Gorham v. Chadwick

200 A. 500, 135 Me. 479, 117 A.L.R. 805, 1938 Me. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 20, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 200 A. 500 (Gorham v. Chadwick) 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
Gorham v. Chadwick, 200 A. 500, 135 Me. 479, 117 A.L.R. 805, 1938 Me. LEXIS 41 (Me. 1938).

Opinion

Sturgis, J.

This bill in equity brought to obtain a construction of the will of Hannah Edblad, late of Houlton, deceased, is certified forward on report accompanied by an agreed statement of facts and the pleadings in the case. All interested parties, having been joined as defendants, answer, join in the prayer for the construction of the will and, waiving all denials, by stipulation admit the truth of the allegations of the bill.

Hannah Edblad died on the twenty-third day of November, 1935, leaving a will dated June 20,1929, which was thereafter duly proved and allowed. Joseph P. Gorham, the complainant, as administrator d. b. n. c. t. a. of her estate brings this bill for instructions in the performance of his duties. In the third paragraph of her will, the testatrix made the following bequest:

“I give and bequeath to Nell M. Chadwick of Houlton, Maine, my diamond ring and my stock in Houlton Trust Company.”

In the fourth paragraph, she gave her niece Elsie F. Harvey of Kansas City, Missouri, two thousand dollars ($2000.00) and certain enumerated items of personal property.

By the sixth paragraph, she bequeathed and devised the residue of her estate to the Inhabitants of the Town of Houlton to be used for the maintenance of her homestead property as a community house, with additional provision for the use of the residue for the erection and maintenance of any community house which might be acquired in place of her homestead.

[481]*481The other provisions of the will are not involved in this inquiry and are not passed upon in this opinion.

It appears and is to be assumed from statements of counsel that Hannah Edblad on June 20,1929, when she executed her will, owned the same and only the ten shares of common stock of the Houlton Trust Company of Houlton, Maine,¡each of theparvalue of $100.00, which she had when that bank on March 4, 1933, was closed, and continued to own until she died. In the course of the reorganization of the Houlton Trust Company, however, an assessment of $1000.00 was made against her as a stockholder under sections 93,94 of Chapter 57, Revised Statutes, and persons liable for stock assessment having been authorized to subscribefor aproposed second preferred stock in an amount equal to his or her liability and in lieu thereof, on June 4, 1934, in writing and as a stockholder she deposited her original shares of the common stock of the bank to be held subject to the terms of the reorganization and decrees of court making the same effective, subscribed for and agreed to purchase shares of noncumulative, nonassessable second or class B, so called, preferred stock of an aggregate par value of $1000.00, and assigned her savings deposit of $9213.22 which she had in the Houlton Trust Company as collateral security for the performance of her contract. When she died, this agreement had not been acted upon but remained in full force and effect.

After Hannah Edblad’s death, the Supreme Judicial Court having jurisdiction of the proceeding modified its earlier decree authorizing stockholders to> satisfy their liability for stock assessments by subscribing for a new second preferred stock, by approving an issue of common stock and permitting such stockholders to subscribe therefor in lieu of the second preferred stock and on the same terms. Complying with this decree, the complainant, as administrator d. b. n. c. t. a., made a new surrender for retirement of the original ten shares of stock of the Houlton Trust Company owned by his testatrix, cancelled her subscription of June 4, 1934, as a stockholder for second preferred stock, and agreed to take common stock of the same aggregate par value in lieu thereof and subject to the same provisions as to cancellation of his testatrix’ stock liability. This agreement was accepted and forty shares of common stock of the par value of $25.00 each were issued to the Estate of [482]*482Hannah Edblad, her savings deposit in the possession of her personal representative charged with $1000.00, her double liability as a stockholder cancelled, and her original ten shares of the common stock of the bank were retired. •

It also appears that as a part of the reorganization of the Houlton Trust Company it was proposed that refinancing be effected through the sale of first preferred stock to the depositors, and Hannah Edblad on January 13, 1934, as a depositor subscribed for one hundred and forty shares, or such part thereof as might be allotted to her, of six per cent cumulative, nonassessable, $10.00 par preferred stock of the Houlton Trust Company at a price of $50.00 per share, including in that subscription contract an order authorizing the amount payable thereunder to be charged to her savings or demand account. This subscription continued in force until after Hannah Edblad’s death, and by virtue of it, as is stipulated in the agreed statement, sixty-nine shares of the par value of $10.00 each of the preferred stock of the reorganized bank were issued to her administrator d. b. n. c. t. a., and the agreed price of $50.00 per share and altogether the sum of $3450.00 was charged to the balance of her savings deposit. ,

The precise question presented is whether under the third paragraph of Hannah Edblad’s (will the legatee, Nell M. Chadwick, is entitled to take either the forty shares of common stock or the sixty-nine shares of preferred stock, or both, which on final reorganization of the Houlton Trust Company were issued to the testatrix’ estate.

The cardinal rule for the interpretation of wills is that they shall be construed so as to give effect to the intention of the testator. It is the intention, however, gathered from the language used in the testament which governs. Blaisdell v. Hight, 69 Me., 306; Torrey v. Peabody, 97 Me., 104, 53 A., 988; Palmer v. Estate of Palmer, 106 Me., 25, 75 A., 130; Spear v. Stanley, 129 Me., 55, 149 A., 603. And it is the intention of the maker of the will at the time of its execution. Although a will speaks only from the maker’s death, the language used in the testament must be construed as of the date of its execution and in the light of the then surrounding circumstances. Another and accurate statement of this rule is that a will is not operative until the death of the maker and then speaks his or [483]*483her intention at the time of its execution. Cook v. Stevens, 125 Me., 378, 134 A., 195; Spear v. Stanley, supra; In re Mandelle’s Estate, 252 Mich., 375, 233 N. W., 230.

The testatrix, Hannah Edblad, owning ten shares of the stock of the Houlton Trust Company, described her bequest in the third paragraph of her will to her beneficiary, Nell M. Chadwick, as “my stock in Houlton Trust Company.” As to whether she then contemplated a sale or exchange of these shares or the acquisition of more stock of the bank is not disclosed in the will and can not be considered. It may be safely assumed, however, that she did not anticipate that the Houlton Trust Company would close and she would be called upon to participate in a reorganization in the manner and to the extent reported. Limiting our inquiry then to the will itself and the time and surrounding circumstances of its making, we are convinced that this testatrix intended her bequest to include only the stock in the Houlton Trust Company which she then owned. The language which she used discloses an intention that her legatee should receive the very stock bequeathed and not merely its equivalent in kind or value.

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Bluebook (online)
200 A. 500, 135 Me. 479, 117 A.L.R. 805, 1938 Me. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorham-v-chadwick-me-1938.