Bronson v. Pinney

33 A.2d 322, 130 Conn. 262, 1943 Conn. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 13, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 33 A.2d 322 (Bronson v. Pinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bronson v. Pinney, 33 A.2d 322, 130 Conn. 262, 1943 Conn. LEXIS 177 (Colo. 1943).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

This action was brought to secure a construction of certain provisions in the will of Frank S. Platt, who died, a resident of New Haven, in 1934. The case was submitted to the trial court upon the admitted allegations of the pleadings, and from its decision several of the parties have appealed.

In the fourth article of the will, the testator gave a legacy of $5000 to each of ten nephews and nieces, who are named, and to the children of a deceased niece, Bertha B. Squire, the children also being named. *264 We are primarily concerned with four of these legacies: one to his niece Mrs. Mabel Pinney Cannon, one to his niece Mabel Clark, one to his nephew Howard Platt, and the fourth to his niece Gladys Platt Pendleton. In the sixth article he gave the residue of his estate to trustees “to pay the net income in semiannual payments to the legatees named in the fourth item of this will in equal portions (with one exception) and if, after the date of this will and' at any time before the termination of this trust, any one of the aforesaid legatees dies leaving issue then the portion which the parent would have received had he lived shall be paid to the issue of such parent. This trust shall terminate ten (10) years after the probate of my will. Upon the termination of the trust the trust fund shall be divided equally (with one exception) between the legatees named in the fourth item of my will and the issue of such legatees as may die after the date of my will and prior to the final distribution. The issue of any legatee before named in said item four shall take the parent share per stirpes. I make one apparent exception to the rule of equality in income and distribution. In item four (f) I give to the four Squire children collectively the share of their parent. These four children collectively take one portion of income and principal.”

In a codicil he revoked the legacy given to Mrs. Cannon, and in lieu of it gave the same sum to the trustees named in the will, as a spendthrift trust for her, with this provision: “I further direct that the payment of principal, if any, due to the said Mrs. Mabel Pinney Cannon under the sixth item of my will shall be added to the principal of the trust estate in this item created and become a part and parcel;of it. If at the death of the said Mabel Pinney Cannon any portion of the principal of this trust fund has not *265 been expended, then and in that event, I give and bequeath the unexpended portion to the issue of the said Mabel Pinney Cannon share and share alike Per Stirpes.” He later made a second codicil as follows: ‘T modify paragraph sixth of my will as follows: Howard Platt, of San Francisco, and Gladys Platt Pendleton, of San Francisco, and their respective issue shall take nothing by virtue of said paragraph. It is my wish that they each receive five thousand ($5000) dollars by virtue of paragraph fourth (j) and (k) and that they receive no more. If either the said Howard Platt or the said Gladys Platt Pendleton die before me then the issue of the one dying shall take the parent’s share per stirpes. I have reduced the gifts of the two legatees aforesaid because I believe they are relatively more prosperous than some of my other legatees and therefore, in less need of money.”

Mabel Clark survived the testator but has died without issue, and the administrator of her estate is one of the parties to this action. One of the questions presented was as to the disposition to be made of the share of the residue given to her. The other questions are as to the rights of the parties under the sixth article, as regards the shares given in it to Howard Platt and Mrs. Pendleton. Howard Platt survived the testator but has since died, leaving one child.' Mrs. Pendleton is still living.

The will contains no express disposition of the gifts made in the sixth article in the event that any legatee should die without issue, as did Mabel Clark. The direction that “upon the termination of the trust” the fund “shall be divided equally (with one exception)” among the legatees is insufficient to import that any legatee must survive a termination of the trust in order to become entitled to a share of it. We have never recognized in this state the rule that where there is no *266 express gift, but merely a direction to pay or divide at a future time, the gift will not vest until that .time. White v. Smith, 87 Conn. 663, 668, 89 Atl. 272; New Britain Trust Co. v. Stanley, 128 Conn. 386, 393, 23 Atl. (2d) 142. In Mead v. Close, 115 Conn. 443, 445, 161 Atl. 799, we said: “The words ‘to be divided’ among my brothers, or their children, import á gift to these beneficiaries, and in themselves have no significance as postponing the vesting of their rights.-. * . This is also true of the provision that such division shall be made ‘upon the death’ of the life tenant;” Any claim that Mabel Clark’s rights were contingent upon her being alive at the termination of the trust is completely rebutted by the fact that without question she became entitled at the death of the testator to receive a share of the income of the trust; in both the bequest of the income and of the principal, at the termination of the trust,'the testator made.the same provisions, gifts to the legatees named in the fourth article and to the issue of any who diéd;. and it is not reasonable to assume that he distinguished between the gifts of income and principal, intending that the former should vest at his death and -the latter only upon the termination of the trust. If Mabel Clark had survived the termination of the -trust, it was clearly the intent of the testator to vest in her absolute title to her share in the fund; and the provisions of -the will can mean no less an estate because she died before that time. Duncan v. Higgins, 129 Conn. 136, 145, 26 Atl. (2d) 849.

She took an interest in both income and priheipal which vested at the death of the testator. This was defeasible in the event' that she died leaving issue; but nowhere in the will do we find any intention.ex-! pressed that her death without issue - would in itself terminate the estate given to her. In Austin v. Bristol, *267 40 Conn. 120, 136, we quoted the statement of the Master of the Rolls in Harrison v. Foreman, 5 Ves. 207, 210, 31 Eng. Rep. R. 549: “There is a vested interest; and the contingency, upon which it is to be devested, never happened. The vested interest therefore remains; as if that contingency had never been annexed to it.” This quotation was repeated and the principle applied in Mahoney v. Mahoney, 98 Conn. 525, 535, 120 Atl. 342. We have also applied it in instances where an absolute estate was defeasible upon a condition which has failed; Congregational Home Missionary Society v. Thames Bank & Trust Co., 127 Conn. 1, 13, 14 Atl. (2d) 626; Duncan v. Higgins, supra; and in the latter case we said (p. 145) : .

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Bluebook (online)
33 A.2d 322, 130 Conn. 262, 1943 Conn. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bronson-v-pinney-conn-1943.