Estate of Bjors

229 P.2d 468, 103 Cal. App. 2d 361
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 1951
DocketCiv. No. 14661
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 229 P.2d 468 (Estate of Bjors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Bjors, 229 P.2d 468, 103 Cal. App. 2d 361 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

103 Cal.App.2d 361 (1951)

Estate of VICTOR BJORS, Deceased. EDWARD BJORSES et al., Appellants,
v.
CROCKER FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SAN FRANCISCO, as Executor, etc., et al., Respondents.

Civ. No. 14661.

California Court of Appeals. First Dist., Div. One.

Apr. 10, 1951.

Henry B. Lister for Appellants.

Theodore M. Monell and Hilary H. Crawford for Respondents.

WOOD (Fred B.), J.

This is an appeal from a portion of the decree of final distribution in the estate of Victor Bjors, an appeal taken by Victor's sole surviving brother, Edward, by the son of Victor's predeceased sister, Ida, and by children and grandchildren of his predeceased sister, Wilhelmina. The appeal is from all of the decree except the portion thereof which distributed a $5,000 legacy to a friend of the testator.

Victor died January 7, 1947, a resident of the city and county of San Francisco. He was a man of advanced years and left an estate of the appraised value of $433,482.92. His will, executed June 18, 1946, and a codicil thereto, executed September 18, 1946, were proved January 27, 1947.

In his will, Victor recited that he was single and without issue; that his parents were no longer living; that one brother had died without issue; that his sisters Ida and Wilhelmina had died leaving children surviving them; that Edward was his only living brother; and that all of these relatives lived in Finland.

After making these recitals, he gave all of his estate in trust to Crocker First National Bank of San Francisco, specifying first the general and the specific powers of the trustee in the handling of the trust property and funds. Then followed the *363 dispositive provisions, in two parts: Paragraph III, headed "Beneficiaries," relating, principally, to payment of income to the persons and groups of persons designated therein; and paragraph IV, headed "Termination," relating to disposition of the corpus upon termination of the trust, or of the several trusts, for payment of income.

By his codicil, after giving $5,000 to a friend, Victor amended his will by making specific additions to and deletions from various portions of paragraphs III and IV of the will. He then ratified, approved, confirmed and adopted all of the provisions of the will as thus modified. It is one of these modifications that presents the problem upon this appeal.

The will (prior to modification) directed the payment of one-third of the income to the brother Edward during his lifetime (and upon Edward's death, distribution to his lineal descendants per stirpes), and two-thirds of the income to the children of the two sisters, Ida and Wilhelmina. By the codicil he reapportioned the income, allocating one-fifth to Edward, two- fifths to the children of Ida and Wilhelmina, and two-fifths to Otto Sigfred Edwardson, a son of Edward and a resident and citizen of the Dominion of Canada. The codicil supplemented this redistribution of income by inserting in the "Termination" paragraph the followng clause: "(c-1) This trust shall terminate as to the remainder of my estate upon the death of my said nephew, Otto Sigfred Edwardson, at which time said portion of my trust estate shall go, vest in and be delivered to his child or children, in equal shares, then living."

Does this clause mean that upon the death of Otto the trust terminates as to four-fifths thereof (the income payable to Otto and the income payable to the children of Ida and Wilhelmina) and that four-fifths of the corpus goes to the child or children of Otto, or that the trust then terminates only as to the two-fifths of the income allocated to Otto and that his children then take but two fifths of the corpus? The decree of distribution gives four- fifths of the corpus to the children of Otto, upon the death of Otto.

This termination clause can best be interpreted by reading it in its context. Paragraph III, relating to payment of income and paragraph IV, relating to termination, as amended by the codicil, [fn. *] read as follows: *364

"(III) Beneficiaries:"

"(a) I hereby direct my said Trustee to pay [TEXT STRICKEN]-[one-third]- one- fifth of the income from my said estate to my brother, Edward Bjorses, heretofore mentioned, in monthly instalments, or at less frequent intervals (not less frequently than annually); provided however, that said Trustee may, in its absolute discretion, pay such additional amounts to my brother as may be necessary for his maintenance and support, or for the maintenance, support, education and comfort of any of his children, or to cover any emergency or unexpected contingency which said Trustee deems it proper to pay hereunder. If necessary, said Trustee is authorized to advance to my said brother such amounts as may be required, in order to carry out the intentions hereof, from the principal or corpus of said trust estate;"

"(b) I hereby direct my said Trustee to pay [TEXT STRICKEN]-[the]- [TEXT STRICKEN]-[balance]- two-fifths of the income from my said estate to the children of my sisters, Wilhelmina Bjorses Philajamaki, also known as Wilhelmina Bjorses, above mentioned and of my sister Ida Bjorses Doli, above mentioned, in equal shares, per capita and not per stirpes, in monthly instalments, or at less frequent intervals (not less frequently than annually); provided, however, that said Trustee may, in its absolute discretion, pay such additional amounts, to or for any of said children as may be necessary for the maintenance, support and education of any of said children or to cover any emergency or unexpected contingency which said Trustee may deem it proper to pay. If necessary, said Trustee is authorized to advance to any beneficiary hereunder such amounts as may be required, to carry out the intentions hereof, from the principal or corpus of said trust estate. Any advances so made shall be offset against the interest of any beneficiary hereunder, in order to equalize a fair division of said portion of my estate bequeathed for the benefit of said children of my two sisters."

"(b-1) I hereby direct my said Trustee to pay the balance of the income from my said estate to my nephew OTTO SIGFRED EDWARDSON (now residing in New Westminster, B. C., Canada, but intending to come to San Francisco in the very near future), so long as he shall live."

"(c) In the event that, by reason of any law of the State of California, or of the United States, the income hereinbefore provided to be paid to any beneficiary hereunder shall be subject to forfeiture, or if, under the laws of any country of which any beneficiary hereunder should be a resident or citizen *365 (excepting the United States of America), any taxes levied or assessed against said trust estate, or the income therefrom, should be in excess of sixty per cent of the amount of said trust estate, or of such income, respectively, or, in the event that any beneficiary hereunder cannot be located within five (5) years after my death, and in the further event that none of the children of my brother can be so located, in any and all of such events the provisions hereof, so far as any beneficiary hereunder and the children of my brother are concerned, shall lapse, and the effect thereof shall be to increase the shares going to the persons not so affected as hereinafter provided;"

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229 P.2d 468, 103 Cal. App. 2d 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-bjors-calctapp-1951.