Fitchie v. Brown

211 U.S. 321, 29 S. Ct. 106, 53 L. Ed. 202, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1547
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 7, 1908
Docket47
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 211 U.S. 321 (Fitchie v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitchie v. Brown, 211 U.S. 321, 29 S. Ct. 106, 53 L. Ed. 202, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1547 (1908).

Opinion

Mu. Justice Peckham,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

In the view we take of the case there aye but two questions necessary to be noticed,, and they involve the validity of the trust and the disposition of the surplus income. The appel- *328 lánts, who are the heirs of testator, insist, first, that the provision in the will for final distribution, ordering the trust fund to be divided equally among those persons entitled at that time to the annuities mentioned, is invalid, because there is no direction in the will as to when it is to take place, and therefore effect cannot be given to it; that the only direction in the will as to the duration of the trust is contained in the words “the residue „ . . to be placed in trust for as long a period as is legally possible, the termination or ending of said trust to take place when the law requires it under the statute.” Unless there is contained in those words a direction as to the duration of the trust, or, in other words, a direction as to the period at which that part of the trust which consists of the payment of annuities is to cease, and that part which consists of the distribution of the capital is to take place, then, it is contended, the duration of the trust has not been sufficiently declared by the testator, and the trust is one which the court cannot carry out; second, that if the above words do constitute a direction as to the duration of the trust, yet still the testator has not selected the lives in being which are to be taken as' a. limitation of the trust; third, that even if the testator had selected the lives consisting of all the annuitants mentioned, they are more than forty in number, and the trust is void, because it would then tend to a perpetuity, as the extinction of more than forty lives is more than can be made 'out by reasonable evidence of without difficulty, it being quite impracticable to ascertain when the last of more than forty lives would be extinguished.

The ’ counsel for the. executors pf the testator; appellees herein, was permitted in this couft to file a' brief and was heard orally on the argument before us, although no appeal from the .decree had been taken by the executors, this court stating, however, that it would thereafter decide whether counsel for executors had any right to be heard to contend against the decree of the court below.

Counsel, in fact, did argue against some parts of the decree, *329 contending that the trust was valid in so far as it provided for the payment of the annuities specified, but that the provision for final distribution was void, and that the annuities succeeding to and other than the life annuities were perpetual, and that there was an intestacy as to that not required to satisfy all the annuities.

We are of opinion that counsel for the executors had no right to appear and be heard against the decree, no appeal having been taken from it by h'is clients.

The trustee contends that the whole trust is valid, and that the surplus income over the amount necessary for the payment of the annuities mentioned must be accumulated up to the time of the general distribution under the trust’, as provided for in the will, and that such surplus shall then be distributed as part of the trust fund to the persons then entitled to that fund.

Our first inquiry is, Wa’s this trust valid as a whole? It is conceded by all that the common law is applicable, and that there is no statute in Hawaii governing the subject, except the statute making the common law applicable there, and that the utmost extent of a trust at common law is limited by lives in being at its creation and for twenty-one years thereafter; that the lives must be selected by the testator in his will; that they must be ascertained lives, i. e., lives that can be distinguished, and the fact of the death of the last survivor must be capable of being made out by reasonable evidence [Thellusson v. Woodford, 4 Ves. 227; S. C., 11 Ves. 134, 146; In re Moore (1901), 1 Ch. 936], and the selected lives need not be those having an interest in the property. Moore’s Case is an example of a void limitation on the ground of uncertainty. The limitation was measured by twenty-one years from the death of the last survivor of all persons living at the death of the testatrix.

A perusal of the will shows that the testator did not in so many words name the persons whose lives the trustee contends he selected for the limitation of the trust.

*330 However, if the scheme of the will, discoverable from its provisions, be such that a plain implication arises from those provisions that a certain class or number of lives mentioned, or referred to, in the will were selected by the testator for a limitation of the trust, such implied selection is sufficient. It is the intention of the testator that is to be sought, and such intention is not always found to have been directly, and in so many words, expressed in the will. An intention, which is implied from language actually used and from facts actually appearing in the will, is to be carried out, provided it does not violate the law. An intention so implied is as good as an intention more plainly and in direct terms expressed. The question is, therefore, whether the testator, by an implication arising from the language used in the will and the facts therein appearing, selected those lives by which the trust is to be limited.

Looking at the will, it is seen that a trust is created for three purposes: The first, to pay certain annuitants out of the income of the fund; the second, to hold the fund until the time for distribution arrives; and the third,.to distribute it to those people who may then be entitled to it, as provided by the terms of the will.

The whole trust,, the testator has provided, shall continue as long as is legally possible, and it is not to be confined to any particular subdivision of the trust. The direction to hold and distribute is as imperative as the direction to pay annuitants until distribution is made. When the testator created the trust in the language already quoted he must have intended it should be measured by .some lives then in 'being, and for not more than twenty-one years thereafter, because that is the longest time a trust of that kind is legally possible, and he provided it should last as long as that. There are no other lives that can reasonably be said to have been within thé'intention- of the testator when he was making this provision. It is said that being ignorant of the legal length of time a trust could last, he therefore provided that it should *331 last as long as legally possible, and thus'he could not have had an intention to select any particular life or lives in limiting the length of the trust.

There is force in the argument, but we are disposed to think that the position taken by the trustee is the correct one, and, indeed, is the only one compatible with the intention of the testator, to be gathered from the will.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 U.S. 321, 29 S. Ct. 106, 53 L. Ed. 202, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitchie-v-brown-scotus-1908.