In Re Henry's Will

134 A. 632, 99 Vt. 437, 49 A.L.R. 169, 1926 Vt. LEXIS 157
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 6, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 134 A. 632 (In Re Henry's Will) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Henry's Will, 134 A. 632, 99 Vt. 437, 49 A.L.R. 169, 1926 Vt. LEXIS 157 (Vt. 1926).

Opinion

Slack, J.

This is an appeal from a decree of the probate court within and for the probate district of Windsor, making distribution of a trust fund created by the will of Julia Henry formerly of Chester in said district, deceased.

Julia Henry died March 7, 1903. Her will was duly admitted to probate April 7, 1903. The provision thereof creating the fund, the disposition of which is in controversy, reads as follows :

“I give devise and bequeath the sum of $4,000, in trust in the hands of three trustees for the purpose of establishing if found to be feasible, a home for indigent women and men upon the Henry Homestead in said Chester, meaning the real estate which until her death was owned jointly by Mary H. Henry and Hugh Henry, said fund and the income thereof to be held by such trustees for the period of 5 years after the decease of the last survivor of Hugh Henry, Martha D. Henry and William G. Henry. After the death of the last survivor of the above, if my interest in said Homestead has not been purchased by them or either of them, I bequeath my interest in said Henry Homestead to said trust fund and if then thought feasible with the funds provided by this bequest or otherwise received by said trustees, to open and maintain such home, then I authorize such trustees to purchase the remaining interests in said Homestead, and thereafter to sell and dispose of such parts of said Homestead premises as are not *440 needed for said home, provided they shall not sell or convey the Homestead Dwelling on the fifty acres of land most contiguous- thereto. If said Home is established it' shall be called the Henry Home for the Indigent, etc. * * # # * if at the end of said term of 5 years above named the funds and accrued income and funds otherwise received shall not have been sufficient in the judgment of said trustees to warrant the establishment and maintenance of-such a Home, then all the property bequeathed by me for that purpose, I bequeath to my heirs”

The fund thus created, together with the income thereof, remained in the hands of duly appointed trustees until the expiration of five years after the death of Hugh Henry (he being the survivor of the three persons named in said provision) which occurred February 3, 1920, when the trustees decided that it was •not feasible to establish a home in accordance with the provision of said will, and proceedings were thereupon had to distribute said fund which resulted in the decree appealed from. Such decree distributes the fund as of the date of testatrix’s death. The appellants insist that it should be distributed as of the daté of the termination of the trust by the trustees.

The testatrix never married. She was survived by two brothers, Hugh and William; a sister, Martha; two children of the brother Hugh; a child of a deceased brother, Arthur; and seven children of a deceased brother, Patrick. Both brothers, the sister, and one of the children of Patrick died before the trust was terminated by the trustees. Neither the brother William, nor the sister, nor the deceased child of Patrick ever married.

Under the decree as made, the child of Arthur receives one-third of the fund; the two children of Hugh, together, receive one-third; and the six surviving children of Patrick receive the remaining one-third. Under the distribution contended for by appellants, who are five of the surviving children of Patrick, the nine nephews and nieces of the testatrix who were living at the time the trust was terminated by the trustees would share the fund equally.

The first question that confronts us is whether the gift over to “my heirs” took effect in interest from the date of testatrix’s death, or whether the interest of such heirs was merely contingent and liable to be defeated by the trustees by putting the fund to the use contemplated by the testatrix, in short, whether the interest of such heirs is a vested or a contingent one. This *441 depends, of course, upon the intention of the testatrix which, when ascertained, controls, and must be carried out so far as it legally may be. Harris v. Harris’ Estate, 82 Vt. 199, 72 Atl. 912. To aid us in discovering such intention we invoke certain well-recognized rules of construction. They are these: (l)“Thelaw favors the early vesting of estates and presumes in favor of the vesting of remainders in interest on the death of the testator, if the language used is consistent with an intention to postpone the enjoyment only.” In re Robinson’s Estate, 90 Vt. 328, 98 Atl. 826. Or to put it in another way: “No estate will be held contingent unless very decided terms are used in the will, or it is necessary to so hold in order to carry out the other provisions or implications of the will.” In re Tucker’s Will, 63 Vt. 104, 21 Atl. 272, 25 A. S. R. 743. (2) “A gift of personalty to ‘heirs’ merely, whether to one’s own heirs or the heirs of another, is primarily to be held to be to those who would be entitled to take under the statute of distributions, and to indicate, when there are no other words in the will showing that the testator used the word ‘heirs’ in a different sense, that they are to take in the same manner and in the same proportions as though the property had come to them as intestate’s estate of the person whose heirs they are called.” In re Irish’s Will, 89 Vt. 56, 94 Atl. 173, Ann. Cas. 1917C, 1154. (3) ““When futurity is annexed to the substance of the gift, the vesting is postponed; but, if annexed to the time of payment only, the legacy vests immediately. In re Mansur’s Will, 98 Vt. 296, 127 Atl. 297.

Applying these rules of construction, we have held that where a testator bequeaths the use and income of property for certain purposes until the happening of an event, which must necessarily happen, sooner or later, by the efflux of time, and not a dubious or uncertain one, with a gift over of the property it-, self, or the property and unused income, to other beneficiaries, the interest of the latter vested immediately upon the testator’s death. Among the cases so holding are, Harris v. Harris’ Estate, In re Tucker’s Will, and In re Robinson’s Estate, cited above, and Burton v. Provost et al., 75 Vt. 199, 54 Atl. 189, and Jones v. Knappen, 63 Vt. 391, 22 Atl. 630, 14 L. R. A. 293. But in the Irish Will Case, su,pra, where the principal of the trust, as well as the income and interest arising therefrom, was to be used and expended as needed and required for the proper and comfortable support of the testator’s mother for the full term and period of *442 her natural life, and to defray the expenses of her funeral and burial, it was held that futurity was annexed to the substance of the gift, and consequently the vesting was suspended until the time when the bequest should take effect; because, as was said: “It was only so much of said sum (the principal) with accrued interest thereon as should be remaining at the termination of the trust — and it might be much, or little, or none at all- — that was given over.” It was the doubt and uncertainty which attached to the gift over in- that case, as was pointed out in In re Robinson’s Estate, supra, that distinguished it from the other cases cited above.

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Bluebook (online)
134 A. 632, 99 Vt. 437, 49 A.L.R. 169, 1926 Vt. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-henrys-will-vt-1926.