Congregational Home Missionary Society v. Thames Bank & Trust Co.

14 A.2d 626, 127 Conn. 1, 1940 Conn. LEXIS 225
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 6, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 A.2d 626 (Congregational Home Missionary Society v. Thames Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Congregational Home Missionary Society v. Thames Bank & Trust Co., 14 A.2d 626, 127 Conn. 1, 1940 Conn. LEXIS 225 (Colo. 1940).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

These are appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court which vacated an order of distribution made by the Court of Probate for the district of Norwich under the will of Henry B. Norton, and which directed a distribution of a certain portion of the estate in a manner different from that decreed by the Court of Probate. Henry B. Norton died in 1891, leaving a will, executed in 1884, with two codicils made respectively in 1887 and 1889. In the will he first gave to his wife for her life the homestead he had occupied and to her, absolutely, its furnishings and accessories. He then gave “all the rest and residue of my estate of every kind” to a trustee, the income to be distributed among his wife, so long as she lived, his four daughters or their issue, and others, and the principal to be distributed at the death of the last survivor of his daughters among their issue, but if there were no such issue, then among certain persons and institutions; and he made a final provision directing that “all the rest and residue” of his estate should be divided among four charitable organizations. In the first codicil, his wife having died, he gave the homestead to his daughters until the death of the last survivor and also gave them the personal property he had originally bequeathed to his wife, and, as the gift of income to his wife had lapsed by her death, he directed that the whole net income from “the remainder” of' the estate should be disposed of as directed in the will. In the second codicil he made certain changes in the provisions for the distribution of the principal in the event that there were no surviving issue of his daughters at the death of the longest living; he ratified and confirmed all the “particular legacies” in his will except *5 as they were altered or revoked by the codicils; he made a further provision for the payment of a certain sum to a charitable organization; and then, reciting that in his will he had directed “the rest and residue of his estate” to be divided among the four charitable organizations therein named, he revoked that provision and directed that “the rest, residue and remainder” be divided among five charitable organizations. The testator’s wife and daughters having all died, the trust for their lives has terminated and the estate is ready for final distribution. The issues arising upon the appeal involve one paragraph of the will and two in the second codicil, which are quoted in the footnote. 1

We shall first consider the paragraph quoted from *6 the will. Of the persons named in it, two died before the termination of the trust, each leaving children, and the other two are now living. The initial question presented is whether the children of the two deceased legatees named in it can take under the will as “issue” of their mothers. It is claimed that the testator used the word “issue” in this paragraph as meaning children. Counsel contend that at the time the will was executed the word issue was generally regarded in its primary significance as synonymous with children. This contention is, however, unsound. Before the execution of the will, “issue” had the accepted primary meaning of descendants generally. Price v. Sisson (1860) 13 N. J. Eq. 168, 177; 2 Jarman, Wills (Ed. 1855) 25; 1 Bouvier, Law Dictionary (Ed. 1848) 730; 2 Burrill, Law Dictionary (Ed. 1871) 98. Reading the will as a whole, there can be no reasonable doubt but that the testator intended by the word “issue,” not children, but lineal descendants of every degree. Not only in this paragraph, but in other provisions, it is clear that he was thinking of such descendants not as children of the beneficiaries named, but as representatives of family stocks. For example, in one of the principal provisions of the will, he directed the distribution of income to his daughters and if any of them died leaving issue, then to such issue; and to hold that the testator intended issue to mean children in this provision would be to ascribe to him the conscious purpose to disinherit grandchildren of a daughter where they survived the termination of the trust but the daughter had died before that time. There is also significance in the fact that in two instances the testator did, in the will, use the word “children,” thus indicating that the words “children” and “issue” were not synonymous in his mind. In the first instance the testator described two legatees he named as the children of a deceased daugh *7 ter. In the other he made a gift of a portion of the principal at the expiration of the trust to Calvin Frisbie “and to any children of his who may survive him”; this is significant in view of the fact that when the will was made Calvin Frisbie did have living children; and while it is true that in the second codicil he changed the phraseology of this gift to read to Calvin Frisbie “and in case of his death before the termination of the trust leaving issue, the same to go to such issue,” this finds a ready explanation in that it would make this paragraph harmonious with all the others in the will and codicils where he made any provision for the descendants of named legatees.

When the testator died, the Statute against Perpetuities, quoted in the footnote, 1 was in force. In Leake v. Watson, 60 Conn. 498, 21 Atl. 1075, we construed the words “immediate issue or descendants” as used in it to mean children, and not grandchildren or other remote descendants. It is true that the provision in the will before the court in that case was not a gift to “issue” but one to the “heirs” of the testator’s daughters. However, as the court pointed out (page 508), the question whether or not that gift was valid necessarily depended upon the meaning to be given the words “immediate issue or descendants” in the statute and the construction it placed upon those words was directly involved in the decision. Since it was made, we have, in a long series of decisions, held that a gift to the “issue” of a person in being, unless the circumstances disclose that the testator used that word in other than its primary meaning of descendants of any *8 degree, is invalid under the statute. White v. Allen, 76 Conn. 185, 189, 56 Atl. 519; Thomas v. Castle, Id., 447, 56 Atl. 854; Bartlett v. Sears, 81 Conn. 34, 41, 70 Atl. 33; Perry v. Bulkley, 82 Conn. 158, 165, 72 Atl. 1014; Pease v. Cornell, 84 Conn. 391, 395, 80 Atl. 86; Sumner v. Westcott, 86 Conn. 217, 222, 84 Atl. 921; Wallace v. Wallace, 103 Conn. 122, 134, 130 Atl. 116; Comstock v. Bridgeport Trust Co., 106 Conn. 514, 518, 138 Atl. 440; Warren v. Duval, 124 Conn. 448, 452, 200 Atl. 804; Thames Bank & Trust Co. v. Adams, 125 Conn. 656, 660, 7 Atl. (2d) 836. In some twenty-other decisions involving gifts to “heirs,” “legal representatives” and the like, we have followed the construction placed upon the statute in Leake v. Watson and held them invalid. In Tingier v. Chamberlin,

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Bluebook (online)
14 A.2d 626, 127 Conn. 1, 1940 Conn. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/congregational-home-missionary-society-v-thames-bank-trust-co-conn-1940.