Cramer v. Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co.

147 A. 139, 110 Conn. 22, 73 A.L.R. 201, 1929 Conn. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 25, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 147 A. 139 (Cramer v. Hartford-Connecticut 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
Cramer v. Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co., 147 A. 139, 110 Conn. 22, 73 A.L.R. 201, 1929 Conn. LEXIS 4 (Colo. 1929).

Opinion

Maltbie, J.

This action is brought by the administrator upon the estate of Grace D. Dodd against The Hartford-Connecticut Trust Company, named trustee in a certain instrument purporting to be a trust agreement, executed and delivered by her to it, and also against the administrator of the estate of one of the *24 beneficiaries named in that instrument and against a living beneficiary, claiming that the instrument be declared null and void, and that the defendant Trust Company account for the property received under it and for damages. In the fourth count of the complaint it was alleged that the property transferred to the Trust Company was not within the term “securities” as used in the instrument and that the Trust Company had taken and held it as agent and servant of Mrs. Dodd and had refused to surrender it to the plaintiff on demand. A fifth count was added by amendment, in which it was alleged that the agreement was testamentary in character and that, not having been executed in accordance with the provisions of the statute governing the execution of wills, it was invalid and void. By agreement of counsel and in accordance with the provisions of § 5636 of the General Statutes, the trial court heard and determined the issues arising under the fourth and fifth counts before the trial of certain issues raised by the other counts. From its decision, upholding the instrument as creating a valid trust of the property transferred to the Trust Company, the plaintiff has appealed.

On October 7th, 1921, Mrs. Dodd’s husband committed. suicide, leaving a will in which the defendant Trust Company was named executor. Mrs. Dodd was at the time disabled by paralysis so th'at she could only speak a few words át a time and could not write with her right hand. One of the trust officers of the Trust Company called upon her and a power of attorney was executed by her to it. When Mr. Dodd’s safe deposit box was opened, most of Mrs. Dodd’s property was found in it, and the Trust Company, under the power of attorney, took possession of it, gave Mrs. Dodd a receipt, and thereafter, until November, 1921, held it as her agent. Mrs. Dodd expressed a wish to *25 make some provision with reference to her property so that it would not go to her relatives. As a result, the instrument in question, a copy of which is printed in the footnote, was drawn up by the officer of the Trust *26 Company- and executed by her, she signing it with her left hand, which she had learned to use. Thereafter *27 the Trust Company transferred all the property referred to in the schedule annexed to it from an account in which it had carried them as attorney to a trustee account, caused all the certificates of stock to be transferred into its name as trustee, and withdrew and invested the various savings accounts except one, Mrs. Dodd signing the necessary papers to accomplish these changes. Thereafter the Trust Company held the property as a trust fund, at times changed the investments without consulting her, paid her bills and from time to time sent her small sums of money. Within a month of the execution of the instrument and at other times Mrs. Dodd said that she had given her money to the Trust Company.

Whatever the natural or technical meaning of the word “securities” the instrument before us makes it perfectly certain that it was here used to include the property, including her savings bank accounts transferred to the Trust Company; for the instrument recites the desire of Mrs. Dodd to transfer and the actual transfer of the “securities set forth” in the schedule which is annexed to it, and in that schedule the property is listed in detail. No question is made that there was a sufficient transfer of the property included in the instrument to the Trust Company to sustain the trust if one was validly created. By the terms of the instrument Mrs. Dodd divested herself of the legal title to the property referred to in it and the schedule and vested that title in the Trust Company, with full power to manage and control it, reserving only to herself the net income for her life, a right to such part of the principal as the trustee might deem necessary for her maintenance, comfort and support, and a power to revoke the trust. She did not thereafter have such control over the use and management of the property that the Trust Company is to be deemed merely her *28 agent. Lyle v. Burke, 40 Mich. 499; Warsco v. Oshkosh Savings & Trust Co., 183 Wis. 156, 196 N. W. 829. “A power of revocation is perfectly consistent with the creation of a valid trust.” Stone v. Hackett, 78 Mass. (12 Gray) 227, 232. That she intended something more than a mere agency is apparent from the fact that the Trust Company was acting under a power of attorney for her in the management of her affairs when the instrument in question was executed.

The invalidity of the agreement, if it is invalid, must be because it was in fact a testamentary disposition of the property, not executed as required by our statute of wills. That there may be a valid trust where property is transferred to a trustee with a reservation of a life use to the settlor and at his death upon a further trust for other beneficiaries or to pay over to designated persons does not admit of doubt. Candee v. Connecticut Savings Bank, 81 Conn. 372, 71 Atl. 551; Blodgett v. Union & New Haven Trust Co., 97 Conn. 405, 116 Atl. 908; Burbank v. Stevens, 104 Conn. 17, 22, 131 Atl. 742; Bromley v. Mitchell, 155 Mass. 509, 511, 30 N. E. 33; Kelley v. Snow, 185 Mass. 288, 70 N. E. 89; Lewis v. Curnutt, 130 Iowa, 423, 106 N. W. 914; 1 Perry on Trusts (7th Ed.) p. 119. The essential difference between such a trust and a will is that the former acts at once to vest the interest in the beneficiaries, although enjoyment is postponed until the death of the settlor, while the latter does not take effect until death and until then no interest can vest. 1 Perry on Trusts (7th Ed.) p. 119. “The essential characteristic of an instrument testamentary in its nature is, that it operates only upon and by reason of the death of the maker. Up to that time it is ambulatory. By its execution the maker has parted with no rights and divested himself of no modicum of his estate, and per contra no rights have accrued to and no *29 estate has vested in any other person. The death of the maker establishes for the first time the character of the instrument. . . . Upon the other hand, to the creation of a valid express trust it is essential that some estate or interest should be conveyed to the trustee, and, when the instrument creating the trust is other than a will, that estate or interest must pass immediately. . . . But it is important to note the distinction between the interest transferred and the enjoyment of that interest. The enjoyment of the cestui

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Bluebook (online)
147 A. 139, 110 Conn. 22, 73 A.L.R. 201, 1929 Conn. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cramer-v-hartford-connecticut-trust-co-conn-1929.