Estate of Worthley

535 A.2d 433, 1988 Me. LEXIS 22
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 5, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 535 A.2d 433 (Estate of Worthley) 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
Estate of Worthley, 535 A.2d 433, 1988 Me. LEXIS 22 (Me. 1988).

Opinions

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

This appeal presents the question whether a general power of appointment vested by a will in three donees survives when one of the three predeceases the testator. Arthur Abbott,1 personal representative of the Estate of Mary G. Worthley, late of West Lebanon, appeals from an order of the York County Probate Court, construing the following article of Miss Worthley’s will in light of the fact that Harriet Fogg predeceased her:

FIFTH: I request that my friends, Harriet Fogg, and Reverend and Mrs. Fred Robie of Sanford, Maine, shall insofar as possible specify the disposition to be made of the remainder of my furniture and furnishings, and I request that my Executor shall carry out the formalities of any such gift, sale or other disposition as they specify.

The Probate Court declared that Article Fifth “allows Reverend and Mrs. Fred Ro-bie to specify themselves and/or other persons as the recipients of the remainder of decedent’s furniture and furnishings.” Although we do not fully agree with the reasoning used by the Probate Court to reach that conclusion, we affirm its decision that the Robies have a general power of appointment over Miss Worthley’s furniture and furnishings that she did not specifically bequeath.

Mary Worthley died testate on April 21, 1986. Harriet Fogg, one of the persons named in Article Fifth of Miss Worthley’s will, had predeceased her. In his petition filed pursuant to 18-A M.R.S.A. § 3-1001 (1981), the personal representative asked the Probate Court to determine whether, in these factual circumstances, Reverend and Mrs. Robie had the power to designate themselves and others as the recipients of Miss Worthley’s remaining furniture and furnishings.

The parties suggest that the disputed language could be construed to create either a trust, a specific devise, or a power of appointment. The Probate Court correctly held that Article Fifth did not create a trust. “No trust is created if the transferor does not manifest an intention to impose enforceable duties upon the transferee. His intention not to impose enforceable duties may be shown by the fact that he uses precatory rather than mandatory words.” Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 125 comment a, at 268 (1959). The precatory language used by Miss Worthley in Article Fifth negates any intention to impose a legal obligation on her three friends to dispose of the property.

The Probate Court did err, however, in stating that the will provision created a specific devise. A devise is defined in the Probate Code as “a testamentary disposition of real or personal property.” 18-A M.R.S.A. § 1-201(7) (1981). In this case, Article Fifth begins “I request that my friends ... insofar as possible specify the disposition to be made of the remainder of my furniture and furnishings....” That language contrasts sharply with the preceding three articles, all of which begin “I give and bequeath.... ” The second article directs the executor to sell the testatrix’s residence and to distribute the proceeds to named individuals. The third article bequeaths certain specific items of personal property to named individuals. The specif[435]*435ic fourth article bequeaths certain sums of money to named individuals. Viewing Article Fifth in light of the preceding provisions, it is certain that Miss Worthley did not intend to make an outright devise of the property jointly to Mrs. Fogg and the Robies.

Rather than an outright devise, we conclude that Article Fifth created a general power of appointment. Miss Worthley in plain and unmistakable language vested in her three friends the power to “specify the disposition to be made of the remainder of my furniture and furnishings.” That power conforms to the classical definition of a general power of appointment, since the donees of the power (Harriet Fogg and Reverend and Mrs. Robie) may appoint to anyone including themselves. See Moore v. Emery, 137 Me. 259, 274, 18 A.2d 781, 788 (1941). There remains only one serious question in this case: what effect does the death of one of the three donees prior to the death of the testatrix have upon the general power of appointment? We conclude that under Miss Worthley’s will the two surviving do-nees have the same joint power to appoint the subject personal property as all three donees would have held jointly if Harriet Fogg had not predeceased the testatrix.

A testator’s intent must control the proper interpretation of a power of appointment just the same as any other provision in a will:

The guiding principle of a court in construing a will is to determine the intent of the testator, which must be found from the particular language which he has used read in connection with the will taken as a whole and in cases of doubt in the light of the surrounding circumstances. There is no particular magic in isolated phrases. Language which may mean one thing when applied to one state of facts may have to be interpreted differently when applied to another. Precedents are of less importance than elsewhere in the law; and to quite an extent each case must be considered by itself.

Id. at 277-78, 18 A.2d at 790. See also 18-A M.R.S.A, § 2-603 (1981). The Restatement (Second) of Property (1986) sees manifestation of the donor’s intent as essential to the creation of a power of appointment, id. § 12.1, and looks to the donor’s intent for the standards that limit a donee’s exercise of that power, id. § 12.2. See also id. § 12.2 comment c (“The scope of a power can be limited in many different ways by the donor’s manifestation of intent”).

Miss Worthley unfortunately did not make her intent express in the contingency that has in fact occurred; namely, the non-survival of one of the donees of her general power of appointment. Few reported decisions have addressed the question with which we are here faced, but none that we have found directly contradicts the overriding proposition that the answer must lie in the intent of the testator, whether that intent is expressly declared or is “discovered within the four corners of the [will], read in the light of the surrounding applicable circumstances.” Estate of Thompson, 414 A.2d 881, 887 (Me.1980). The United States Supreme Court made this point in Peter v. Beverly, 35 U.S. (10 Pet.) 532, 9 L.Ed. 522 (1836), a point of origin for later decisions on the issue. After noting that the English rule depends primarily on whether the power is coupled with an interest,2 the Supreme Court went on to observe:

In the American cases, there seems to be less confusion and nicety on this point; and the courts have generally applied to the construction of such powers, the great and leading principle which applies to the construction of other parts of the will, to ascertain and carry into execution the intention of the testator. When the power is given to executors, to be executed in their official capacity of executors, and there are no words in the will warranting the conclusion, that the testator intended, for safe[436]*436ty or some other object, a joint execution of the power; as the office survives, the power ought also to be construed as surviving.

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Estate of Worthley
535 A.2d 433 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
535 A.2d 433, 1988 Me. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-worthley-me-1988.