Eggleston v. Merriam

85 N.W. 937, 83 Minn. 98, 1901 Minn. LEXIS 635
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 3, 1901
DocketNos. 12,514 — (101)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 85 N.W. 937 (Eggleston v. Merriam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eggleston v. Merriam, 85 N.W. 937, 83 Minn. 98, 1901 Minn. LEXIS 635 (Mich. 1901).

Opinions

LOVELY, J.

Under the issues in this action, a construction of the second paragraph of the will of the late John L. Merriam, providing for bequests to his executors, as trustees, of such “an amount of securities as will produce a net annual income” of $600 per year for the plaintiff, who was the sister of the testator, is required. The fourth paragraph of this same instrument, providing an annual income of $8,000 from a fund to be set apart from the estate of deceased, was construed by this court in Merriam v. Merriam, 80 Minn. 254, 83 N. W. 162. The second paragraph of the will is referred to in the opinion in that case, but, while in many respects similar, was not distinctly passed upon. In the provision for his sister (Mrs. Carrie C. Eggleston), as well as for Mrs. Merriam, securities were to be selected by the executors, and held in trust to produce an annual income for the beneficiary. In the case of Mrs. Eggleston securities were selected, but, as in the case of Mrs. Merriam, have materially diminished in value, and the question before the trial court in this case, as on the appeal in Mer[100]*100riam v. Merriam, is whether the selection of such securities by the executors was absolute, and must be considered a changeless fund. The trial court in this case held that the securities which were selected for Mrs. Eggleston constituted the sole fund from which an annual income is to be derived for her, and made findings to that effect. After denial of a motion for a new trial, the determination of the court below is brought here by the plaintiff for review.

It was conceded on the argument of this appeal, as well as in the brief of respondents’ counsel, that the construction of the fourth paragraph of the will for the benefit of Mrs. Merriam (Merriam v. Merriam, supra) was correct, but that the paragraph of the will for the benefit of Mrs. Eggleston, and the fourth paragraph, which was passed upon in that case, are distinguishable; that, while the court was justified in its conclusion that the provision for the benefit of the testator’s widow was a demonstrative legacy, the peculiar phraseology of the legacy for Mrs. Eggleston was so different in material respects that the authority of the previous decision does not affect the construction of the bequest for her, which was a specific legacy; hence the inquiry whether Merriam v. Merriam, supra, controls the decision in this case is an important question on this review. For the purpose of comparison, it is best to quote both paragraphs, so far as applicable: The second paragraph of the will has the following provision:

“Second. I give and bequeath unto my executors, as trustees, and unto their successors as such, such an amount of my interest-bearing securities as will produce a net annual income of seven hundred dollars ($700) per year, which said securities they shall set apart, hold, and reinvest as such trustees; and out of which said net annual income they shall pay over to my sister Mrs. C. C. Eggleston, wife of R. D. Eggleston, of St. Paul, Minnesota, the sum of six hundred dollars ($600) per year, for and during her natural life, from the date of my death. * * And as and when the said Mrs. O. C. Eggleston * * * shall have deceased, * * * so much of the said securities as shall have been so held in trust to provide the said annuity for such deceased shall be forthwith released and discharged from such trust, and the same, with any net accumulations thereof, shall thereupon become a part and parcel of the rest and residue of my estate, to be disposed of under the succeeding provisions of this will.”

[101]*101The material part of the fourth paragraph of the will is as follows :

“My executors shall set apart from or provide out of my estate such interest or dividend-bearing securities as shall be sufficient to produce a certain annual net income of at least eight thousand dollars ($8,000) per year, and which said net income they shall collect and pay over to my said wife therefrom the sum of eight thousand dollars ($8,000) per year, in quarterly instalments, for and during her natural life, for her own absolute use and disposal.”

It was also conceded, as was necessary under the authority of the previous decision, that if the bequest to Mrs. Eggleston was a demonstrative legacy, upon the diminution of the producing capacity of the securities set apart for her income below the sum of $600 per year she might have further securities set apart, or enough of the principal fund selected by the executors applied to insure her the annual amount of $600 during life; so that it becomes important to ascertain what material difference exists between the substantial features of the bequest to the sister and that to the wife.

The conditions which controlled the view of this court, as expressed in the opinion in the former case, were that the provision of the testator for an annual income of a certain sum to be paid during life, in view of all other provisions of the will, indicated a primary intent to secure that sum to the legatee. In this respect we are unable to discover any practical distinction between the two legacies. Some stress in construing the fourth paragraph was placed upon the use of the words, “sufficient to produce a certain annual net income”; in the provision for Mrs. Eggleston, the language is, “such securities as will produce a net annual income,” — a difference in phraseology, but of no practical significance, as indicating a distinction in the intention of the testator.

In the fourth paragraph the executors were to select securities that should produce the income; but here, also, there is no limitation of the time when the securities were to be selected. Here, as there, likewise, the amount of the producing capacity should continue during the life of the beneficiary, which is the essential and controlling test of their actual and continuing value; and, while [102]*102the collocation of words is different in the different paragraphs, such verbal arrangement does not materially change the substantial rights of the parties, either as to who should execute the trust or the substantial benefits to be derived therefrom; the difference is, in fact, merely “formal and modal.” We can no more say that it was the intention of the testator (reading and construing the will by its four corners) that the first selection of securities for an annual income during the lifetime of the legatee should control than under the provision for the benefit of Mrs. Merriam. In this, as in that, instance the controlling purpose of giving a certain sum for an annual income during life seems to us to be conclusive, and the manner in which this is to be carried out by the selection of securities is subordinate to, and unhampered by, conditions other than that such securities will produce such income during that period, which it could not do if the first selection, subject to the vicissitudes of commercial changes in value, made such selection absolute and unchanging. The result of the administration of the estate shows that it is ample to carry out the beneficent purpose of continuing the income of the sister as well as the wife during the lifetime of each.

It was the duty of the executors to select enough securities at once to accomplish that purpose.

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Related

Estate of O'Gorman
6 Coffey 245 (California Superior Court, 1910)
Eggleston v. Merriam
90 N.W. 118 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 N.W. 937, 83 Minn. 98, 1901 Minn. LEXIS 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eggleston-v-merriam-minn-1901.