Dupont v. Pelletier

113 A. 11, 120 Me. 114
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 30, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 113 A. 11 (Dupont v. Pelletier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dupont v. Pelletier, 113 A. 11, 120 Me. 114 (Me. 1921).

Opinion

Spear, J.

This case involves the interpretation of the will of Pierre Emmanuel Dupont of Biddeford.

The first clause reads as follows: “I give, bequeathe and devise all my estate, real, personal and mixed, wherever found and wherever situated, to the Community of Carmelites located and established in Montreal, in the Province of Quebec and Dominion of Canada, in trust nevertheless, to hold to them and to their successors in trust, for-the following purposes:

1. To pay to my nephew, Dr. Eugene Panneton, annually during his lifetime, the .sum of five hundred dollars, when he shall become permanently incapacitated from earning his own living; but if his incapacity is of a temporary character, then to pay-him a part of said sum of five hundred dollars, annually proportional to the time of his temporary incapacity.. My said trustees may .act upon their own good judgment and discretion in the matter, but a certificate of his attending physician shall be accepted as proof of his incapacity.

2. To pay to my sister, Emma Picard, annually during her lifetime, in event that she may need assistance, the sum of five hundred dollars; but if such needy condition is temporary, then to pay her a proportionate part' of said sum of five hundred dollars, proportional to the time .of her needs. My said trustees may act upon their own good judgment and discretion in the matter, but a certificate of her attending physician shall be accepted as proof of her needs.

3. It is my desire to establish in said Biddeford a monastery of the order of. Carmelites to be devoted to the spiritual interests of the French population of said Biddeford, and I direct my said trustees to appropriate all my estate, subject to the foregoing provisions, to this object, and it is my desire that the same be accomplished as soon as practicable; but if for any reason it is not feasible that such monastery be established in said Biddeford,- then the same may be established in another place, but it shall be devoted to the spiritual interests of such French population.

[117]*117Lastly — I do nominate and appoint Edouard Pelletier of said Biddeford, executor of this will and request and direct that he may be authorized to act as such without giving bonds; but in the event of his decease or that he declines to act, then I nominate and appoint Joseph Panneton executor of this will and direct and request that he may be authorized to act as such without being required to give bonds.

The solution of the questions raised in items 1 and 2, is comparatively clear. They fall in the same category as to how the total or partial incapacity in the one case, and the total or partial need in the other are to be ascertained. The testator in express terms leaves the determination of these matters to “good judgment and discretion” of the trustees, subject however to the final arbitration of the family physician.

The language of the testator in limiting the power of the trustees, in the exercise of their judgment, in the respects named, provides: “But a certificate of his attending physician shall be accepted, as proof of his incapacity;”, and of “her attending physician, as proof of her needs.”

It is contended that the word “proof” should be construed to mean “evidence” and that consequently the certificate cannot be regarded as final. We are of the opinion, however, that the word “proof” as used in these conditions in the will was intended by the testator to be used in the legal sense.

Evidence is but a medium of proof. Proof is the effect of evidence; is a deduction from evidence that produces conviction; the establishment of a fact by the evidence. But if the certificate is to be regarded as evidence, only, to whom would such evidence be referred, to determine whether it met the standard of proof? It must be to the trustees themselves, a proceeding which would merely remit the physician’s certificate to “their judgment and discretion” and render the limiting clause inane and void. While the words “proof” and “evidence,” in common usage, are sometimes employed indifferently, we are yet of the opinion that the phrase “shall be accepted as proof” was intended to mean that the certificate of the physician should be final. It furthermore seems reasonable, at least, that the testator conceived of this provision as a method of finally settling any controversy that might arise between the beneficaries and the trustees, as to the degree of disability or need, the very question now raised by Emma Picard.

[118]*118The trustees are invested with the same right to invoke the certificate as the beneficiaries. The limitation of this right to “his family physician” and “her family physician” not their family physician, removes any doubt as to whom the referee shall be. In other words the provision for the “certificate of the family physician” imposes a limitation upon both the beneficiaries and the trustees and furnishes a tribunal by which each can have their privileges as well as their rights determined.

It is therefore the opinion of the court that the trustees should act upon the certificate of the family physician as final proof of the total or partial incapacity or need of the beneficiaries as described in items 1 and 2.

The trustee named in item 3, declined to accept the trust and therefore left the trust estate without a trustee. The present temporary trustees wish also to be relieved. Upon this state of facts two questions arise:

First, the intention of the testator, as discovered from the language of item 3, and the explanatory circumstances.

Second, must the trust fail for want of a trustee?

The entire phraseology of item 3, considered in connection with the admissible evidential circumstances, is most potent evidence that the main object and manifest purpose of this devout priest, who had labored so long and administered so faithfully to his people, was the dedication of his estate to the promotion of the spiritual welfare of the people of his own nationality. As he expressed it, “To be devoted to the spiritual interests of the French population of said Biddeford,” a clearly charitable purpose. The monastery was conceived as a medium of administering this charitable trust. It was to act as trustee. It was not the end, but a means to the end. The provision, if not feasible to. erect the monastery in Biddeford, that it might be located in some other indefinite place, but wherever located, “it shall be devoted to the spiritual interests of such French population,” clearly indicates that the spiritual welfare- of the French people, and not a monastery, was uppermost in his mind. It was his central thought expressed at the beginning and the end of item 3, as an observation will prove. We feel confident that the paramount thought in the mind of this benevolent priest was the spiritual welfare of the people of his own nationality in the City of Biddeford, for whose destiny in life and death he had, for so many years, been their spiritual adviser.

[119]*119Accordingly the French population of the City of Biddeford are the well defined beneficiaries under the will of Father Dupont.

We now come to the second proposition: Must the trust fail for want of a trustee? The doctrine is too well established to require citation that a trust will not be permitted to fail for want of a trustee, if it can be legally avoided.

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Bluebook (online)
113 A. 11, 120 Me. 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupont-v-pelletier-me-1921.