Horlick v. Sidley

3 N.W.2d 710, 241 Wis. 81, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 194
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 3 N.W.2d 710 (Horlick v. Sidley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horlick v. Sidley, 3 N.W.2d 710, 241 Wis. 81, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 194 (Wis. 1942).

Opinion

The following opinion was filed May 5, 1942 :

Fairchild, J.

It is urged on behalf of William H. Sidley, the appellant, that he is entitled to that part of the undistributed one third of the net income allocable to the share of his mother, Mabel Horlick Sidley, which had been collected by the trustees prior to her death and also to that part of such undistributed one third of the net income which had accrued prior to but had not been collected until after her death. A similar claim is made in respect to income allocable to the share of William O. Horlick. This claim is based on the provision in the trust agreement that in the event of death of a beneficiary prior to the termination'of the trust the net *87 income “which would have been paid to her [or him] if living” should be paid to her (or his) issue. The solution to this question must be found in the intent of the settlor. Commercial Trust Co. v. Spiegelberg (1934), 117 N. J. Eq. 171, 175 Atl. 164; affirmed (1936) “for the reasons expressed in the opinion of [the] vice-chancellor,” 119 N. J. Eq. 376, 182 Atl. 875. The nature of the rights and the subject matter here involved as well as the express language of the trust instrument favor the interpretation given by the lower court. No specific periods were fixed by the trust instrument designating the times when income was to be distributed by the trustees, and although they were given no authority to- accumulate or withhold income for any period of time, it was their practice not to distribute this money until some one of the beneficiaries had occasion to demand it when they would then pay over to each beneficiary an equal share of the income. Frequently the trustees had on hand a large amount of income so retained. The sums here involved consist of money that had been collected as income prior to the death of the beneficiaries in question and money that, although accrued prior to death, had not been collected until after such time. The specific items consist of bond interest. To avoid confusion of thought, it is well to point out here that two distinct problems are involved, one of apportionment, i. e., of determining whether accruing income is to be divided, as measured by time, between the deceased primary beneficiary, or his or her estate, and the secondary beneficiary; .the other of determining which bene-ficiar}' had title to the particular items of income collected or matured. Note (1940), 126 A. L. R. 12, 30-32. Only little doubt can be raised as to the latter problem. Counsel for appellant apparently concede that where the interests involved are those of one having a life interest and of one having á remainder interest ordinarily the former has a vested right to the income accrued or collected before death and the authorities support such rule. Welch v. Apthorp (1909), 203 Mass. *88 249, 89 N. E. 432, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 449; Commercial Trust Co. v. Spiegelberg, supra; Davidson’s Estate (1926), 287 Pa. 354, 135 Atl. 130. It is argued, however, that such rule does not apply for the reason that the primary beneficiaries did not have a life interest'in the trust property but a defeasible interest, an unlimited ownership subject to being cut off by the happening of a specified event, namely, death within the fifteen-year period of the trust. Neither reason, nor authority, however, support the result so claimed.

The reasons opposing appellant’s claim are clearly stated by the New Jersey court in the Spiegelberg Case, supra, in the following language (pp. 174, 175) :

“By the first paragraph of the trust indenture, supra, the net income of the trust for and during the life of the settlor’s wife, was given to her, absolutely and unqualifiedly, and its payment to her specifically enjoined upon the trustees. That income was set aside as and became her absolute property. She could not legally be deprived of any part of it by and [sic] act, design or default on the part of the trustees. Nor could the trustees, by merely neglecting or refusing to pay it to her in the manner directed by the settlor, convert all or any part of it into corpus or accumulations thereon, payable, upon her death, to the remainderman under the trust.
“To hold otherwise, and as contended for by the remainder-men — that income accrued, but not actually paid over, during the life of the life tenant reverted upon her death to the re-maindermen as accumulations on corpus — would necessitate a construction whereby this outright gift to the settlor’s wife would be qualified so as to include not that which he had specifically directed the trustees to pay her, but only that which they saw fit to actually pay her, during her lifetime. It would require that settlor’s clear and unambiguous language be; judicially supplemented by words which he saw fit ter exclude or omit therefrom. .
“The inevitable result and effect of any such construction would be to enable the trustees by their mere withholding, intentionally or otherwise, payment of all or' any part of the net income until after the life beneficiary’s, death to thereby *89 not only deprive the latter of that which the creator of the trust intended and specifically directed should absolutely be hers, but to even frustrate and defeat his very intent. A construction so harsh and casting such grave doubts upon the stability and security of trust settlements, and incidentally upon the settlor’s power to dispose, as he sees fit, of that which is his own, should not, and will not, be adopted unless the language and tenure of the trust indenture admits of no other.”

Granting that the interest of William H. Sidley is an executory interest operating to defeat the prior vested interest in the principal of the trust, it does not necessarily follow that it likewise operates to defeat such interest in the collected or accrued income. What distinguishes, for the purposes of appellant’s argument, such income and income previously paid to the primary beneficiaries ? The interest in the accrued and the collected income is a fully vested interest whatever may be the nature of the title to the principal and to the subsequently accruing income, and this vested interest is not subject to any defeasance. It is recognized that the Rhode Island case of Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Noyes (1904), 26 R. I. 323, 58 Atl. 999, reaches a contrary result to the position taken by appellant and counsel attempt to explain this case on the ground that “the important distinction, so far as concerns the disposition of accumulated and accrued income, between a life interest and a defeasibly vested interest in principal and income does not seem to have been pointed out to the Rhode Island court.” Yet, as we have seen, no sound basis exists for holding that because the interest in the principal and the right to subsequent income may be subject to being divested it' necessarily follows that the beneficiary’s interest in the accrued and collected income is of the same nature, and common sense forbids such a result.

Similar reasons and rules apply to the obtaining of a like result to the problem of apportionment. The rule is stated *90 as follows in the Restatement of the Law of Trusts, pp. 697, 698, § 235:

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.W.2d 710, 241 Wis. 81, 1942 Wisc. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horlick-v-sidley-wis-1942.