Gleason v. Hastings

180 N.E. 129, 278 Mass. 409, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 817
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 180 N.E. 129 (Gleason v. Hastings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gleason v. Hastings, 180 N.E. 129, 278 Mass. 409, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 817 (Mass. 1932).

Opinion

Field, J. Deming J.

Hastings died May 9, 1896. By his will, which was duly allowed, he gave the residue of his estate to a trustee “to pay over the net income thereof semi-annually, quarterly, or oftener if he deems it .expedient so to do, to my son Addison T. Hastings and Albert J. Hastings, and my grandson Jasper H. Adams, one third to each, during their lives, and upon the decease of either to pay over his share of said income to his lawful issue, if any, in equal shares, and in case of the death of either, leaving no lawful issue, to pay his share of said income to the survivors in equal shares, or to the survivor and the lawful issue of the other, if any, said issue to take the parent’s share, and at the decease of both of said children, and said grand-child, to pay over and convey the whole principal of said residue to their lawful issue, if any, in [411]*411equal shares, and if no lawful issue of either is then living, to pay over and convey said principal to my heirs.”

The testator left two sons, Addison T. Hastings and Albert J. Hastings, and a grandson, Jasper H. Adams. Jasper H. Adams died in 1901 without issue. Addison T. Hastings died in 1918, leaving two sons, Addison T. Hastings, junior, and Dana B. Hastings, and a daughter, Gertrude L. Pond. Albert J. Hastings died in 1931, leaving a son, Albert G. Hastings, who is a minor. Thus the trust terminated in 1931 upon the death of Albert J. Hastings.

The trustee brought a petition in equity in the Probate Court for instructions as to the distribution of the trust fund. Upon this petition the court entered a decree that “the testator intended that the distribution of the principal of the trust fund after the death of the surviving life tenant, should be in equal shares per capita among the lawful issue of the life tenants living at the time of the death of the surviving Ufe tenant,” and that such distribution should be made to Addison T. Hastings, junior, Gertrude L. Pond, Dana B. Hastings and Albert G. Hastings, one quarter of the trust fund to each. Gertrude L. Pond and Dana B. Hastings brought a petition in the Probate Court under G. L. c. 203, § 25, praying that the trustee be ordered to convert the trust estate into cash and distribute it among the persons entitled thereto. Upon this petition the court entered a decree that the trust estate be converted into cash and distributed among Addison T. Hastings, junior, Gertrude L. Pond, Dana B. Hastings and Albert G. Hastings, one quarter to each. • From each decree Albert G. Hastings, by his guardian ad litem, appealed.

1. The decree upon the petition for instructions was correct. By the terms of the will the “whole principal” of the trust fund is to be distributed upon the death of the last surviving life tenant among the lawful issue, then living, of the life tenants, such issue, in the events which have happened, being their children. So far there properly is no controversy. The question argued is whether the dis[412]*412tribution among the children of the life tenants should be per capita, as the court decreed, or per stirpes, as Albert G. Hastings, by his guardian ad litem, contends.

There is no significant difference, so far as appears, between the language of the trust clause and of the will as a whole, the general scope and purpose of the will, and the circumstances known to the testator when he made it, in this case, and the same controlling factors of interpretation in Cammann v. Abbe, 258 Mass. 427, where it was held that a distribution of principal per capita was intended. We see no adequate reason for reaching a different conclusion here. By the express provision for distributing principal among issue “in equal shares,” equality of enjoyment of such principal among issue of the three life tenants is indicated. No division of principal was to be made in either case before the death of the last surviving life tenant. There would be little reason for keeping a trust fund undivided until that time if distribution was then to be made according to stocks. See Dole v. Keyes, 143 Mass. 237, 239. In each case, however, by clear words, provision was made for distribution of income during the continuance of the trust per stirpes, and it is argued that such a provision for distribution of income discloses an intention to secure equality among families, which should dominate the entire trust. But the argument to the contrary seems to have more weight — that an aptly framed provision for distribution of income per stirpes shows that the testator knew how to provide for such a distribution when he wished to do so, and, by failing to make a similar provision for distribution of principal, disclosed an intention that a different distribution thereof should be made. Cammann v. Abbe, 258 Mass. 427, 429-430. See also Anderson v. Bean, 220 Mass. 360, 362; Old Colony Trust Co. v. Lothrop, 276 Mass. 496, 500-501. The difference is particularly clear in the will under consideration, which provides in terms that issue of a deceased life tenant shall “take the parent’s share” of income, but contains no words indicating that issue who take the principal do so as representing their respective ancestors.

[413]*413The provision for distribution of principal in Cammann v. Abbe, 258 Mass. 427, 428, was “to divide and pay over whole of said trust fund to issue then living in equal shares.” The word “issue” was construed to mean issue of the life tenants, and not issue of the testator. In the present case this meaning was put beyond doubt by the testator’s use of the word “their,” referring to the life tenants, before the word “issue” in the direction “to pay over and convey the whole principal of said residue to their lawful issue, if any, in equal shares.” We think that this was the purpose of the use of the word “their” and that its use, coupled with the fact that the word “all” was not used before “issue,” and with the position of the words “in equal shares,” does not have the additional force attributed to it by the guardian ad litem of showing that the testator was interested in the family of each life tenant as a class rather than in all issue as a class.

Doubtless, as contended by the guardian ad litem, the word “issue” is not confined to children of the fife tenants. Gardiner v. Everett, 240 Mass. 536, 537-538. This fact, however, does not tend to overthrow the conclusion that a distribution per capita rather than a distribution per stirpes was intended, for it does not follow that, on a distribution per capita, issue of different degrees of kinship to the life tenants would share equally. Such an argument against a per capita distribution among issue of the same degree of kinship was considered and rejected in Cammann v. Abbe, 258 Mass. 427, 430. See also Manning v. Manning, 229 Mass. 527, 531-532.

The case differs in its facts from Cammann v. Abbe, 258 Mass. 427, in that here a grandchild of the testator is included with his children in the class of life tenants, and on a per capita distribution issue of such grandchild would be included with the issue of the children in the class which takes principal. The structure of the will, however, indicates that the grandchild was treated as a child and the inference is to be drawn that his issue, if any, were to be treated in the same way as the issue of the children.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 N.E. 129, 278 Mass. 409, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gleason-v-hastings-mass-1932.