Hannan v. Slush

5 F.2d 718, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1064
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedApril 20, 1925
DocketNo. 438
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 F.2d 718 (Hannan v. Slush) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hannan v. Slush, 5 F.2d 718, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1064 (E.D. Mich. 1925).

Opinion

TUTTLE, District Judge.

This is a bill to-construe a will and to construe and set aside a certain so-called instrument of appointment purporting to have been executed pursuant to said will. The jurisdiction of the court is-properly invoked on the ground of diversity of citizenship.

The plaintiff is Luella Hannan, who is the-widow of William W. Hannan, deceased, a-legatee under the will of said deceased, and a donee of certain trust powers created by said will. The will, which was duly executed December 18, 1916, gave lump sum legacies-to various persons, aggregating approximately $1,000,000, and also provided for the payment, by testamentary trustees, of' $2,500 monthly to the plaintiff during her life. It also created in the plaintiff certain powers of appointment of the residue of the estate to charity under conditions which will be hereinafter set forth in proper detail. The deceased, who was a resident of the city of Detroit and county of Wayne, died December 24,1917. At that time his estate was of the value of approximately $4,000,000. The will was duly probated in the probate court of said county February 13, 1918. About the first of December, 1918 (the exact date being in dispute, uncertain, and immaterial for the purposes of this ease),, plaintiff executed a written instrument purporting to be an appointment, pursuant to» the powers conferred on her as donee by the-terms of the will, of the sum of $2,500,000» to certain trustees therein named, for the establishment and maintenance of a public-auditorium for the people of Detroit. At the time of the execution of this instrument, the value of the estate was approximately $4,000,000, out of which there was due and unpaid about $1,000,000 in legacies and about $500,000 in state inheritance taxes; so that the payment at that time of the sum so appointed would have exhausted the entire estate and no source would have remained from-which the plaintiff’s aforementioned monthly stipend under the will could have been paid. This instrument, which will be hereinafter more fully referred to, was filed in said probate court February 18, 1919, indorsed with the approval of the testamentary trustees hereinafter mentioned. On December 16, 1918, plaintiff signed an election to take under said will, which election was duly filed in said probate court.

On \October 14, 1919, plaintiff filed in this court a bill of complaint, against the trustees under the will and under the appointment mentioned, seeking to set aside her- said election on the ground that its execution by her [719]*719had been procured fraudulently and wrongfully and while she was mentally incompetent to understand or know what she was doing. The bill, which will be referred to again later, also (and clearly as merely incidental to the setting aside of the election, which was obviously the main object of the bill) asked that said appointment be set aside on the same grounds. On May 26, 1921, while the bill last mentioned was pending in this court, plaintiff and the other surviving testamentary trustee under the will of the deceased entered into an agreement for the settlement of the suit so pending, by the terms of which plaintiff in her personal, individual capacity, received the sum of $400,-000 in addition to her monthly legacy of $2,-500 and agreed to withdraw her claim to take otherwise than under the will. Certain provisions were also included with reference to the appointment, which will be mentioned later. Shortly thereafter in accordance with the terms of said settlement agreement, a consent decree dismissing said bill was entered by this court, reciting that “the parties to this cause having come into court, by their respective counsel, and it appearing to the court that the subject-matter in this suit has been adjusted and settled by the parties, therefore, by the consent of counsel for plaintiff, on motion of counsel for defendants, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that this cause be, and the same is, hereby dismissed.” Thereafter, plaintiff commenced the present suit for the purpose of setting aside the aforesaid so-called instrument of appointment on the ground that its execution was in excess of the power created by the will on which it purports to be based, and that such execution was and is beyond the scope of such power and void, for reasons to be now discussed. The suit was referred, on bill and answer, to the master in chancery of this court, who, after hearing evidence and arguments, filed a lengthy report containing findings of fact and conclusions of law and recommending the entry of a decree in favor of plaintiff. To this report the defendants have filed exceptions on which the cause is now before the court. Unless plaintiff is now barred, by the former consent decree already referred to, from maintaining her present suit (a question to be hereinafter considered), the validity of the appointment in question depends upon the proper construction of the language of the will conferring on plaintiff such powers of appointment as she possesses. The will first provides for a trust for the payment of the various legacies specifically mentioned in the will (aggregating, as already indicated, nearly $1,000,000), and the further payment, out of the invested funds of the estate, which are to remain in the hands and under the control of the testamentary trustees for that purpose, of the stated monthly installments of $2,500 to the plaintiff during her life. The will then proceeds with the following language:

“When said property is freed from said trust (whether it is freed at the death of my wife, Luella Hannan, or whether a part is freed then and a part of it at the later death of said Clay A. Greene), I bequeath the same to such charities for the people of the city of Detroit, and such charitable institutions in the city of Detroit (and by ‘charities’ I mean any form of public benefit, by no means excluding public parks and playgrounds) as my wife, Luella Hannan, may in her will appoint. She may give all to one charity or to one charitable institution or she may distribute the same among several charities or charitable institutions in such proportion as to her seems wise. If my said wife shall desire, during her lifetime, to devote a portion of said property to any of the charities or charitable institutions above described, and if in the judgment of the two remaining trustees this can be done with entire safety (keeping in mind the object for which the trust is created) she shall have the right to do so; and to justify the appropriation of money or property' in this contingency, there shall be filed in the probate court a proper written instrument, signed by said wife and approved by each of the other trustees.
“If my wife shall fail, either entirely or partially, to designate, as hereinbefore required, to what charity or charitable institutions said property shall go, then I bequeath said property to the endowment fund of the Children’s Aid Society of Detroit.”

The instrument executed by the plaintiff purporting to appoint the $2,500,000 in question was in the following form and language:

“I, Luella Hannan, widow of William W. Hannan, late of Detroit, Michigan, under and by virtue of power given me by the will of my said husband, duly probated in the probate court of Wayne county, Michigan, and ■with the consent and approval of Flavius L. Brooke and Matthew Slush, executors and trustees under the said will,
“Do hereby appoint and direct the conveyance, assignment and transfer by the trustees under the will of Wiliam W. Hannan, deceased, at such time or times, in such install[720]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

AGUILAR GARCIA v. Bondi
N.D. California, 2025
(PC) Ernst v. Ramos
E.D. California, 2022

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F.2d 718, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannan-v-slush-mied-1925.