Estate of Hinckley

1 Myrick 189
CourtSuperior Court of California, County of San Francisco
DecidedJuly 28, 1878
DocketNo. 7036
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Myrick 189 (Estate of Hinckley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of California, County of San Francisco primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Hinckley, 1 Myrick 189 (Cal. Super. Ct. 1878).

Opinion

Testator directed the executors to pay to E. B. Badger and two others $3,000 in trust, that they apply the principal and income for the benefit of James Campbell according to their discretion.

Testator died April 11, 1876, and James Campbell died August 21, 1876. Testator left him surviving heirs at law, who are still living.

E. B. Badger and others applied for the distribution to them of the $3,000 mentioned in the will, claiming that upon the death of testator the right to the legacy became vested, and the subsequent death of Campbell did not defeat the bequest.

By the Court:

The object and purpose of the trust has ceased and determined, and the effect of the bequest falls with the purpose. The purpose was that the $3,000 and its income should be for the sole use and benefit of James Campbell during his lifetime, and no equitable estate of inheritance was intended to be created. The petition is denied; but it being intimated that the trustees incurred liabilities in consequence of the trust before the death of Campbell, they may make proof thereof and present the same for future consideration.

Subsequent proceedings were had by which the sum of $500 was directed to be paid to reimburse the trustees for liabilities incurred before Campbell’s death; leaving $2,500 of the legacy undisposed of.

The heirs at law filed a petition that the $2,500 be adjudged to belong to them.

[191]*191E. D. Sawyer:

The $2,500 belong to the heirs: Miss Hinckley is residuary legatee cc of all my estate not herein-before devised and bequeathed.” The item of $3,000 was thereinbefore bequeathed, viz: to the persons in trust for Campbell, which removed that sum from the residuary clause, even if by a subsequent event the bequest should fail in being carried into effect. As the legacy failed subsequently to death of testator, this money was not in effect bequeathed, and goes to the heir.

2 Redf., 117; 5 N. Y., 409 ; 7 Hill, 352.

Lloyd Baldwin:

This money goes to the residuary legatee. 68 Penn. St., 84; 40 Conn., 250; 17 Md., 23; 4 Vesey, 708; 4 Kent, 541. Testator took the $3,000 out of the estate for James Campbell only and only for his life; and when that object fails, it goes under the residuary clause. Courts are against partial intestacy. 4 Paige, 117; 2 Coll. Ch., 516; 8 Vesey, 24; 30 Ind., 292; 45 N. Y., 254; 3 Yates (Penn.) 187; 6 Paige, 607; 1 Dana, 206; 4 Vesey, 708; 5 Vesey, 501; 2 Madd. Ch., 94.

The heirs are not entitled to the money; it goes under the residuary clause to Miss Hinckley. Whatever was not given for Campbell was given to her. He having a life interest only, all except that life interest went under the will. Upon the death of Campbell the money could not be paid to the trustees, the object of the trust having failed.

October 3, 1878.

Stephen H. Phillips, for executors.

Doyle & Barber, for the residuary legatee.

Testator died April 11, 1876, leaving an estate valued in the inventory, filed June 5, 1876, at $135,269.50; of which, the California Theatre property was valued at $120,000.

The debts have all been paid, except a debt presented by the Hibernia Savings and Loan Society for $37,500 and interest, which has been allowed and approved. This claim [192]*192has been assigned to and is now held by F. H. Woods, one of the trustees hereinafter named, and by an instrument filed herein by him dated June 8, 1877, he states that the amount then due was $37,500, and he relinquishes all claim against any property of said estate except the California Theatre property, which was mortgaged to secure the debt.

All the legacies have been paid except those hereinafter mentioned.

The trustees hereinafter named now ask distribution of the California Theatre property to them upon the trusts named in the will, which is resisted by Mary H. Hinckley, the residuary legatee and devisee.

The following are the clauses in the will relating to the subject in controversy:

“I give the property known as the California Theatre property, being the property now subject to a lease to H. P. Wakelee, [recorded, Liber 28 Leases, page 172, to which reference is had], for a term of years, and which lease is a part of the conditions under which this bequest is made, together with all rights which move to me or my heirs and assigns under or by virtue of such said lease, to the following named persons, my fellow citizens and members of the First Unitarian Society of San Francisco aforesaid, viz: Horatio Stebbins, C. Adolphe Low, Horace Davis, George C. Hickox, Stephen H. Phillips, Frank H. Woods, Louis H. Bonestell, Charles A. Murdock, John C. Merrill, and John H. Madison [the last named to have no successor], in trust, nevertheless, for the following purposes:
“To pay to my relatives hereinafter named, that is to say, [naming twelve persons], three thousand dollars each, from the income of the said property under the lease aforesaid, or from the capital amount paid by the lessees under said lease for the property, if said lessees choose so to pay it according to the terms of said lease. * * After the payment of these bequests as herein provided, the remaining part of the California Theatre property, either under the lease or in capital amount paid by the lessees, as the case may be, shall be devoted to the establishment of a perpetual fund, to be called the William and Alice Hinckley Fund, the [193]*193income of this fund to be devoted perpetually to Human Beneficence and Charity; and while I do not wish to set arbitrary limits to the wisdom, faithfulness, and discretion of my trustees, desiring as I do to foster Religion, Learning, and Charity, I wish to call their attention to the trials and afflictions of the industrious, striving, unfortunate poor, and especially to the aged, the infirm, and the lonely. I wish also, to show my interest in good learning, and my sympathy with honorable and striving young men, to set apart from the income of this fund the sum of three hundred dollars per annum, to be known and designated as the Hinckley Scholarship, to be given to some worthy, talented, industrious, and needy young man, who is pursuing liberal studies, either in the University of the State or in any other school, as the trustees shall name.”

The will provides a mode of selecting successors to the members of the board of trustees; and requires the trustees to report annually its condition and their doings under the will to the trustees of the First Unitarian Society of San Francisco.

“Finally, I dedicate this fund established by this will, in my own name and in the name of my beloved wife, to the interests of religion, learning, and charity; and I desire by it to express my sympathy with my fellow-men and my humble faith in God, the father and friend of all.”

The residuary legatee, in resisting the petition for distribution, makes the following points, among others:

1— The debt to Woods is still outstanding; distribution of an estate cannot be had until all the debts are paid; the Court has no power to distribute, subject to a mortgage lien.
2— The charitable devise is utterly null and void, not being within section 847 of the Civil Code.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Myrick 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-hinckley-calsuppctsf-1878.