Harris v. Attorney General

324 A.2d 279, 31 Conn. Super. Ct. 93, 31 Conn. Supp. 93, 1974 Conn. Super. LEXIS 236
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 21, 1974
DocketFile 177347
StatusPublished

This text of 324 A.2d 279 (Harris v. Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Attorney General, 324 A.2d 279, 31 Conn. Super. Ct. 93, 31 Conn. Supp. 93, 1974 Conn. Super. LEXIS 236 (Colo. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Alexander, J.

The plaintiffs are the trustees under a trust created by the will of Theodate Pope Riddle which provides for the maintenance of her property known as Hill-Stead, in the town of Farmington, as a museum. It is comprised of about 150 acres of land and includes the main house as well as a number of smaller dwellings and buildings. Among these smaller buildings is “The Grundy,” *95 which is an old frame dwellinghouse. In their eomplaint, the trustees seek this court’s permission to sell the Gundy and also request other authority in using the funds realized from its sale.

The defendants are the attorney general, representing the public interest; the Connecticut Bank and Trust Company, trustee of a trust under the tenth clause of the will; the Pope-Brooks Foundation, Inc.; and the Avon Old Farms School, Inc. Except for the attorney general, the defendants resist the plaintiffs’ petition for sale of the Gundy and also have interposed a counterclaim in which they seek a decree ordering the plaintiff trustees to terminate the Hill-Stead Museum trust and to turn over all the trust property to the defendant Connecticut Bank and Trust Company as trustee under a trust created by the tenth clause of the will for the benefit of the defendants Avon Old Farms School and Pope-Brooks Foundation. The attorney general opposed the termination of the Hill-Stead Museum and urged its continuance in the public interest. He also joined with the plaintiffs in urging the sale of the Gundy. Also as parties are the town of Farmington, the Friends of Hill-Stead, and the Farming-ton Land Trust, Inc., all of which have been permitted to intervene by order of the court.

I

The fifth clause of the will creates the trust under which the museum has been operating since the death of Mrs. Riddle in 1946. By its terms, the parties are directed to maintain the property “forever as a museum for the exhibition of the articles of artistic interest contained in the main house, and for the education and benefit of the eitizens of the villages of Farmington and Avon and the general public.” The property consists not only of the land and buildings but also of valuable paintings, art *96 objects and household furniture which are located within the main house. The testatrix, as stated in the fifth clause of her will, has left ,a “Memorandum” concerning the maintenance of the museum. This memorandum gives many directions to the trustees. Among them is the provision that the Gundy be maintained as a museum.

The fifth clause of the will provides for termination of the trust if the trustees decide that there is insufficient public interest, or upon destruction or loss of the contents. In the event that the museum and trust should then terminate, all of its assets would pass to the residuary trustee under the tenth clause.

By the terms of the eighth clause of the will, Mrs. Riddle left to a trustee the sum of $400,000, the income from which is to be used for the maintenance of the museum. This sum has more than doubled since the inception of the trust.

The tenth clause provides for a residuary trust. Its income is to be used in large measure for the support of Avon Old Farms School.

In 1955, the trustees were authorized to sell about eighty acres of land on the outer fringes of the Hill-Stead property. Included among these eighty acres was the Gundy. All the acreage permitted to be sold was to be sold free and clear of all restrictions, except the Gundy. The latter was subject to a number of provisos, notably that only a life use could be conveyed.

In support of their request for an order of sale of the Gundy, the plaintiffs offered considerable evidence. From the financial aspect it was demonstrated that for the past three years, the trust had been running at annual deficits ranging from about $6000 to $17,000. Prior to those years, the fiscal picture was difficult, with the number of years of *97 deficit being almost equal to those of solvency. From 1956 to 1972, there was a net deficit of $42,000. These results have ensued even though admission fees have been charged to visitors. The Gundy has a market value of $75,000, and if sold, the income from the proceeds, plus the elimination of its present maintenance costs of about $3500 per year, would have the net effect of increasing the museum’s annual income by about $7000. Evidence has also been produced which demonstrates that, to prepare the Gundy as a museum, repairs and structural changes of at least $42,000 are needed, together with furnishings amounting to a minimum of $55,000. There is no money available to cover these costs, which are necessary if the Gundy is to be constituted as a museum.

In addition to these financial considerations, there are aspects of a more aesthetic or nonfinaneial nature which render the Gundy property unfeasible as a museum. Expert opinion in this field indicates that the house and its decor have little or no value from a cultural or historical standpoint or as a museum; certainly it woefully lacks historic or artistic value. This was obvious to the court when it inspected the premises. There is qualified expert opinion that it would not qualify as a “landmark” home. Moreover, its stairways are narrow and steep, thus being dangerous for use by large numbers of the public.

There have also been changes in circumstances since Mrs. Biddle’s death which further frustrate the operation of the Gundy. These changes also have taken place since 1955. First, in accordance with Mrs. Biddle’s wishes as expressed in the “Memorandum,” the property was used in part as a tearoom for the students of Miss Porter’s School. After some years, the school is no longer interested in this and has vacated. Also, in accordance with *98 the memorandum, a relative of Mrs. Riddle occupied a part of the premises as her home. She has died, and there is no longer a need to keep the Gundy to fulfil that aspect of the testatrix’ wishes.

Note should also be made of the location of the Gundy. Several parcels of the eighty-acre portion have been sold since 1955, private homes having been built on them. The Gundy now stands in a row of these houses and does not appear to be a part of the Hill-Stead Museum. This result is all the more accentuated by the fact that it is out of sight of the main building and is in no way a necessary or integral part of the museum.

The trustees claim the right to sell the property in question on the basis of the doctrine of approximation. This right cannot be determined without a consideration of the applicable testamentary provisions.

A reading of the will makes it manifestly clear that the Hill-Stead Museum in the main house, with its outstanding paintings and decor, was the dominant factor in Mrs. Riddle’s mind in creating this trust estate. The Gundy, on the other hand, is at best only a side feature. Its creation does not even take place by virtue of any provision of the will itself; rather, it appears only in a “Memorandum.” Mrs. Riddle had placed the provision for the creation of the Gundy as a museum in a list of her “ideas” concerning Hill-Stead.

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Bluebook (online)
324 A.2d 279, 31 Conn. Super. Ct. 93, 31 Conn. Supp. 93, 1974 Conn. Super. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-attorney-general-connsuperct-1974.