Delaware Trust Co. v. Delaware Trust Co.

95 A.2d 569
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 19, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 95 A.2d 569 (Delaware Trust Co. v. Delaware Trust Co.) 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. Delaware Trust Co., 95 A.2d 569 (Del. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

95 A.2d 569 (1953)

DELAWARE TRUST CO.
v.
DELAWARE TRUST CO. et al.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

March 19, 1953.

*570 David F. Anderson (of Berl, Potter & Anderson), Wilmington, for plaintiff.

W. Reese Hitchens and H. James Conaway, Jr. (of Hering, Morris, James & Hitchens), Wilmington, for defendants Agnes Hubbard, Richard Hubbard, Eva V. Lofland, William Carney, Nell A. Beardsley, Edward Stewart, Linda Elizabeth Stewart, Linda Stewart Eklof and Agnes Hubbard Tisch.

Houston Wilson, Georgetown, for defendant Elizabeth Vaules Carlisle.

Howard Duane, Wilmington, for defendant Lester L. Carlisle, Jr.

Lawrence C. Elliott, Georgetown, for defendant Christian Science Soc. of Milford.

SEITZ, Chancellor.

The principal issue is whether a power of appointment created by an inter vivos trust instrument was exercised in the trustor's will.

This is a complaint for instructions by the executor and trustee under the will of Mary Blanche Carlisle Hirsch. All defendants have appeared by counsel except Carlisle Hubbard, Alice Mitchell Hubbard, Lulu C. Darby, John C. Darby and The First Church of Christ Scientist, Boston, Massachusetts, and a default judgment has been entered against them.

Mary Blanche Carlisle Hirsch (hereafter called the "trustor" or "testatrix") entered into an inter vivos trust agreement with Delaware Trust Company on December 21, 1940. Under this agreement she deposited with the Delaware Trust Company, as trustee, certain cash and securities having a value of about $125,000. She reserved the right to add to, withdraw from or revoke the trust in whole or in part. The net income was to be paid to her until her death or until she revoked the agreement. It was provided that upon her death:

"the trustee shall assign, transfer and deliver the trust fund as then constituted, as directed and appointed by the last Will and Testament of the Trustor or in the absence of such direction and appointment unto the next of kin of the Trustor according to the intestate law of the State of Delaware."

At the time the trust agreement was executed in December 1940 the trustor was a childless widow well advanced in years. Her next of kin at that date were as follows:

1. Carlisle L. Hubbard, Agnes Hubbard and Linda Elizabeth Stewart, the children of her deceased sister, Linda Carlisle Hubbard.

2. Paris T. Carlisle III, her brother; and

3. Lester L. Carlisle, her brother.

There is no evidence as to whether the trustor had a will in 1940. The trustor made a will in 1944 and another will in 1948. Neither of these wills, which were superseded by her last will of 1950, mentions the inter vivos trust or trust property.

The trustor died on June 18, 1951 leaving a will executed August 2, 1950 and a codicil, not here material except that it reaffirmed the will, executed May 22, 1951, and without having terminated the trust during her lifetime. At the time the testatrix executed her will and down to the date of her death, her next of kin under the Delaware intestacy law were:

1. Carlisle L. Hubbard, Agnes Hubbard, and Linda Elizabeth Stewart, the children *571 of her deceased sister, Linda Carlisle Hubbard.

Carlisle L. Hubbard had two children, Richard Hubbard and Agnes Hubbard Tisch; Agnes Hubbard was unmarried and about 68 years of age in 1950. Linda Elizabeth Stewart had two children, Edward Stewart and Linda Stewart Eklof.

2. Elizabeth Vaules Carlisle, daughter of her deceased brother, Paris T. Carlisle III, who died August 3, 1942;

Elizabeth Vaules Carlisle was 54 years of age in 1950 and unmarried.

3. Lester L. Carlisle, Jr., son of her deceased brother, Lester L. Carlisle, who died November 12, 1945.

Lester L. Carlisle, Jr., has one child, Richard Carlisle born in March 1951.

There is no express reference in the will of the testatrix to the inter vivos trust of 1940 or to her power of appointment thereunder. Nor is there any reference to the property making up the corpus of the trust as such. In her will she first made specific bequests including jewelry to various named nieces, grand-nieces and the wife of a nephew. She bequeathed her home furniture to her niece Agnes Hubbard, and $5,000 to her niece Linda Elizabeth Stewart. She then bequeathed small sums of money to three individuals. Finally she placed the residue in trust with a direction to the trustee:

"to receive and take over and retain so long as it shall deem it advisable, the securities in which my personal estate shall be invested at the time of my death * * *."
"The net income arising from the trust fund shall be paid in equal shares to Agnes Hubbard and to Elizabeth Vaules Carlisle in monthly payments so long as they both shall live, and upon the death of either of them, then the full income shall be paid in monthly installments to the survivor of them during the life of such survivor."
"Upon the death of the last survivor * * * I order and direct my said Trustee to pay over all the balance of my Estate * * * free and discharged of all trusts, as follows: * * *."

She then directs that $5,000 shall be paid to The Christian Science Society, Milford, Delaware; that ¾ of the balance shall go per stirpes to Edward Stewart and Linda Stewart Eklof, children of Linda Elizabeth Stewart, and that the remaining ¼ go per stirpes to Richard Hubbard and Agnes Tisch, children of Carlisle L. Hubbard. No member of the Lester Carlisle branch is mentioned in the will or codicil. The testatrix also directed that various taxes should be paid by the executor from the estate.

The testamentary estate of the testatrix was worth about $102,000 at the date the will was executed. It was about $97,000 at the date of her death. The inter vivos trust made up of stocks, bonds and cash, had a market value of about $220,000 at the death date, although it increased thereafter. In view of the values known to the testatrix it must be inferred that she was aware of the operation of her will upon her property. Moreover, in view of the relatively unchanged condition of her finances between the date her will was executed and the date of her death, it seems fair to consider the actual disposition under her will as though it were within the contemplation of the testatrix when she executed her will and codicil. The personal property in the so-called testamentary estate at the date of death was valued at $51,000, but all except $750 was used to cover bequests, expenses, taxes, etc. Thus only $750 along with real estate having a value of $46,000 passed into the residuary trust, leaving aside the inter vivos trust property. One of the two pieces of real estate, the home of the testatrix, was worth about $22,500. The other is a farm having a value of $23,500 which produced a yearly net income for the period of 1940 to 1950 of about $500.

The testatrix was in fact advised as to the nature and value of the assets in the trust corpus practically up until the date of her death. It also appears that she was a reasonably competent person and aware of her personal affairs.

*572 The Duane-Wilson defendants seem to suggest that the evidence of the surrounding circumstances are generally inadmissible unless the will is "ambiguous". In resolving these questions I shall apply to the evidence the following guide so well stated for the Supreme Court of Delaware by Judge Rodney in Bird v. Wilmington Society of Fine Arts, 28 Del.Ch.

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