Farnam v. Farnam

77 A. 70, 83 Conn. 369, 1910 Conn. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 12, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 77 A. 70 (Farnam v. Farnam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farnam v. Farnam, 77 A. 70, 83 Conn. 369, 1910 Conn. LEXIS 71 (Colo. 1910).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

This will was before this court upon a reservation for advice in Farnam v. Farnam, 53 Conn. 261, 2 Atl. 325, 5 Atl. 682. At that time the intent of the testator was defined, the construction to be given to his language established, and the legal operation of that language for the most part determined. The Superior Court subsequently rendered its judgment wherein the construction of the will was settled and adjudged in conformity with the advice given, and the trustees were ordered to proceed with the execution of the trust pursuant to the terms of the judgment. The years which have since passed have been productive of situations in the family history which.prompt the trustees to seek from the Superior Court for their guidance certain additional advice pertinent to existing conditions, and to others which may reasonably be anticipated in the future. The advice thus asked relates in part to the interpretation to be given to an expression contained in the former opinion and judgment, in part looks to the express adjudication of questions which,' while more or less affected by the former conclusions and the governing principles laid down, were not distinctly passed upon, and in part concerns the operative effect of a provision in the will which the court found no occasion to adjudicate.

*374 To the..extent that this judgment established the construction of the will, or declared its operative effect in matters concerning which there were or are existing rights and interests, it was a judicial declaration which we ought not to disturb, whatever our conclusions might be upon the questions decided, were they now presented for the first time. The parties interested have for these many years, doubtless, regulated their lives and their affairs in conformity to it, and all those and their privies, whose rights as between each other were thereby directly fixed and determined, acquired property rights which became vested in them by the court’s action. Gilman v. Tucker, 128 N. Y. 190, 203, 204, 28 N. E. 1040; Germania Savings Bank v. Suspension Bridge, 159 N. Y. 362, 368, 54 N. E. 33; Humphrey v. Gerard, ante, p. 346, 77 Atl. 65; Smith v. Lewis, 26 Conn. 110, 117; Nichols v. Bridgeport, 27 id. 459, 462.

We are thus enabled to begin our inquiries with certain premises fixed. In so far as the questions presented to us are but repetitions in another form of those heretofore adjudicated, we have only to reassert what was then said. In so far as our advice is asked for the purpose of having a formal declaration concerning conditions not directly passed upon before, but which involve as factors in them conclusions embodied in the former judgment, or underlying it, it is our manifest duty to accept the former conclusions as fixing the law of the instrument in so far as they go, and thus pursue the only course which can make the operation of the will consistent throughout, and deal with the rights and interests of all parties upon an equal basis. In so far as we are called upon to interpret the language of the court used in the former opinion and judgment, and determine its application, we have but to declare its intended meaning, if that meaning is apparent.

The questions propounded relate to three subject- *375 matters, to wit: (1) the $5,000 annuities given in the second clause of article “fourth”; (2) the gifts of net annual income provided for in the fourth clause of the same article; and (3) the disposition of the remainder of the trust fund made in article fifth.

The judgment, rendered in conformity to the advice of this court, declared that the above-described annuities were payable after the death of a child to the “family” of such child during the continuance of the trust. The Superior Court is now asked to define the term “family” as thus used, to announce who are to be regarded as embraced within its description, and to determine the basis upon which those within the description are to share. The word “family” is one of flexible and uncertain meaning, and will be construed differently according as the circumstances may seem to require, in order that the apparent meaning in which it is used in any given case may be carried into effect. Lepard v. Clapp, 80 Conn. 29, 34, 66 Atl. 780.

The opinion of the court leaves no room for reasonable doubt as to what it meant by the use of the term. It was declared that what the testator studiously sought to accomplish throughout the provisions of his will was exact equality and impartiality as between the different members and branches of his stock, that the annuities were manifestly given for purposes of maintenance, that it could not be presumed that the testator would have cut off the family of a child from participation after a child’s death, and that, as he had not done so expressly, the court was not disposed to do so by implication. From these premises it was argued that his intent in providing these annual payments must have been one which would accomplish the ends sought, and that the only construction which would do so was one which continued the benefit of each of them to the heirs of a child deceased as long as the trust should *376 continue. This conclusion was amplified and made more distinct by the final statement that in making a declaration of the court’s conclusion in this regard its purpose was to follow, as nearly as might be, the stat.ute of distribution as the guiding principle of succession.

The court thus clearly manifested its purpose and the result which it meant to effectuate. It plainly indicated its conclusion that the right to the enjoyment of the several annuity payments, as maintenance provisions, was not vested in the several children of the testator as one for the life of the trust; that the death of any one of such children would not terminate the payments set apart for his or her enjoyment primarily, but that, on the contrary, such payments would be continued to others surviving him or her as substitutes for the deceased; that this process of substitution of living persons for the dead child, as beneficiaries of the payment which the child, if living, would receive, was to go on until the termination of the trust; that the persons who were to be regarded as these substitutes were the “heirs” of the deceased child, using that term in the sense of the distributees of his estate in intestacy; and that the basis of division among these persons was that fixed by the statute of distribution. It is evident from the fact that these annuities were declared to be maintenance provisions, from the declaration of the opinion and judgment that their payment was to be continued to the families of deceased children during the life of the trust, and from the careful avoidance of all expression by the court indicative of a vesting in somebody at some time of the right to them for the future, that it was the intended meaning of the court that the payments as they should accrue were to be made to that group of persons, whoever they might be,who at the time each payment became due represented *377

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Bluebook (online)
77 A. 70, 83 Conn. 369, 1910 Conn. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farnam-v-farnam-conn-1910.