Camden Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Guerin

99 A. 105, 87 N.J. Eq. 72, 2 Stock. 72, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 12
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 25, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 99 A. 105 (Camden Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Guerin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camden Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Guerin, 99 A. 105, 87 N.J. Eq. 72, 2 Stock. 72, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 12 (N.J. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Beaming, Y. C.

Tlie bill of complaint in tliis suit lias been filed by trustees under the will of Joseph Ogden Cuthbert, deceased, and seeks directions from this court touching the administration of the trust. All persons interested in the estate have been made defendants.

Testator died November 30th, 1887. After certain specific bequests testator devised and bequeathed the residue of his estate to certain designated persons and to their heirs and assigns and successors in office in trust, and specifically defined the nature and extent of the trust.

• The trust which is declared by the will first has- reference to the disposition which the trustees are directed to make of the net income of the residuary estate during the continuance of the trust and deals with various contingencies which are to determine the persons to whom' the net income shall be payable from time to time. It is then provided that upon the happening of certain contingencies the trustees shall distribute the corpus of the residuary estate in manner therein specifically set forth.

At the date of the will, as well as at testator’s death, he had three sons, a daughter and a granddaughter—the daughter of a deceased son—who, in absence of a will, would have been his heirs-at-law as well as his next of kin.

The provisions of the will for the termination of the trust and distribution of the corpus of the residuary estate are as follows:

“Upon tlie dentil of all my sons and daughter and granddaughter Mary Rue above named and their surviving husbands and wives; also after the death of all tlie children of tlie first generation of my said sons,( daughter and granddaughter Mary Rue, the trusts hereby created shall-cease, and the Trustees of this my will, or their successors in office,shall part, divide and distribute all' the residue of the capital of my. estate to and among the lawful grandchildren of my said sons, daughter and granddaughter Mary Rue, absolutely in. the shares and ■ proportions [74]*74above directed respecting the income, ■ clear of further trusts, per stirpes and not per capita."

The corpus of the residuary estate is thus given to vest at the death of persons who are not necessarily in being at the decease of testator. The well-defined rule of law against the creation of perpetuities forbids a gift which is to vest on a contingency of that nature. Husbands and wives of the children and grandchild of testator, and also children of testator’s children and grandchild, could come into being after the death of testator, and no gift could be lawfully made to vest at their death. It results that the gift of the corpus of the residuary estate wholly failed and that estate at the death of testator passed to his heirs-at-law and next of kin under our intestacy laws, subject to the operation of all lawful provisions of the trust relating to the management of the' estate and distribution of the income during such period as the trust could continue. The circumstance that the residuary estate was part personal property and part real estate is here immaterial, as tire heirs-at-law and next of bin of testator were identical at his decease. At the death of testator the equitable title to the corpus of his residuary estate accordingly passed to his four children and grandchild in equal shares, subject to the operation of all lawful provisions of the will relating to the trust for the management of the estate and distribution of the net income therefrom. Gray Per. § 414.

Joseph O. Cuthbert, Jr., one of the sons of testator, has since died without issue. His equitable title to the one-fifth share of the corpus of the residuary estate then vested in the three remaining children and the granddaughter" of testator, thus constituting each the equitable owner of one-fourth of the corpus, subject to the trust relating to the management of the corpus and distribution of the income. Each of these three remaining children of testator have since died leaving issue who have inherited their parents’ respective shares of the corpus, subject to the operation of the trust; the granddaughter of testator is still alive. The legal title to the corpus of the residuary estate "is still in the trustees for the purposes of the trust.

The trust created by the will for .the management of the residuary estate, and the distribution of the net income there[75]*75from, is also in conflict with the rule against perpetuities in some of the provisions of the trust; in other respects its provisions axe valid and will be enforced.

One-fifth of the net income is directed to be paid by the trustees to each of the four children of testator during their respective lives; one-half of the remaining one-fiftli to be paid to the granddaughter of testator for life and the other half to her mother for life. These are valid provisions of the trust and conferred upon each of these six beneficiaries a right to the shares of the income' named during their respective lives. As alfcady stated, the granddaughter of testator is still alive; all the children of testator are now deceased.

The trust next provided that upon the decease of the mother of the granddaughter her one-tenth share of the income should be paid to the granddaughter for life; the mother of the granddaughter is now deceased, and the granddaughter has thus become entitled to one-fifth of the net income. .

The trust then provides as follows:

“Upon the death of any of my sons or daughter or granddaughter Mary Rue leaving a wife or husband surviving them, one-third of the income so as aforesaid made payable to said decedent shall thereafter be paid to such surviving wife or husband for life, the remainder of said income shall be paid to the child or children of such decedent, if any, during the life of such children’s surviving parent. In case such son or daughter or granddaughter Mary Rue so dying should leave no wife or husband to survive them; also after the death of’any such surviving wife or husband; I give, devise and bequeath that fifth part of the share of the income of my estate so as aforesaid held in trust for such son, daughter or granddaughter Mary Rue for life, to all and every the child or children of such deceased son, daughter or granddaughter Mary Rue who may he living at the time of the death of such parent in equal parts and shares, during their respective lives to be paid to them by my said Trustees upon their own receipts only and so that the said capital and income shall not be subject to the debts, control or engagement of my grandchildren.” ■ ■

These provisions of the trust may be best considered in their application to the beneficiaries severally. As the granddaughter, Mary A. Bue, is still alive and has a husband and children living at this time, the several contingencies may be advantageously applied to her share of the income for purposes of illustration.

[76]*76It will be observed that in the event oí her decease leaving children and no husband surviving her, her one-fifth share of the income is made payable to her surviving children during their respective lives: This is a valid provision of the trust, as the rights of the surviving children are made to vest at the decease of a granddaughter specifically named in the will.

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Bluebook (online)
99 A. 105, 87 N.J. Eq. 72, 2 Stock. 72, 1916 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camden-safe-deposit-trust-co-v-guerin-njch-1916.