In Re Estate of Bunting

261 N.W. 922, 220 Iowa 186
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 17, 1935
DocketNo. 42871.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 261 N.W. 922 (In Re Estate of Bunting) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Bunting, 261 N.W. 922, 220 Iowa 186 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Powers, J.

Marshall Bunting died testate on July 1, 1925, survived by his widow, Clara Bunting, and seven daughters and two sons. By the terms of his will, which was dated June 14, 1922, he gave $5,000 absolutely to each of six of his daughters. The provision in controversy here is with reference to the other daughter, Charlotta Case. It is item 5 of the will, and is as follows:

“I will devise and bequeath to my wife Clara Bunting the sum of Five Thousand Dollars in trust for the use and benefit of my daughter Charlotta Case, she to pay to said daughter the income from said fund and so much of the principal from time to time as she, my wife, shall deem advisable for the care and support of my said daughter.”

Subject to these seven bequests, the residue of the estate was devised and bequeathed to his widow for life, with the remainder to his two sons to be equally divided between them. Charlotta Case died in 1926, while the estate of Marshall Bunting was being administered and before the trust fund had been set up, although the widow of testator, who was executor of his estate and the person made trustee under item 5 of the will, had made some expenditures for and on behalf of the daughter, Charlotta Case. The administrator of the estate of Charlotta Case claims this bequest on the theory that the bequest is an absolute one to Charlotta Case, and that the provision for a trusteeship was merely for its custody and control during the lifetime of Charlotta Case. The representatives of the estate- of Marshall Bunting resist the claim on the theory that Charlotta Case, the beneficiary, never acquired any interest in said fund, and that item 5 creates a trust for a specific purpose, namely, to *188 supply care and support for Charlotta Case, and that that purpose has now been fulfilled or made impossible of performance, and by reason thereof the ownership of the fund remains in the estate of Marshall Bunting and passes under the residuary clause of his will. The question thus presented is one of interpretation of the will.

It is elementary that the sole function of the court in such a situation is to ascertain the testator’s intention and carry out that intention or purpose if no law is thereby violated. To discover the intention, the court should take the will by its four corners and examine the -entire document. Moreover, the court may consider the circumstances existing at the time the will was drawn. As sometimes expressed, the court should put itself in the environment which surrounded the testator when he made the will and read the language of the will in the light of such environment as an aid to discovering the intention of the testator. When confronted with such a problem, precedents and authorities giving a particular meaning- to particular words are of very little value because the language used in wills and the circumstances under which used are so varied that the decisions with reference to the meaning- of certain language under one set of circumstances are of little value in determining what the testator meant by the use of different language under different circumstances. Sir William Jones expressed this thought by the epigram “that no will has a brother.” Each case must be determined upon the facts of that particular case.

It must be conceded that any effort to arrive at the intention of a testator not expressed is beset by many uncertainties and hazards, and that any conclusion which a court may reach must be arrived at with the recognition that there is a possibility that it may be doing violence to the actual intention of the testator. The fact that the able and learned trial court reached a conclusion in this case at variance with the conclusion which we have arrived at illustrates, how minds may reach a different destination when required to grope in the dark and in an area where there are no satisfactory signposts to definitely point the way. A court in reaching a conclusion in such a situation is forced to do so with the knowledge that the guides are not very certain, definite, or satisfactory. In other words, the court must proceed more or less in the dark and without satisfactory light. The statement of Lord Coke is as true today as it was when uttered *189 centuries ago: “Wills and the construction of them do more perplex a man than any other learning; and to make a certain construction of them, this excedit jurisprudentum artem. ’ ’

It is the conclusion of this court, from a reading of the will in the light of the circumstances under which it was written, that Charlotta Case acquired no vested interest in the fund created by item 5 of the will, and that upon her death no interest in said fund passed to the representatives of her estate. We have been led to such conclusion by the following considerations:

1. Charlotta Case had married prior to the time the will was made. Her husband, apparently, was unable to support her. In any event, she and her husband were constantly harassed by reason of unpaid bills and accounts for the support of the family. Marshall Bunting had come to her aid in the payment of the rent of a home and supplies for the home in order that she might not suffer unduly for lack of proper maintenance and support prior to the making of the will. Under such circumstances, if any money were left to her, it would be immediately seized by creditors. The obvious purpose the testator had in mind in creating the trust was to make some provision for the support and maintenance of Charlotta Cáse, but at the same time accomplish that purpose in such a manner as to make it impossible for her creditors to ever reach the fund. It seems to us that to hold that the fund should now be paid to her administrator and should, therefore, be made available for the payment of her creditors is to defeat the obvious purpose and intention of the testator in creating, under the circumstances here, the trust set out in item 5 of the will. Such a purpose was not only perfectly lawful, but it was perfectly natural. The testator was under no obligation to these creditors. He was under no duty to leave his property so that they might be satisfied. He had a right to so arrange the disposition of his property that his children would get the direct benefit of it and that their creditors would get no benefit. On the other hand, he was the father of this woman. That he had the natural and normal paternal interest in her is clearly shown. During life he did not undertake to pay the debts which she and her husband had contracted, but he did make certain that she had a place to live by paying house rent, and he did pay for some of the tilings which went into the home that she might not suffer for want of proper maintenance. Is it not logical to assume that he wanted to have that same policy continued after his *190 death, and therefore provided his wife, the mother of that child, with funds to continue that policy ? The policy was not to pay the debts of the daughter, but to see, so far as possible, that she did not suffer because of the lack of the means of proper sustenance and support.

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Bluebook (online)
261 N.W. 922, 220 Iowa 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-bunting-iowa-1935.