Dodge v. Dodge

32 A.2d 619, 69 R.I. 187, 1943 R.I. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 24, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 32 A.2d 619 (Dodge v. Dodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodge v. Dodge, 32 A.2d 619, 69 R.I. 187, 1943 R.I. LEXIS 43 (R.I. 1943).

Opinion

*188 Moss, J.

This suit in equity is before us on the complainants’ appeal from a decree of the superior court dismissing the bill of complaint after a hearing on the bill, answer and replication and the filing of a decision for the respondents.

The suit was brought on June 30, 1931 by Charles J. Dodge, Samuel R. Dodge and Helen F. Ernst against Frank C. Dodge, his wife Jeanne Dodge, and John W. Dodge, father of all the other parties except Jeanne Dodge. The principal relief prayed for in the bill is that certain described written instruments, executed after April 26, 1929, by the *189 respondents or some of them, be declared invalid and be cancelled.

The grounds upon which this relief is sought are that none of these instruments could be valid without the assent of the father, John W. Dodge; that he was not mentally competent to give it; and that his assent was procured by undue influence by the other respondents. These instruments were preceded by two other instruments, the validity of which was not in dispute. By the earlier of those two instruments, which was executed and acknowledged by John W. Dodge on April 25, 1929 and duly recorded, he conveyed all his real estate, located in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and all his personalty to his sons Charles and Frank upon the trusts set forth in the later of those two instruments, which was a declaration of trust, executed by these sons on April 26, 1929, and under which he was to be sole beneficiary during his lifetime.

In this declaration it was provided that at any time he could amend it, could remove any trustee and could fill any vacancy; and that upon his death his beneficial interest in the trust property should pass to such person or persons as he should, by instrument executed in his lifetime or by will, appoint.

Among the instruments, the validity of which was attacked in the bill of complaint, was one executed by the father, by which he removed his son Charles as one of the two trustees under the trust, appointing no successor and leaving his son Frank as the sole trustee up to the time of the hearing of the cause on its merits. Others of these instruments were deeds by which most of the trust properties, with the written assent of the father, had been conveyed free of the trust, by Charles, as trustee, to his wife, who had then conveyed them to Charles, free of the trust, subject, as to some of these properties, to life estates in the father.

The cause was heard in the superior court on bill, answer *190 and replication, in November 1931; and in the decision, filed by the trial justice on December 3, 1931, he found that the father was not mentally incompetent to give valid assent to the instruments which the complainants sought to have annulled. In this connection he called attention to the fact that it was proved that in September 1930 the probate court of the town of Barrington in this state had, by a decree, refused to grant either part of a petition filed by the complainants herein for the appointment of a guardian of the person and estate of their father and that no appeal from that decree had been taken.

The trial justice also found that the complainant Charles had not proved by a preponderance of the evidence that, by one of the instruments sought to be annulled, his father had improperly removed him as one of the trustees of the trusts created for the father’s benefit by the two earlier instruments above referred to, it not having been shown by the evidence that the removal had been brought about by-undue influence by the other respondents or either of them. He also found in substance that, as all of the complainants were only in the position of heirs and next of kin of their father during his lifetime, they had no present right in any of his property and therefore had no right to contest the validity of any of the other instruments which they sought to have annulled.

■ The complainants contended, at the hearing in the superior court on the merits of the cause, that they did have a vested or present interest in the trust property because of an instrument referred to as “Instructions to Trustee”. This was one of the instruments executed by their father after April 26, 1929 and the validity of which they denied in theii; bill of complaint, upon the grounds above stated.

That instrument was executed by the respondent John W. Dodge on December 19, 1929. Therein he described himself as the beneficiary in the above-described declaration of trust and stated that by virtue of the powers in him *191 vested and reserved thereby he instructed and empowered the trustee or trustees thereunder, at the termination of the trust, to distribute in a certain manner all the real and personal property then in the trust. According to the instructions therein set forth, a substantial portion of the trust property would have been distributable, at the termination of the trust, to each of the complainants Samuel R. Dodge and Helen F. Ernst.

The conclusion of this instrument was as follows: “I further certify that I have revoked and destroyed any and all wills and codicils heretofore made by me and that I execute this instrument in lieu of all testamentary dispositions.' IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand and seal and acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be my free act and deed, in presence of three (3) witnesses this nineteenth day of December A. D. 1929.” His signature and seal were then placed upon the instrument.

On the same date it was acknowledged to be his free act and deed before a notary public of Massachusetts, whose seal was placed upon it. Immediately after the acknowledgment' appears the following language: “On this nineteenth day of December, A. D. 1929 the above instrument was read over to and approved by John W. Dodge who signed, sealed and acknowledged the same in our presence and as witnesses thereof, we three (3) at his request and in his presence and in the presence of each other, hereto subscribe our names.” This is followed by the signatures of three persons. The instrument was recorded in the registries of deeds of Plymouth County, Massachusetts, and the town of Barrington, Rhode Island.

In his decision the trial justice said as to this instrument: “It would seem that this instrument was testamentary in character and was apparently executed under the provisions of Sec. 10 of the declaration of trust. It was also executed with all the formalities of a will and if testamentary presumably could be changed. The Court feels that it created *192 no such present interest in their father’s estate as would now be available to the complainants.”

After considering the language of that section of the declaration of trust which is above referred to and other pertinent sections of that declaration, we are of the opinion that if this instrument referred to as “Instructions to Trustee” was not actually a will, it so much partook of the character of a will that none of the complainants had, by virtue of it, any right, title or interest in any of the trust property or assets during the lifetime of their father.

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Related

Marcaccio v. Marcaccio
65 A.2d 720 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 A.2d 619, 69 R.I. 187, 1943 R.I. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodge-v-dodge-ri-1943.