Gilman v. Gilman

122 A. 386, 99 Conn. 598, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 122 A. 386 (Gilman v. Gilman) 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
Gilman v. Gilman, 122 A. 386, 99 Conn. 598, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 128 (Colo. 1923).

Opinion

Keeler, J.

The seventh article of the will of the testatrix gives to her executors the residue of her estate “ to be distributed at their discretion.” Read free from considerations arising from claimed rules of construction, this provision seems to clearly indicate that the testatrix desired her executors to take this property and make such disposition thereof as to them seemed best. We think, then, that the discussion of the questions raised in the reservation can properly be approached by *605 considering, first, the claims of these defendants who contend that the gift to the executors is upon a trust too vague and indefinite to be enforced. Taking up first such claims of law as are pressed in this behalf, we find it asserted that the giving of general pecuniary bequests to the persons who are afterward in the will named as executors is inconsistent with an absolute gift to these parties as executors. This claim, of course, entirely ignores the provision as to distribution just quoted, and assumes that the executors qualifying will apportion the residue among themselves and exclude the other relatives of the testatrix; that because the executors have the power so to do, they will proceed in that way, and that hence the provision now considered could never have been intended to result in giving such a power and estate, albeit such an estate is necessary to effectuate the purpose which the testatrix had in mind. This point will be discussed more at length when later we consider the provisions of the will in detail; we now give attention to the authorities cited as supporting such a contention. In Haskell v. Staples, 116 Me. 103, 110 Atl. 148, the testator gave to Hall J. Staples, whom he also named as executor, a pecuniary legacy of $500 and bequeathed the residue of his estate to him “in trust ... to be by him distributed and disposed of as he pleases.” The court found an express trust to exist which was declared void by the court for uncertainty. In connection with so holding, the court instances the fact of the pecuniary legacy as negativing the idea of a beneficial interest in the residue given in trust, in that a sharp distinction is made in the character of the two estates granted. There is no indication that the court did or would have based its decision on this point' alone. In Briggs v. Penny, 3 Mac. & G. 546, the testatrix gave Sarah Penny, who was also executrix, a legacy of £3,000, and a further legacy of £3,000 for her trouble as execu *606 trix, and also gave to her the residue of the estate “well knowing that she will make a good use and dispose of it in a manner in accordance with my views and wishes.” The court held that the gift was a precatory trust, on the ground that all option or discretion on the party who was to act, was taken away and that the executrix was bound by the wishes of the testatrix, which were so uncertain as to make the trust void. In connection with the other provisions of the will the Lord Chancellor instances the liberal provision made by the pecuniary legacies, but nowhere indicates this consideration as a controlling or independent feature in the case. In neither of the two cases cited is the rule laid down in the absolute and categorical way claimed by these defendants in the instant case. In Balfe v. Halfpenny, 1 Irish Reps. (1904) 486, the holding is in accordance with the claims of these defendants. In re Dewey’s Estate, 45 Utah, 98, 143 Pac. 124, cited to this point, did not involve this question. In Thomas v. Anderson, 158 C. C. A. 70, 245 Fed. 642, the court found very properly that the residuary clause created a precatory trust which was void for indefiniteness. In arriving at its conclusion the court gave weight to the fact of a large pecuniary legacy given in the will to the executor, but the opinion stresses other features rather than this one. In Christman v. Roesch, 132 N. Y. App. Div. 22, 116 N. Y. Supp. 348, affirmed without opinion in 198 N. Y. 538, 92 N. E. 1080, only minor consideration is given to the pecuniary legacy given by the will to the executor.

We fail to find any case where the rule of construction claimed by these defendants was made the sole or the controlling reason of decision, and must conclude that in so far as being a cardinal rule of construction it is one of quite minor importance, and to be given such weight only as is justified by the context and general scheme of any particular will.

*607 As applied to the will in question, we note that $1,000 each is given to all of the seven nephews and nieces of the decedent, and that the executors are three of this class of legatees. In making these gifts the testatrix, in the familiar language of conversation, was remembering her nephews and nieces. Her estate was of considerable size, and the amounts given as above are certainly so small as not to indicate any ulterior reason in her mind directed to the fact that they were to be executors, and also her residuary legatees. Such a concurrence in wills is not infrequent. In the instant case we cannot regard the legacies to the nephews and a niece as modifying the residuary provision.

It is further insisted that the power of sale given to the executors in the will is superfluous if they take the estate beneficially. In the case of In re West, L. R. (1900) 1 Ch. Div. 84, cited to this point, there was an express trust which did not exhaust the residue, and it was held that the character of the trust was impressed upon the whole fund and that the trustees could not take beneficially the unappropriated part of it. The case of Thomas v. Anderson, supra, is again invoked. The court, as we have seen, held that the will established a precatory trust, and negatives a beneficial bequest because of a power of sale given to the executor, saying that the language conferring the power is mere surplusage ‘ ‘if the residuary estate was given to him as his private property. Every owner of private property has a right to exercise all those powers with respect to it.” Christman v. Roesch, supra, is in accord with Thomas v. Anderson on this point.

However legitimate this observation may be as applied to the law of Missouri passed upon in Thomas v. Anderson, it certainly is not adapted to the practice existing in Connecticut. A power of sale in this jurisdiction is convenient in the simplest will, and almost *608 a necessity in an instrument which is comprehensive and contemplates a considerable time in the full execution of its provisions. It enables sale of real property pending the settlement of an estate, without the necessity of an application to court for an order, attended perhaps with the expense of a large charge for a surety bond, it facilitates transfer of securities, and in other ways is useful.

Looking at the will in question in the light of what has just been said, and comparing it with prior testamentary endeavors of the testatrix, we find in the will of 1915 (Exhibit H).and the draft-will of 1919 (Exhibit I) powers of sale in practically identical terms; and further, in the will of Maria P.

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Bluebook (online)
122 A. 386, 99 Conn. 598, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilman-v-gilman-conn-1923.