Hartford National Bank & Trust Co. v. Yearly Meeting

81 A.2d 104, 137 Conn. 648, 1951 Conn. LEXIS 167
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 8, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 81 A.2d 104 (Hartford National Bank & Trust Co. v. Yearly Meeting) 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
Hartford National Bank & Trust Co. v. Yearly Meeting, 81 A.2d 104, 137 Conn. 648, 1951 Conn. LEXIS 167 (Colo. 1951).

Opinions

Brown, C. J.

The principal question presented upon the reservation of this action for the construction of the will of Walter R. Jones concerns the disposition of surplus income of a trust under the will.

The testator died at Hartford September 22, 1934, leaving a will executed by him August 24, 1934. After making certain specific bequests and devises, he gave the life use of his shore cottage in Saybrook to his wife, and further directed that the trustee named in the fifth paragraph of the will pay to her $350 per year for its maintenance, "said sum to be paid by my Trustee from the fund created in the Fifth paragraph of this will.” By the fifth paragraph he gave the residue of his estate to the plaintiff as trustee, with the following provisions: It was to hold, invest and reinvest the estate and to collect the income until the termination of the trust. It was also to pay in equal monthly instalments these annuities: To the testator’s wife, $2400 a year during her life; to the testator’s sister, Ethel M. Jones, $720 a year, to be used by her for the support of the testator’s parents, Lindsey S. Jones and Alice R. Jones, during their lives; and to Elsie Peters, who was not related to the testator, $480 a year during her life or until she married. After the death of the testator’s wife, the trustee was directed to pay in equal [650]*650monthly instalments the following annuities: To Mabel Taber, a cousin of the testator, $300 a year during her life or until she married; to the testator’s sister, Ethel M. Jones, $480 a year during her life; and to Elsie Peters, $240 a year during her life or until she married, this annuity being operative to increase the annual total payable to her to $720. The paragraph went on to provide that if any of the annuitants to whom these payments were to be made “shall be in want, I direct my Trustee in its sole discretion to add to” the annuities “if in its discretion the trust fund warrants such additional payments.” The paragraph finally made provision to the effect that “when there are no further payments to be made under said trust fund” as specified in the provisions for the annuitants recited above, “I direct that my Trustee shall pay over the principal of said trust fund as then constituted, absolutely and free of trust,” to the defendant Yearly Meeting of Friends for New England.

For four years in his youth, until 1901, the testator attended what was then known as Friends School in Providence, Rhode Island, which is owned by the Yearly Meeting of Friends for New England. Thereafter, he occasionally attended reunions at the school. There was no issue of the testator’s marriage. His wife survived him. For some time prior to the execution of his will, the testator’s parents made their home in Dorchester, Massachusetts, with his sister Ethel M. Jones, who never married. She was a school teacher until her retirement in 1944. The testator had no other sister and his only brother had died without issue in 1911. As the testator well knew, his mother had been an invalid for years before the execution of the will, and neither parent had enough income to live on. His sister’s annual income did not exceed $2000. Down to the execution of the will, the testator, who was familiar [651]*651with the foregoing facts, advanced $60 per month to his sister toward his parents’ support, and she contributed $10 per week in addition to certain other items. At the time the will was executed, the ages of the annuitants named in it were: Lindsey S. Jones, 82 years; Alice R. Jones, 75; testator’s wife, 66; Ethel M. Jones, 51; Elsie Peters, 44; and Mabel Taber, 40. From January 1, 1934, until the death of the testator on September 22, 1934, he received from his property $5651.99 in dividends and interest. During his brief interview with the lawyer who prepared the will, the testator stressed the importance of providing fixed monthly amounts for his beneficiaries whether or not this involved invasion of principal, but did not refer to the possibility that surplus trust income might accrue. The attorney had no information as to the amount of the testator’s estate or as to the ages of the annuitants. The testator had executed an earlier will on January 15, 1932, which was revoked by the one before us. Both wills followed the same general testamentary scheme. In the earlier will, as in this one, the great bulk of the testator’s estate was left in trust for the payment of the life annuities specified and for the eventual payment of the fund to the defendant Yearly Meeting. All the annuitants named in the first will were similarly provided for in the second, although with some variation in the amounts, and two additional annuitants were included. The testator, who had always lived modestly, had acquired the property devised by each of these wills substantially through his own earnings.

On October 1, 1934, the will was admitted to probate by the Court of Probate for the district of Hartford and the plaintiff bank qualified as executor. The appraised value of the estate was $157,317.28. It consisted mostly of income-producing securities. The bank’s final account as executor was allowed, and on [652]*652May 1, 1935, it qualified as trustee under the will. The appraised value of the assets distributed to it as trustee was $133,437.18. Since May 1, 1935, with the exception of the year 1936, the annual income of the fund has exceeded the amount paid to annuitants and for other expenses, and the total net accumulation of surplus income as of May 1, 1950, was $9405.91. The testator’s wife died August 3, 1950. Alice R. Jones died April 27, 1938, and Lindsey S. Jones, January 26, 1943. On August 21, 1950, the approximate market value of the principal of the trust was $157,937. It is probable that additional surplus income will accumulate in the future, and the rate of accumulation will be greatly increased because of the reduction in the amount of annuities payable under the terms of the trust from and after the death of the testator’s widow.

The primary questions asked in this case,1 as was true of the decisive questions in New Haven Bank v. [653]*653Hubinger, 117 Conn. 417, 167 A. 914, concern the duty of the trustee as to the excess of income over the amount required to pay the annuities. As we there stated (p. 420): “Where a testator establishes a fund the income from which is to be used for certain purposes but that income is in excess of the amount required for those purposes, the question whether the excess shall accumulate and be added to the principal or shall be otherwise disposed of depends primarily upon the intent of the testator.” As was also there pointed out (p. 421), however, even though the will contains no expression of an intent that the excess income shall be accumulated, such course must be followed where the disposition of the excess as it accrues would be contrary to the schemé of the testator as disclosed in the will. Accordingly, the absence of an accumulation provision is only one of several indications of the testator’s intention and, in view of the character and contents of the will, may be one by no means as significant as those of a contrary import. Townsend v. Wilson, 77 Conn. 411, 415, 59 A. 417. In short, a will may be effective to require the accumulation of excess income either by reason of its express terms or by implication from its general scheme of disposition. We also said in New Haven Bank v. Hubinger,

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Hartford National Bank & Trust Co. v. Yearly Meeting
81 A.2d 104 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 A.2d 104, 137 Conn. 648, 1951 Conn. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-national-bank-trust-co-v-yearly-meeting-conn-1951.