Griffin v. Sturges

40 A.2d 758, 131 Conn. 471, 156 A.L.R. 972, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 305
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 21, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 40 A.2d 758 (Griffin v. Sturges) 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
Griffin v. Sturges, 40 A.2d 758, 131 Conn. 471, 156 A.L.R. 972, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 305 (Colo. 1944).

Opinions

Maltbie, C. J.

The plaintiff, administrator c.t.a. upon the estate of Wilbur Sturges and trustee under his will, brought this action seeking advice as to his duties and it has been reserved to this court. The second article of the will contained these provisions: The testator gave $10,000 to a trustee, with direction to pay the interest and income to his son James, adding: “I direct that no part of said interest and income shall be liable to be taken for any debt or debts of my said son, and direct said trustee to pay the same to my said son, only as above provided.”

The will then proceeded: “If at any time, my said son, James R. Sturges, shall absolutely give up and refrain from the use of alcoholic or intoxicating liquors, then and in that event, from the time he shall comply with this provision, I give, and bequeath to said Louis Goldschmidt, as such Trustee, all my prop *474 erty and estate, in trust, for the purposes above provided for the benefit of my said son, and direct said Trustee to pay said income and interest to my said son, which said Trustee shall receive from my whole estate, so long as my said son shall so refrain from such use of said liquors.” If at any time James should claim that he had complied with this condition and was entitled to receive the income from the whole estate but the trustee should neglect or refuse to pay it to him, James might make his written application to the Court of Probate for the district having jurisdiction of the settlement of the estate and the court should hear and determine the matter, after proper notice to interested parties. If the court found that he had complied with the condition, it might order the trustee to pay the income to him, but if it should determine that he had not complied with it, then he was not to receive income from more of the estate than the $10,000 first given. If the court should determine that he was entitled to receive the income, the trustee was not to be held personally liable for any refusal to pay it before the court had determined the question. If, after it had ordered payment from the income of the entire estate, the trustee should thereafter be of the opinion that James had violated the condition under which he was entitled to it, the trustee might apply to the Probate Court for an order revoking its prior order that the payment be made, and the court, after hearing, might take that action, and then James was to receive only the income from the sum of $10,000. James or the trustee might from time to time renew the application either for the payment of the income on the whole estate or for an order revoking such a requirement. The judgment of the Court of Probate in any of these matters should be conclusive on all persons interested and no appeal should be allowed. *475 If at any time the income paid to the son should not, in the opinion of the trustee, be sufficient for his comfortable support, the trustee might pay him such part of the principal as he should deem necessary for such a purpose, and if the son deemed the income insufficient for the purpose and the trustee refused to pay him any part of the principal, the son was authorized and empowered to make written application to the Court of Probate for such order as the judge of the court might deem proper; and the decision was to be final and conclusive and no appeal was to be allowed therefrom. Any income received by the trustee which was not paid to the son was to be added to and become a part of the principal. At the death of James the trust was to cease and provision was made for the payment of income and principal to James’s children.

The third article provided that, if James had no children entitled to receive the property under the preceding provision, a Church Society and a Lodge of Masons were to receive legacies in definite amounts, and the remainder of the estate was given, under certain conditions, to the town of Weston for the purchase of a Bible for each child attending its public schools, but if the town should refuse to accept the gift under the conditions stated or, having accepted, should violate them, then the property was to go to the Masonic Charity Foundation of Connecticut. In the fourth article the testator provided that if any legatee or devisee under the will should object to the probate of the will or should “contest the same, or any of its provisions, in any Court,” then the testator revoked any and all provisions made in it for the benefit of that legatee or devisee and the legacy so revoked was to become a part of the residue of the testator’s estate and be disposed of as such.

It is necessary first to consider whether by reason *476 of the concluding provision of the will, to which reference has just been made, a forfeiture has been incurred. The complaint raised no issue as to the interpretation of the will, but was restricted to questions concerning the validity of various provisions in it; it particularly queried the validity of the gifts of income to the son in the second article and the gift at his death to his children; and it went on generally to query whether, if these were held to be invalid, the bequests in article third of the will were valid, making specific mention of the gift to the town of Weston. James, in his answer and statement of claim, asserted the invalidity of all the gifts specifically mentioned in the complaint, and particularly the invalidity of the gift to the Masonic Charity Foundation, and his pleading concluded with the claim that the will should be “so construed as to find” that the attempted disposition of the estate in the second and third articles is invalid and the property is intestate, with the result that it would pass to him as sole heir-at-law and next of kin. The court had appointed a guardian for the undetermined and unborn children of James, and the guardian, in his answer and statement of claim, asserted the invalidity only of the provisions in the second article for the payment to the son of the income of the entire estate upon the conditions mentioned in the will. Both James and the guardian have pressed these claims before us.

It is not possible to construe the provision of the will concerning a contest as referring solely to objections to the probate of the will; after that is mentioned, the will also specifies a contest of “the same, or any of its provisions, in any Court.” The testator evidently had in mind legal proceedings of any nature which would defeat his expressed will. Moran v. Moran, 144 Iowa 451, 464, 123 N. W. 202. Where an *477 action is brought to secure an interpretation of a will, an assertion by any beneficiary of the construction which he believes to be the correct one is not a contest as that expression is used in the will before us, because he is merely seeking to give effect to the real intent of the testator. South Norwalk Trust Co. v. St. John, 92 Conn. 168, 176, 101 Atl. 961. The present action goes beyond such a situation because the only issues presented concern the validity of the provisions of the will.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 A.2d 758, 131 Conn. 471, 156 A.L.R. 972, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-sturges-conn-1944.