Brown v. Mead

183 A. 27, 121 Conn. 1, 1936 Conn. LEXIS 82
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 8, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 183 A. 27 (Brown v. Mead) 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
Brown v. Mead, 183 A. 27, 121 Conn. 1, 1936 Conn. LEXIS 82 (Colo. 1936).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

On February 24th, 1920, Helen Hartley Jenkins entered into a trust agreement whereby she transferred a large amount of property to be held in trust. The agreement, to which we shall refer as the first agreement, stated the purpose to be to create a trust for the benefit of her daughter, Grace Hartley Jenkins, who was to receive the net income of the property, and should she be alive at the termination of the trust, which was to be at the end of *4 fifteen years, the principal. The donor reserved the right at any time to modify or supplement the agreement in any way she saw fit, provided it was not for her own benefit. On January 13th, 1921, exercising the reserved power to modify the trust, she executed another agreement, which we shall refer to as the second agreement, in terms supplementing and becoming a part of the original agreement, but in effect constituting an almost complete substitute for it. Under this agreement Grace Hartley Jenkins was to receive the income of the property until the donor’s death, and thereafter certain amounts were to be expended for the benefit of two grandchildren of the donor, Francis Geer, Jr. and Helen Hartley Geer, until the youngest reached the age of twenty-one, and they or their children were ultimately to receive the principal. The donor again reserved the right to modify or supplement the instrument, provided it was not for her own benefit.

While it is not stated in the stipulation of facts, it is apparent from the record that previous to the execution of the second agreement the donor’s daughter, Grace Hartley Jenkins, had been married, and it is stipulated that, subsequent to the execution of the agreement, two children were born to her, Helen Hartley Mead on November 24th, 1922, and Edwin Winter Mead on December 23d, 1923. On March 25th, 1925, the donor, again exercising her power to modify or supplement the previous agreement, executed a further agreement, to which we shall refer as the third agreement, which was stated to be a supplement to and part of the two previous agreements, all to constitute one complete document and to be administered to make one consistent whole. The relevant portions of the three agreements to which we have referred are given *5 in the footnote. On the same day she made the third agreement she also executed a further modification of *6 the agreements, in which she surrendered her reserved power to make changes in the terms of the trust. She died April 24th, 1934.

*7 The first question raised by the interrogatories concerns the right of Helen Hartley Mead and Edwin *8 Winter Mead, the grandchildren named in the third agreement, to share in the benefits of the trust. That the donor intended that they should share equally with her other grandchildren named in the second agreement, at least in some of the benefits provided, is apparent from even a casual reading of the third agreement. That instrument is far from precise in its terms and evidences a considerable degree of confusion in the mind of the draftsman. For example, it confirms the “administrative clauses” of the trust which relate to the payment of income during the lifetime of the donor’s daughter, Grace Hartley Jenkins, and her *9 nephew Marcellus Hartley Dodge; but as modified by the second agreement the trust provides for the payment of income to the daughter only during the term of the trust or, if the donor died before the end of that term, only until her death, and any provision for payment of income to the nephew is eliminated. The lack of precision in the language used and the apparent confusion in the third agreement suggests two considerations we must have in mind. One is that we cannot expect to effectuate the intent of the donor by applying to the words used a precise or technical meaning, and the other, that the draftsman had in mind the provisions of the original agreement as well as those of the second.

The third section of the third agreement in terms provides that the right of the Mead children to share in the trust is to begin “Upon the termination of said Trust so far as relates to income, and when the principal shall be deliverable under the terms thereof.” As a portion of the principal of the fund becomes deliverable when Francis Geer, Jr., reaches the age of twenty-one, and as this would be before the yearly payments to the Geer children, which continue until Helen Hartley Geer reaches that age, about a year and a half later, would cease, it is not possible, if we assume that those yearly payments were intended to be included within the term “income,” to construe the two clauses in the quotation we have made as referring to the same time. If, on the other hand, we assume that the donor had in mind a distinction between the provision made for the payment of the income of the fund to her daughter until the donor’s death, if that occurred before the termination of the trust, and the provision for yearly payments for the benefit of the grandchildren, then the rights of the Mead children would arise upon the donor’s death. *10 It is further provided in the third agreement that the shares “hereby set aside” for the Mead children are to be taken “under the same conditions and be administered in the same manner as the said shares set aside” for the Geer children, and also that the effect of the provision is to be to insert the Mead children “as equal beneficiaries under said trust, under all the conditions, limitations and provisions for administration as the same are therein set forth.” Certainly the Mead children cannot be “equal beneficiaries under said trust” unless they share in income as well as principal, and the references to the administration of the trust would mean little unless they are applied to the distribution of income as well as principal. The phrase at the beginning of the article, “Upon the termination of said Trust so far as relates to income,” must be taken in a restrictive sense. This article follows immediately upon the second, which confirms and ratifies the provisions of the trust relating to the payment of income to the donor’s daughter and her nephew. Disregarding the latter, as we must, the mind of the draftsman in using the phrase last quoted, “termination of said Trust so far as relates to income,” must have centered upon the provision for income payments to the daughter. Only by so construing it can we give a sensible meaning to the third article as a whole. The Mead children are, then, entitled to share in yearly payments to be made beginning with the death of the donor.

That being so, it becomes of importance to determine the nature of the rights of the Geer children under the provision for yearly payments to them. Beyond most trusts, the one before us specifically imposes upon the trustees the duty of interesting themselves in the welfare and education of the children named as beneficiaries. To that end the trustees are directed “in the exercise ... of their various powers” *11

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 A. 27, 121 Conn. 1, 1936 Conn. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-mead-conn-1936.