Dexter v. Evans

27 A. 308, 63 Conn. 58, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 7, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 27 A. 308 (Dexter v. Evans) 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
Dexter v. Evans, 27 A. 308, 63 Conn. 58, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 23 (Colo. 1893).

Opinion

BALDWIN, J.

The testator, in the will which is the subject of this action, after a bequest to his wife “for her support in lieu of dower,” proceeds as follows:

“ I give to my beloved wife, Eliza K. Evans, five hundred dollars, for her to help her sister Catherine White, as she sees fit. I also give to my beloved wife five hundred dollars for her to help her sister' Rachel Kennedy, as she sees fit. I also give Eliza K. Evans, my beloved wife, five hundred dollars, for her to help her sister Julia Eddy, as she may see fit. • I also give Eliza'K. Evans, my beloved wife, five hundred dollars, for her to help her brother Archibald Kennedy, as she may see fit. At the decease of my beloved wife the remainder and residue of the above legacies to go to Walter P. White, who will do by his mother and uncle as he may see fit, and also to see that Rachel Kennedy and Julia Eddy are comfortably provided for during their *60 life-time, unless Eliza K. Evans, my wife, sees fit to make a will and dispose of the remainder and residue of these legacies differently, then they go as she wills.”

Catherine White has died since the testator’s decease; Rachel, Julia and Archibald Kennedy are in advanced years, and straitened circumstances.

The will contains some charitable gifts and provisions in favor of several of the nearest relatives of the testator, two of whom are also made residuary legatees, subject to a life estate in his widow, who is appointed executrix. The last bequest, following the residuary clause, reads thus:

“ I give, devise and bequeath to my beloved wife, Eliza K. Evans, five hundred dollars, for her to use as she may see fit in caring for Clara M. Evans, now Mrs. Campbell.”

The case is reserved for our advice as to the construction and effect of the clauses above quoted.

In each of them, while the widow is the legatee, the expressed purpose is that, through her, another person maybe benefited. Her own support was otherwise provided for.

The last of the legacies is given to the widow “ for her to use, as she may see fit, in caring for ” Clara M. Campbell. It can therefore be used for no other purpose. The time and manner of such expenditures are left to the honest discretion of the widow, but she is a trustee for the use specified, and takes the money, in the language of Lord ELDON in King v. Denison, 1 Vesey & Beames, 268, 272, not subject to a particular purpose, but for a particular purpose. Loving v. Loving, 100 Mass., 340, 342. Such a construction has been given by this court to expressions quite similar, in Strong v. Strong, 8 Conn., 408, 413, and Bristol v. Austin, 40 Conn., 438, 442.

The language of the other legacies, which provide for assistance to certain relatives of the widow, is less decisive of the testator’s intention, but we are of opinion that by these also he designed to create a trust estate of the same nature, and has used words Sufficient for his purpose. Each legacy is given to the widow “ for her to help ” the person designated, as (not if) she may see fit. That he cofitemplated her giving *61 such help to some extent is evident from the bequest of “ the remainder and residue ” of the legacies upon her decease. Upon that event, in the absence of any contrary directions in her will, Walter P. White will take any residue which may be unexpended, whether of one or all of these legacies, as a common fund, in trust to apply it (his mother, Catherine White, having died) for the benefit of his uncle, Archibald Kennedy, and in providing for the comfort of his aunts, Rachel and Julia Kennedy, in such manner and proportions as, in the exercise of an honest discretion, he may from time to time see fit.

The words “ who will do by his mother and uncle as he may see fit,” while precatory in form, we regard as mandatory in effect. That the testator used them with this intention is apparent from the next clause, which provides that he is “also to see that Rachel Kennedy and Julia Kennedy are comfortably provided for during their life-time.” He was to aid his mother and uncle, and “ also ” his aunts.

The succeeding clause, which qualifies the legacy to Walter P. White by adding “ unless Eliza K. Evans, my wife, sees fit to make a will and dispose of the remainder and residue of these legacies differently, then they go as she wills,” we think must be limited in effect to the manner of accomplishing the purposes of the trust, and cannot defeat the existence of the trust. The testator had set apart $2,000 as a means of helping four of his wife’s relatives, and foreseeing that she might not think it judicious to expend the whole during her life-time, selected her nephew as a proper person to succeed her in the trust. He might, however, reasonably contemplate and provide for her possible preference for some other successor, or her desire that the distribution of the unexpended balance should be continued according to the rule of her own discretion rather than that of any new trustee. The clause under consideration would give her such a power, and should, we think, receive no broader construction.

Should the legacy for the benefit of Mrs. Campbell not be expended during the life-time of Mrs. Evans, a new trustee should be appointed to apply the balance remaining, from *62 time to time, in caring for Mrs. Campbell, according to her needs. Birch v. Wade, 3 Vesey & Beames, 198, 200.

, It is to be presumed that these trusts will be wisely and fairly administered, but should there be any failure to exercise an honest discretion in favor of the respective beneficiaries, they could obtain proper relief either from the court of probate or in an equitable action. In re Simons’s Will, 55 Conn., 239, 243; Smith v. Wildman, 37 Conn., 384; 1 Jarman on Wills, 696.

“ If it appear to be the intention of the parties from the whole instrument creating it that the property conveyed is to be held or dealt with for the benefit of another, a court of equity will affix to it the character of a trust,- and impose corresponding duties upon the party receiving the title, if it be capable of lawful enforcement. * * * In the case of Costabadie v. Costabadie, 6 Hare, 410, 414, Vice Chancellor Sir James Wig-ram said : ‘If the gift be subject to the discretion of another person, so long as that person exercises a sound and honest discretion I am not aware of any principle or any authority upon which the court should deprive the party of that discretionary power. Where a proper and honest discretion is exercised, the legatee takes all that the testator gave or intended he should have — that is, so much as in the honest and reasonable exercise of that discretion he is entitled to. That is the measure of the legacy.’ But it is always for the court eventually to say, when called upon, whether the discretion has been either exercised at all, or exercised honestly and in good faith.” Colton v. Colton, 127 U. S. R., 300, 310, 321.

Should Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
27 A. 308, 63 Conn. 58, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dexter-v-evans-conn-1893.