In Re Trust Estate of Thompson

279 N.W. 574, 202 Minn. 648, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 892
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 13, 1938
DocketNos. 31,702, 31,703.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 279 N.W. 574 (In Re Trust Estate of Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Trust Estate of Thompson, 279 N.W. 574, 202 Minn. 648, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 892 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

Holt, Justice.

This is an appeal from the findings and order construing the avlII of Abigail I. Thompson.

There is in the hands of the trustee ready for distribution about $2,275,000, under this provision of paragraph XXIV of the will:

“(b) The Trust property shall be held by the Trustees undivided during the joint life of my daughters, said Hazel E. Power and said Florence Wheeler Jefferson, and the life of the survivor of them. So long as they both live, the income thereof, first deducting the sums, if any, paid Mary E. Stewart as above provided [a life annuity of $125 per month], shall be paid over to them annually, or at such shorter intervals as the Trustees shall find convenient, in equal shares. In case the first dying leaves her surviving any lawful issue, whether of the first or succeeding generations, then thereafter so long as any such issue and the remaining daughter shall live, such issue shall receive one-half of the income and the remaining daughter the other one-half. But, in the event such issue of the deceased daughter shall die during the life of the remaining daughter, then thereafter the whole income shall be paid to such remaining daughter until her death.
“Upon the death of the remaining daughter, the property shall be divided and turned over one-half thereof to the living issue of each daughter, if there then be such issue of each, whether of the first or succeeding generations. But, if there then be such issue of one daughter only, that issue shall take the whole of the Trust estate.”

The trustee petitioned the court to determine who took under the will on the death of Hazel E. Power, the survivor of the two *650 daughters. At the time of this daughter’s death all her six children were living, one of these, Abbie, being married and having two children, Fletcher G. Driscoll and Charles P. Driscoll, minors. The only children of the daughter Florence W. Jefferson were also living, viz., Rufus Jefferson and Florence Jefferson Graef, the latter being married and having a daughter, Florence Graef. These parties appeared and answered, the minors by guardian ad litem. The children of the two daughters claimed to be the distributees to the exclusion of the three grandchildren, and the latter claimed as per capita distributees equally with their living mothers. The court excluded the three grandchildren and directed the trustee to turn over and distribute one-half of the trust estate in equal shares to each of Hazel E. Power’s six children, and one-half of the trust estate in equal shares to the two children of Florence W. Jefferson, and directed the guardian ad litem of the grandchildren to appeal. Hereinafter the grandchildren will be referred to as appellants and the children of the two daughters as respondents.

The primary object in the construction of a will is to ascertain the intent and meaning of the testator. In so doing certain rules of construction derived from experience have been found helpful and have been made use of by the courts where the language employed is obscure. Buck v. Huntley, 151 Minn. 446, 187 N. W. 411. The parties are in agreement that the beneficiaries of this trust estate living on November 3, 1937, at the death of the survivor of the life tenants, took a vested interest. The controversy is as to whether the great grandchildren of testatrix took with their living mothers. In construing a will it is permissible to take into consideration the situation of the testator at the time it was made and also whether it was drawn by one learned in the law. There is here not much to be found aside from the will itself to indicate the situation in which Mrs. Thompson found herself. She had the aid of a skilled lawyer. From the document itself it is perceived that Mrs. Thompson was a person of affluence. She had had no children, but had adopted two nieces. She reared and treated them as if they had been her own children, and they were known by others as her children. This will Avas made March 16, 1923, and the last *651 codicil September 11, 1923. Mrs. Thompson died September 20, 1923. It is to be inferred, therefore, that she was stricken with a fatal malady at the time the will was drawn and that she then knew that she conld not long survive. Her daughters were both married and had children. She disposed of a generous portion of her great fortune by bequests which took effect upon her death. The will contains 23 clauses or paragraphs of such bequests. To each then living grandchild some mementos, from that of a dickering piano to various and many kinds of jewelry and personal keepsakes of herself and deceased husband, were given. She seemed to have attempted an equal division between her daughters of her extensive furniture, rugs, household goods, silverware, works of art, and jewelry, and provided that either daughter might, if she so desired, purchase the homestead at such price as the trustee might fix, one-half such price to be deducted from the share that would go to her issue of the trust estate and credited to the share going to the issue of the other daughter, with adjustment of interest during the trust period.

At the time the will was made Hazel E. Power was 35 years old, married, and the mother of five children, and Florence W. Jefferson was 33 years old, married, and the mother of two children. It may be said that Mrs. Thompson adopted the stirpital plan to dispose of the property placed in the trust, for it was to be distributed one-half thereof to the issue of each daughter, although one daughter had five children and the other only two. It is true that the word “issue” must be given the meaning of lineal descendants as defined by 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 10933(8). But that statutory definition by its terms relates to the descent of estates of intestates and does not pertain to the interpretations of wills or deeds of trust. And when it comes to our statutes of descent of the estates of in-testates it is plain that issue take per stirpes and not per capita, except when the property descends to next of kin, in which case those in equal degree take per capita. (2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §. 8720, par. 5.) No doubt Mrs. Thompson when she made the will entertained the hope that her daughters, then young, might live to good old age. More children might come to them, and some of *652 these might die before the death of their mothers, leaving children. To make doubly sure that such great grandchildren bereft of their mother should share, the words “whether of the first or succeeding generations” were employed. It is not likely that by the use of that phrase Mrs. Thompson intended to have great grandchildren take equally with their living parent. Such a result courts are reluctant to arrive at in the construction of wills unless the intention is clearly expressed that children or issue take equally with a living-parent. In Ernst v. Rivers, 233 Mass. 9, 14, 123 N. E. 93, 95, the court construes lineal heirs as equivalent to lineal descendants or issue, saying:

“Where a gift is made to members of a class described as ‘heirs’ or ‘issue’ in accordance with the rule last above stated it is held that grandchildren and their descendants will not be allowed to compete with their parents unless such was* the intention of the testator.”

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Bluebook (online)
279 N.W. 574, 202 Minn. 648, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-trust-estate-of-thompson-minn-1938.