In Re Estate of Wallich

420 P.2d 40, 18 Utah 2d 240, 1966 Utah LEXIS 441
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1966
Docket10569
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 420 P.2d 40 (In Re Estate of Wallich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court 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 Wallich, 420 P.2d 40, 18 Utah 2d 240, 1966 Utah LEXIS 441 (Utah 1966).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Justice:

Petitioner, Fred R. Wallich, seeks to reverse a decree of the district court requiring him to account as trustee under the will of his uncle, Claudius Wallich, and to distribute the remainder of the estate to the beneficiaries, viz., himself, the respondents and other heirs at law of Claudius Wallich 1

Claudius Wallich died on May 23, 1958, a resident of Salt Lake County, leaving a gross estate of around $300,000. After deduction of specific bequests, taxes and other expenses, there remained about $150,000 with which this suit is concerned.

It is the appellant’s contention that under the terms of the will and the decree of distribution in the estate made February 24, 1959, the effect was to give him the residue of the estate outright, and that he had no duty whatsoever to render any accounting to the respondents or to the court.

The portions of the decree of distribution and the will pertinent to that issue are these:

Paragraph six of the decree states:

* * * all the rest, residue and remainder of the property * * * is here *242 by distribtited to Fred R. Wallich, to be held and used by him in his discretion in accordance with and pursuant to the provisions of paragraph 8 of the Will of the deceased.

Paragraph, eight of the will provided:

All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, * * * I hereby give, devise and bequeath to my said nephew, Fred R. Wallich, * * * in trust, nevertheless, to be held and used by him in his sole and absolute discretion, and without restriction or control of any kind whatsoever, together with the income therefrom, if any, as a reserve to meet any emergencies that may arise in, and for the use and benefit of, the Wallich family, that is, my blood relations, regardless of their degree of kindred or relationship to me; said fund, and the income therefrom, to be held and used by my said nephew until his death or for a period of five (5) years after the date of my death, whichever shall first occur, and upon the occurrence of such event, my said nephew, or in the event of his death prior to five (5) years after my death, then his wife, Loretta Wallich, who shall act as successor Trustee without bond, shall distribute any part of the Trust fund that may be then on hand, to my heirs at law then living, upon the principle of representation. My said nephew in the administration of the trust herein imposed upon him shall act without the necessity of furnishing any bond or any other security, and without the necessity of making any accounting of any nature whatsoever to any person or party concerning the administration of his trust.

In arguing that the provision in the decree of distribution quoted above invested him with the residue of the estate absolutely and without restriction, appellant cites our recent decision in Miller v. Walker 2 wherein we stated that distribution of property “in accordance with the will” merely recited the basis for making the distribution and did not impose any restrictions upon it. That case is quite different from this one. It could hardly be more obvious that the distribution of the property “to be held and used by him [appellant] in his discretion in accordance with and pursuant to the provisions of paragraph 8 of the Will” necessitates looking to the will to determine how the property is to be held and used; and that it thus incorporates and imposes the conditions of the will on the use of the property. 3

*243 Appellant essays this further proposition: If paragraph eight of the will be regarded as incorporated by the decree, nevertheless, no trust is created because he was given sole and absolute discretion, which shows that the testator did not intend to impose any enforceable duties upon him. He urges that this conclusion also finds support in the vagueness of the terms used, i. e., the words, “reserve” for “emergencies” in the “family,” lack sufficient precision in meaning to establish trust responsibility. 4

If the terms appellant singles out could be taken out of context and looked at separately, they might indeed be used to make some plausible argument for his position. But both common sense and the rules of construction forbid any such segregation of the language of the will. The paramount objective in interpreting a will is to give effect to the intent and desire of the testator insofar as that can be ascertained. For that purpose it should be read and understood as a whole, and meaning given to all of its provisions considered in their relationship to each other.

If we turn attention to paragraph eight of the will with that object in mind, this proposition is confronted: If Claudius Wallich had been concerned only with the welfare of his nephew, Fred, and had intended that he should have the residue of the estate entirely for himself, he could have achieved that result by simply saying so in direct language. But he did not do this. It appears quite unmistakably that he had an interest in the welfare of his family beyond a mere concern for Fred. That he intended Fred to hold and use the residue of his estate for any emergency that might arise in the family for a period of five years and then distribute it to the family, is shown not only in the statement of that plan, but in the fact that the terms used manifest complete awareness of the nature and purpose of a trust. E. g., the property is bequeathed to appellant but “in trust, nevertheless,” to be held for the “use and benefit of” the Wal-lich family. It also provides for a “successor trustee” who shall distribute any part of the “trust fund”; and that both Fred “in the administration of the trust here imposed upon him” and the “successor trustee” shall act without bond.

Nor do we believe that the terms appellant complains about as being vague are so indefinite as to circumvent the testator’s expressed desire. In the context used we see no difficulty in understanding what is meant by the terms “reserve” or the Wallich “family.” Particularly so when the latter is further defined as “my blood relations, regardless of their degree of relationship to me.” The word “emergencies,” like a great *244 many words, represents a concept of thought which has some variation. This ranges from situations that fall within the central core of the meaning and upon which everyone would agree, to doubtful ones on the outer fringes upon which there could be disagreement. The fact that such doubtful conditions can be conjured up does not destroy the usefulness of the term in covering circumstances where the term “emergency” would clearly be applicable.

It undoubtedly was from an awareness of the inefficacy of words to convey meanings within precise boundaries that the testator gave appellant a wide discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
420 P.2d 40, 18 Utah 2d 240, 1966 Utah LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-wallich-utah-1966.