Delaware Trust Co. v. Cleveland

61 A.2d 126, 30 Del. Ch. 339, 1948 Del. Ch. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 16, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 A.2d 126 (Delaware Trust Co. v. Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delaware Trust Co. v. Cleveland, 61 A.2d 126, 30 Del. Ch. 339, 1948 Del. Ch. LEXIS 74 (Del. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Seitz, Vice-Chancellor:

The problem of will construction confronting the court may be imagined when we consider that the will was drawn for the testatrix by a layman, who used a form procured from a law. office and made such additions and modifications as he deemed appropriate.

The testatrix executed the original will on August 28, 1940, while she was under observation in a Philadelphia hospital. On January 13, 1941, she executed a codicil to her will and she died on January 28, 1941.

The will and codicil are rather elaborate, but in order to understand the problem presented, it is necessary to quote from them at some length. The pertinent provisions of the will are as follows:

“Sixth: I own certain securities hereinafter listed, and said securities and property, together with the investments, reinvestments and proceeds thereof, and such other securities and property as may thereafter be received by the executor hereunder, are herein called the ‘Investment Fund’. * * * The executor shall hold, manage, invest and reinvest the Investment Fund, collect the income therefrom, * * *. The executor shall use and apply the net income of the Investment Fund to the payment of $50.00 monthly to my sister, Olive Garvin Cleveland, and $50.00 monthly to my brother, Edward Terrence Garvin, for the period of seven calendar years following my death. If during the continuance of this investment fund, the net income payable to the estate from such investment fund is insufficient to cover the monthly payments to be made to Olive Garvin Cleveland and Edward Terrence Garvin, then the executor is authorized and empowered in his sole discretion to pay over unto Olive Garvin Cleveland and Edward Terrence Garvin, so much of the principal of the Investment Fund as may from time to time be required to make up such insufficiency of income. * * *
“Ninth: Following the lapse of seven calendar years after my death, such securities that may be then remaining in the investment fund, I hereby authorize and empower my executor, if he so elects, to convert into cash and to negotiate an instrument with some reliable [341]*341insurance company whereby the proceeds of the investment fund may be used to purchase annuities that will provide for a monthly payment as near to $75.00 or more to Olive Garvin Cleveland and as near to $75.00 or more to Edward Terrence Garvin for the rest of their natural lives, with the provision that should either die before the other, then such payments remaining to be paid the deceased shall become payable to the survivor. In the event that said Olive Garvin Cleveland and Edward Terrence Garvin should die before the principal of the insurance contract becomes exhausted, then such part or parts of the principal remaining to be paid shall be paid to my niece, Jeanne Garvin Edwards or her heirs, in a lump sum. * * *”

The pertinent provisions of the codicil follow:

“Item III. Wherever in my said Last Will and Testament reference is made to the ‘Investment Fund’ and the administration, possession and distribution of the income and principal thereof by my executor, I do now direct that said ‘Investment Fund’ shall constitute my residuary estate, and I do give, devise and bequeath the same unto Delaware Trust Company, a corporation of the State of Delaware, to hold, administer and distribute the net income and principal thereof as my Trustee with all of the duties, powers and compensation granted in my Last Will and Testament unto my executor for like services.
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“Item VI: Should any part of my trust estate remain upon the death of my brother, Edward Terrence Garvin, and my sister, Olive Garvin Cleveland, I direct that item Ninth of my said Last Will and Testament be modified to provide payments of Seventy-five Dollars ($75.00) per month to Jean Edwards' in lieu of a lump sum payment to her and upon her death unto her issue, per stirpes, or, if there be no issue of the said Jean Edwards then living, unto my cousin Albert McLaverty, if living, or his issue, per stirpes, until the trust estate has been thereby exhausted.”

Under Item Sixth of the will an “Investment Fund” was created. The executor Edward Garvin, brother of the testatrix, was given the management of the “Investment Fund”, and directed to pay from the net income the sum of $50.00 a month to himself and to his sister Olive Cleveland for a period of seven calendar years following the death of the testatrix. If the net income proved insufficient to make such payments, the executor was authorized in his sole discretion to make up any insufficiency of income out of principal.

[342]*342Under Item Ninth of the will, after the lapse of the seven calendar years mentioned in Item Sixth, the executor was authorized, if he so elected, to convert the investment fund into cash and to purchase annuities to provide a monthly payment “as near to $75.00 or more” to Olive Cleveland and to Edward Garvin for the rest of their lives. It was provided that if Olive and Edward died before the funds from the annuity contract were exhausted, then the balance was to be paid to the niece Jeanne Edwards or her heirs. The will did not indicate what the executor was to do in the event he did not elect to purchase the annuities.

By her codicil the testatrix directed that the “Investment Fund” should constitute her residuary estate, and she appointed the Delaware Trust Company as trustee “to hold, administer and distribute the net income and principal thereof as my Trustee with all of the duties, powers and compensation granted in my Last Will and Testament unto my executor for like services.” She provided that should any part of her “trust estate” remain upon the death of her brother and sister, Item Ninth of her will should be modified to provide for certain payments to Jeanne Edwards and upon certain conditions to other relatives.

Seven calendar years have now elapsed since the death of the testatrix and no question as to operation of Item Sixth covering that period is here involved. The trustee has now reached the point where it must be advised as to its duties under Item Ninth of the will as modified by the codicil. At the termination of the seven calendar year period, the trustee only possessed sufficient money to purchase a joint survivorship annuity which would provide for monthly payments of about $33.50 during the joint lives of Olive Cleveland and Edward Garvin and during the life of the survivor.

The defendants Olive Cleveland and Edward Garvin contend that by virtue of the codicil to the will the testatrix left her residuary estate in trust and that the terms [343]*343of the trust are those which were to govern the annuity contract. They insist that under such terms they were each to receive $50.00 a month for the first seven years, and thereafter they each were to receive $75.00 a month and the survivor $150.00 a month for the balance of his life. They contend that the principal of the trust may be invaded to make such payments, and that any undistributed funds at the death of the survivor pass under Item VI of the codicil.

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Related

Cleveland v. Delaware Trust Co.
75 A.2d 564 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 A.2d 126, 30 Del. Ch. 339, 1948 Del. Ch. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaware-trust-co-v-cleveland-delch-1948.