Briggs v. Crowley

224 N.E.2d 417, 352 Mass. 194, 1967 Mass. LEXIS 780
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 224 N.E.2d 417 (Briggs v. Crowley) 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
Briggs v. Crowley, 224 N.E.2d 417, 352 Mass. 194, 1967 Mass. LEXIS 780 (Mass. 1967).

Opinion

Spiegel, J.

This is a petition in equity filed in the Probate Court by a life beneficiary under a trust for an accounting from the trustees and for other equitable relief. The petitioner amended the petition on two occasions after the respondents’ demurrers thereto were sustained. 1 The petitioner appeals from the decree sustaining the demurrer to her second amended petition and from the decree dismissing that petition.

The material allegations in the petition are as follows. On February 8, 1938, Ada Langley Briggs executed a deed of trust of certain assets to herself and the respondents as *196 trustees. “The assets of the trust include stocks of a market value in excess of $90,000, providing income in excess of $4,000. ’ ’ The petitioner and others were named in the trust instrument as life beneficiaries. The respondents were named as remaindermen and are entitled to equal shares of the assets of the trust upon the death of the last surviving life beneficiary.

Ada Langley Briggs died, leaving the respondents as the sole trustees. They “have paid lump sums in large amounts to other beneficiaries of the trust in settlement of the claims of such beneficiaries, which payments have been out of proportion to the number of beneficiaries . . . and without regard to the financial needs of such beneficiaries.

“ [I]n making such payments the respondent trustees have acted primarily in order to satisfy demands for an account rather than to provide for the necessaries and comfort of the beneficiaries concerned .... [T]hey have attempted to exact from beneficiaries to whom such amounts were paid an agreement or pledge of secrecy as to the amount and circumstances of payments.”

The trust instrument provides that “The principal purpose of this trust is to provide for the necessaries and comfort of the persons named herein and in order to accomplish this purpose it is intended to give said trustees the fullest authority and discretion without limit and every other unlimited power to do all things. Said trustees may, if they find this intention and purpose is not being accomplished, withhold any money or otherwise or they may buy materials, provisions or do otherwise as the convenience or necessities of any one or more beneficiaries may be described ; also said trustees, at their discretion, may permanently withhold all money, materials, provisions, benefits, or otherwise of every name and nature from any one or more of the beneficiaries. ’ ’

The trust also provides that the trustees “shall not be called upon to account to anyone or file any accounts or disclose any payments to beneficiaries or who the beneficiaries are or otherwise except to the donor” and that the “discretion of the trustees hereunder shall not be questioned by *197 any béneficiary . . . and the executors, administrators or the heirs or assigns of any beneficiary herein named shall not be entitled to any accounting.”

The petitioner has requested and demanded an accounting from the respondents which they have refused to give either to the petitioner or to the Probate Court. As a result, the petitioner has been “unable to determine whether . . . [the trust] has been properly administered by . . . [the respondents] and whether the trust res is intact.”

“The petitioner is an unmarried person of advanced years without employment, and with an income of approximately $1,550, and she has been obliged to live without such necessaries and comfort. Until March 1963, the respondent trustees paid to the petitioner and her sister, Marjorie A. Briggs, the sum of $1,200 each year from income of the trust; the petitioner and her said sister lived together in the same house and shared equally the expense of maintenance thereof, the real estate taxes thereon and the interest and principal payments of the mortgage thereon; on the death of said Marjorie on March 3, 1963, the petitioner requested the respondent trustees to increase the payments to her so as to enable her to meet the expenses of the house, but the respondent trustees not only refused to increase such payments but entirely discontinued payments to the petitioner and have since failed and refused to make any payments.”

“The petitioner has made full disclosure to the respondent trustees of her financial situation, and . . . [they] have full knowledge that without payments from the trust the income of the petitioner is insufficient to provide for her necessaries and comfort.”

“The respondent trustees intend to withhold payments to the petitioner in order that as the remaindermen under the trust they will personally receive, on the death of the petitioner, the entire balance of the trust fund, including any income accrued thereunder, and the petitioner believes and therefore avers that because of their self-interest the respondent trustees have withheld payments of income to her. ’ ’

*198 The prayers óf the petition seek an accounting by the respondents and an order that they pay the petitioner “reasonable amounts for her necessaries and comfort.”

The respondents demurred to the second amended petition on the grounds that the petition “does not state concisely and with substantial certainty the substantive facts necessary to maintain the action” and that the petitioner “has tio legal standing under , the terms of the Trust declared upon to maintain her action.”

1. To sustain a demurrer on the ground stated by the respondents that a petition “does not state concisely and with substantial certainty the substantive facts necessary to maintain the action” the petition must fail to “sufficiently inform the defendants of the facts so that they, might know what they would be called upon to meet.” Lloyd v. Howes, 350 Mass. 19, 21. The allegations in that case were that the plaintiff was “mentally weak,” that the defendant “imposed his will upon hers,” and “influenced her unduly to execute a document that she did not comprehend,” and which was “not in conformity with her wishes and desires.” These were obviously the conclusions which the plaintiff would be required to prove by independent facts in order to maintain her action. The allegations in the cases cited in the Lloyd case illustrate the type of generalities which are fatal if not accompanied by more specific allegations of facts. 2

*199 In the instant case the allegations, considered with the provisions of the trust agreement (see Price v. Price, 341 Mass. 390, 393), set out more than generalities and conclusions. Facts are alleged which show that (1) the respondents stand in a fiduciary relationship to the petitioner; (2) the terms of the trust require that the respondents “provide for the necessaries and comfort”,of the “persons named herein”; (3) that the trustees have paid lump sums in large amounts to other beneficiaries, without regard to their financial needs and such payments were made “primarily in order to satisfy demands for an account”; (4).

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Bluebook (online)
224 N.E.2d 417, 352 Mass. 194, 1967 Mass. LEXIS 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briggs-v-crowley-mass-1967.