Hawaiian Trust Co. v. Faria

43 Haw. 391, 1959 Haw. LEXIS 75
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1959
DocketNo. 4044
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 Haw. 391 (Hawaiian Trust Co. v. Faria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawaiian Trust Co. v. Faria, 43 Haw. 391, 1959 Haw. LEXIS 75 (haw 1959).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

RICE, C. J.

Hawaiian Trust Company, Limited, plaintiff-appellee herein, is a Hawaiian corporation and is the duly qualified acting successor trustee of the trust estate created by the will of Jose Gomes Faria, Deceased, having been appointed as such trustee on August 27, [392]*3921943, as successor to Lawrence Santos who resigned as such trustee and who had been appointed as such trustee on September 18, 1942, as successor to Arthur G. Faria, who died on May 7, 1942.

Jose Gomes Faria died a resident of the Territory of Hawaii. His will — a copy of which is included in an appendix hereto— provided that all of his property, after payment of debts, should be held in trust. The trustee, after payment of an annuity to a sister, was to divide the remaining income in equal one-half parts, one of which was to be paid to the testator’s wife during her lifetime and was at her death to be divided among the testator’s children or their issue in the manner provided for in the paragraph covering distribution of the other one-half.

The testator’s wife and his sister, the annuitant, have both died, so all of the net income of the trust has become payable in accordance with the intent of the testator and the provisions of the will which are as follows:

"* * * The remaining one equal half part or share of the net income of my said property and the investments for the time being representing the same to pay the same in equal parts or shares, to my children LUIZ GOMES FARIA of Honolulu, ADELAIDE G. CABRAL wife of Manuel Cabral of Oakland, State of California, ARTHUR G. FARIA of Honolulu, GEORGE G. FARIA of Honolulu, JOSE DA CRUZ FARIA of Oakland, State of California, LUCY G. GOES wife of John Gomes of Honolulu, MARIA G. FARIA of Honolulu, and PALMIRA G. SANTOS wife of Joseph Santos of Honolulu during their respective lives, and in case of the death of any of my said children without issue living at the time, then, and in that event his part or share of said income shall be divided equally amongst my surviving children, but if any of my said children shall depart this life leaving issue him surviving, such issue shall be entitled to and shall receive the part or share of said net income to which his or her parent was entitled during his or her life time. The payment of said net income to my said children or their issue shall be made every half year from the date of my death.
"I direct that upon the death of my wife MARIA DO [393]*393MONTE FARIA the share or part of said net income to her herein devised shall be divided amongst my children herein name or their issue in the manner hereinabove provided.”

The trust is to terminate upon the death of the last survivor of the wife and children, and, at termination, the trust corpus is to be divided per stirpes among issue of the testator’s children. The trust has not yet terminated. All the others have died and Joseph G. Faria, defendant-appellant herein, is the only ®ne living of testator’s named children.

Listed by their given names, the deceased children of the testator died in the years and with, or without, leaving issue, as follows:

LUIZ (Luis), died in 1935, leaving issue;
ADELAIDE, died in 1941, leaving issue;
ARTHUR, died in 1942, no issue;
GEORGE, died in 1944, leaving issue;
PALMIRA, died in 1950, leaving issue;
LUCY, died in May 1955, leaving issue; and
MARIA, died in August 1955, no issue.

Until the death of Maria in August, 1955, the named trustee and each successor trustee paid the portion of the net income at the time distributable, under the above-quoted trust provisions, equally — “in equal parts or shares” — to the testator’s named children at the time surviving and per stirpes to the issue, if any, of each of testator’s named children then (at the time of payment) deceased.

Arthur was the first of testator’s children to die without issue. At the time of Arthur’s death in 1942, two of the testator’s children, Adelaide and Luiz (Luis), were deceased, leaving issue. Subsequently, others of testator’s children, namely, George, Palmira and Lucy died, each of them leaving issue. The seventh to die was Maria and she died childless.

Subsequent to Arthur’s death, the then trustee, Lawrence Santos, filed a petition to resign and for the appointment of the present trustee as successor trustee. In connection with his resignation, Lawrence Santos filed his final accounts as trustee. These [394]*394accounts showed distribution of income subsequent to Arthur’s death and showed such distributions of the income in sevenths equally among the testator’s surviving children and the issue of the testator’s two deceased children, Adelaide and Luiz (Luis), the distribution to Adelaide’s and Luiz’s children being per stirpes.

In that proceeding in accounting, all beneficiaries were made parties, including the present appellant Joseph G. Faria. No objection to the accounts was filed by any of the beneficiaries and no question was raised by any beneficiary as to the distribution of the income in equal sevenths after Arthur’s death.

The present trustee, from and after its appointment, also continued to distribute the income in the same manner as its predecessor trustee, including the children of Luiz and Adelaide per stirpes, so that the income was distributed in sevenths from and after Arthur’s death until Maria died without issue in 1955. Copies of the accounts were furnished to each beneficiary annually. No beneficiary, including Joseph, ever questioned the distribution made as shown by the accounts.

In 1955, after the death of Maria, the trustee, plaintiff-appellee herein, for the first time conceived that possibly the will could direct a different distribution than that which had always before been made. The trustee withheld from distribution a one-seventh of the net income of the trust (the share which would have been Maria’s if she had lived) and commenced in the circuit court, first circuit, Territory of Hawaii, as civil number 1632, proceedings for instruction, from which the appeal herein has eventualized.

The trustee, plaintiff-appellee herein, in the proceeding in the circuit court expressed doubt as to the following matters:

“(a) Whether, following the death of Arthur G. Faria without issue on May 7, 1942, the share of income to which he would have been entitled had he continued to survive should have been paid in equal shares to those of the testator’s children who were then surviving and to the issue of those who subsequently died, or whether it should have been paid, as it was actually paid, in equal shares to those of the testator’s children who were then surviving and to the issue of those of the testator’s children who were then dead and to the issue of those [395]*395of the testator’s children who subsequently died.
"(b) Whether, following the death of Maria G. Faria Kilburn without issue on August 27, 1955, the share of income to which she would have been entitled had she continued to survive, should be paid to Joseph G. Faria as the sole surviving child of the testator, or whether it should be paid in equal-shares to Joseph G.

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Related

In Re the Estate of Shunji Kay Ikuta
639 P.2d 400 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1981)
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406 P.2d 718 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
43 Haw. 391, 1959 Haw. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawaiian-trust-co-v-faria-haw-1959.