Greenough v. Osgood

126 N.E. 461, 235 Mass. 235, 1920 Mass. LEXIS 723
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 126 N.E. 461 (Greenough v. Osgood) 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
Greenough v. Osgood, 126 N.E. 461, 235 Mass. 235, 1920 Mass. LEXIS 723 (Mass. 1920).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This cause was reserved for the full court by a single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court upon the pleadings and agreed statements of fact, and is a bill in equity for instructions by the trustees under an antenuptial declaration of trust, made in Massachusetts on May 7, 1860, by Hannah Parkman Newell, in contemplation of a marriage which was intended to be, and in fact shortly was, solemnized between the said Hannah P. Newell and one Edward S. Osgood.

All the property put in trust belonged to Hannah Parkman Newell and was inherited from her mother, who resided in Boston, Massachusetts, and was there domiciled at the time of her death. It consisted of real estate located entirely in Massachusetts, of mortgages on real estate located entirely in Massachusetts, and of various securities, which, together with all other documents of title, were thereafter kept in Boston, Massachusetts. At the time of the death of Hannah P. Osgood on October 9,1918, all the property held by the trustees under the antenuptial trust and agreement of May 7, 1860, consisted solely of stock and bonds, loans and cash, including one mortgage on real estate in Connecticut; and the securities and documents of title were and have since been in a safe deposit vault in said Boston. The trustees nominated in the trust instrument accepted the trust, were residents of Massachusetts and continued such until resignation, and at least one of the succeeding trustees under the agreement and trust of May 7, 1860, has always been a resident of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

When the. antenuptial agreement and trust were executed in Massachusetts Hannah P. Newell resided with her father in the city, county and State of New York and Edward S. Osgood was domiciled in San Francisco, California. Immediately upon the marriage, Hannah P. Osgood and her husband removed to California, where they resided for many years. Subsequently she removed with her husband to Boston, where they resided for many years. Finally she removed to New York, where she died on October 9, 1918, leaving a will which was duly proved and allowed by the Surrogates Court in and for the county and State of New York.

Although the donor in her declaration of trust was not domiciled in Massachusetts, we think it plain that she intended that [238]*238the trust should be administered under the laws of that State, by the appointment of the trustees who were residents of Massachusetts, by the fact that the trust property consisted very largely of real estate and real estate mortgages, located entirely in Massachusetts, by the provision of the trust instrument that the property in certain contingencies should go to the "person or persons as would, by the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, have been or be entitled to the same,” and by the further fact that the Massachusetts trustees or trustee could at no time have been compelled to account for the property in trust, in any State other than Massachusetts. Sewall v. Wilmer, 132 Mass. 131. Codman v. Krell, 152 Mass. 214, 218. Russell v. Joys, 227 Mass. 263. It follows that the Massachusetts courts have jurisdiction over the matter in issue.

By the antenuptial agreement and trust Hannah Parkman Newell gave or reserved to herself a special power of appointment over the property conveyed to the trustees, in the event she married and survived Edward S. Osgood, in the following language: “And in case the said Edward S. does not survive the said Hannah P. then at and from the decease of the said Hannah P. to the use of all and every the child and children of the said Hannah P. for such estates and interests, and in such shares and proportions, and to be vested in him her or them, at such respective ages or times, and in such manner, as the said Hannah P. alone, and notwithstanding her coverture, by any deed or instrument in writing, containing a power of revocation, to be sealed and delivered by her in the presence of and attested by three or more credible witnesses, or. by her last will and testament in writing, or by any writing in the nature of a last will, to be signed and published by her in the presence of three or more credible witnesses, shall direct or appoint. And in default of such direction or appointment, or in case any such shall be made, then when and as the estates thereby limited shall respectively end and determine, to the use of the children of the said Hannah P., their heirs and assigns forever.”

Hannah P. Osgood survived her husband, and left four children, William P. Osgood, Edward W. Osgood, Robert T. Osgood, and Anna P. Osgood Culver. All of said persons are of full age and are all made parties defendant to this bill. The only living issue of said children is Parkman Osgood, a minor son of William P. [239]*239Osgood, who is made a party defendant by the bill and appears by Harold S. Davis, guardian ad litem. At the time of the decease of Hannah Parkman Osgood the plaintiffs as succeeding trustees, held personal property only, which they are desirous of paying over and making distribution of among the persons entitled thereto.

The will of Hannah Parkman Osgood, which was proved, allowed and admitted to probate by the Surrogates Court in and for the county and State of New York on December 24, 1918, and of which William P. Osgood and Frederic F. Culver, defendants in this bill, were duly appointed executors, contained two paragraphs in execution of the power of appointment vested in the testatrix by the marriage settlement. These items are as follows:

“First. Under and pursuant to any and all powers of appointment by Will or otherwise which are now or may hereafter be vested in me by virtue of the marriage settlement made between me and my late husband Edward S. Osgood, or otherwise, as well as with the intent also to dispose of all property of whatsoever kind or nature, and wheresoever situate, of which I may die seized or possessed, or which I may in any way be entitled to dispose of at my death, I hereby direct, appoint, give, bequeath and devise as follows. . . .
“Twelfth. After the payment of all appointments, legacies and charges hereinbefore provided for in this my Will, I give, devise, bequeath and appoint all the rest and residue of the property of whatsoever kind and nature, and wheresoever situate which I may be entitled to dispose of by Will, including any and every lapsed legacy or appointment provided for in this my Will, to my Executors hereinafter named, in Trust nevertheless, to divide the same into so many shares or portions as shall equal the number of my children who shall be living at the date of my death, or who shall have died leaving issue who shall be living at the date of my death, such issue to be counted per stirpes and not per capita in making such division, and after such division.
“ (a) To pay over, deliver, transfer and convey one of said shares or portions to my said daughter Anna P., her heirs, executors and administrators, forever, if she be living at the date of my death, or if not then living, in equal share to such of her children as shall then be living;
[240]*240“ (b) To pay over, deliver, transfer and convey another of said shares or portions to my said son William P., his heirs, executors and administrators, forever, if he be living at the date of my death, or if not then living, in equal shares to such of his children as shall then be living;

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Bluebook (online)
126 N.E. 461, 235 Mass. 235, 1920 Mass. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenough-v-osgood-mass-1920.