persons to whom shall be paid a trust fund under the will, executed on January 12, 1864, of Thomas Blanchard, who died at the age of seventy-six, on April 15, 1864. The testator left a wife, but no issue by her, and a, daughter by a former marriage. The daughter was a widow, childless, and non compos mentis at the time the will was executed, and continued so until her death in 1867. The testator left no other descendant. His widow subsequently remarried, and died in 1905. The material provision of the will is :

“ I give, devise and bequeath to my nephew Stillman S. Blanchard of Boston all the rest and residue of my estate, real and personal, in trust to invest the same, and to keep the same safely and securely invested, and after paying taxes, insurance and all other charges, to pay over the net income thereof, one half to my wife, and the other half to, or for the benefit of, my daughter, as hereinafter directed, during the joint lives of the two; and if my daughter shall die during the life of my wife, and leave issue, then to pay to said issue one half of said net income, and the other half to my wife during her life ; and if my [37]*37wife shall die during the life of my daughter, and leave issue by me, then to pay to said issue said one half of said income, until such issue shall attain the age of twenty-one years, then to pay to him or to her one half of the principal of the fund; and in case my daughter shall die during the life of my wife, without leaving issue ; or in case she leave issue, and such issue shall not survive my wife; or if my wife should die during the life of my daughter without leaving issue by me, or in case she leave such issue, and such issue shall not survive my daughter, then, and in either of said cases, to pay the whole of the said net income to the survivor of my said wife and daughter ; and upon the decease of such survivor leaving issue to distribute the principal of the trust fund among my issue; and if on the decease of such survivor there should be no living descendant of mine, then to distribute said principal among my own right heirs, unless my said adopted son, Thomas Blanchard Jr., or some issue of his, be then living, and in that case to pay over to him if living, or to his issue, if he be not then living, one half part of said principal fund.

“ So long as the condition of the mind of my daughter is such as to require a guardian for her, I direct the said trustee to pay her guardian so much of the income hereinbefore appropriated to her as may be necessary for her comfortable maintenance and support, and to add the balance of said income if any there be, to the principal of the fund; and if thereafter there shall be a deficiency of income in any year, or if from any other cause, a sum greater than her share of the annual income of the fund, should be deemed necessary or desirable for her comfort, then the trustee may devote such additions or reserves of income to such purpose; but if no such exigency should arise during the life of my daughter, the said reserves shall be disposed ol as if they formed part of the original principal of the trust fund upon her decease.”

The fund now amounts to about $85,000, all in personal se-, curities, real estate formerly constituting a part having been sold. It was agreed by the parties, and incorporated in the reservation of the single justice, by which the case is brought here, that Thomas Blanchard, Jr., being now alive, is entitled to one half of the trust fund. This inquiry relates only [38]*38to the disposition of the remaining half. The testator provides that this shall be distributed “ among my own right heirs.” The principal question argued has been whether such heirs are to be ascertained as of the death of the testator or as of the death of the last surviving life tenant, that is to say, whether the estate in remainder vested at the death of the testator or was contingent until the time for distribution arrived. It has long been a rule of construction that estates arising under a will should be treated as vesting immediately, unless the testator has manifested by clear language an opposite intent. Bosworth v. Stockbridge, 189 Mass. 266. Minot v. Purrington, 190 Mass. 336. Gardner v. Skinner, 195 Mass. 164. But it has been laid down in early as well as recent cases, as was said by Hammond, J., in McCurdy v. Me Galium, 186 Mass. 464, 469, that “ The cardinal rule in the interpretation of wills, to which all other rules must bend, is that the intention of the testator shall prevail, provided that it is consistent with the rules of law.” Olney v. Hull, 21 Pick. 311,313. Crapo v. Price, 190 Mass. 317, 320. Taking into account the situation of the testator with reference to his wife, daughter and other kindred at the time of the execution of his will, and the language employed, his intent appears to have been to create a contingent rather than a vested interest. The reasons which lead to this conclusion are as follows : It is manifest that he did not intend, in using the words, “ my own right heirs,” to include his daughter or any of his descendants. He draws a clear distinction as to the distribution of the residuum between his descendants and his heirs. He employs these words as descriptive of different classes of beneficiaries. The direction to distribute to his heirs is to take effect only in the event that, at the decease of the survivor of his wife and daughter, there shall at that time be living no descendant of his. The word “ descendant ” is used in its ordinary sense, as meaning those who can trace their origin directly to the testator as ancestor. Baker v. Baker, 8 Gray, 101, 120. Ralph v. Carrick, 11 Ch. D. 873. It follows, therefore, that he intended his heirs to be ascertained only in the event that he left no descendant. His language does not manifest the desire disclosed in Minot v. Harris, 132 Mass. 528; White v. Springett, L. R. 4 Ch. 300, and Lee v. Lee, 1 Dr. & Sm. 85, 91, that the heirs [39]*39should be ascertained as if his daughter and descendants did not exist, but rather shows a wish to examine that question only at a time when descendants shall have been conclusively determined not to exist, which, under the circumstances here disclosed, could not be at the testator’s death but at the death of the surviving life tenant.

Again, the vesting of any interest in Thomas Blanchard, Jr., or his issue, is by the clear terms of the will made contingent upon one or the other being alive at the time of the distribution, that is, at the death of the last surviving life tenant. This point has been treated as tending to show that “ the vesting of the whole was postponed till the arrival of the event on which the distribution is made to depend.” Hale v. Hobson, 167 Mass. 397, 398. Hall v. Hall, 123 Mass. 120.

Then, too, there is an absence of the consideration, which, when present, has a tendency to indicate that a vested remainder is created, in that the limitation is not to the children of the testator. Weight oftentimes is attached to this factor. Gibbens v. Gibbens, 140 Mass. 102. Stanwood v. Stanwood, 179 Mass. 223. Bancroft v. Fitch, 164 Mass. 401. Smith v. Rice, 130 Mass. 441. Denny v. Kettell, 135 Mass. 138. Harding v. Harding, 174 Mass. 268.

Moreover, the will contains no words of present gift to the

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.E. 654, 196 Mass. 35, 1907 Mass. LEXIS 1040, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-safe-deposit-trust-co-v-blanchard-mass-1907.