In Re Trust Under Will of Cosgrave

31 N.W.2d 20, 225 Minn. 443
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 13, 1948
DocketNo. 34,416.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 31 N.W.2d 20 (In Re Trust Under Will of Cosgrave) 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 Under Will of Cosgrave, 31 N.W.2d 20, 225 Minn. 443 (Mich. 1948).

Opinion

1 Reported in 31 N.W.2d 20. The individual trustees of the trust created under the will and codicil thereto of Charles A. Cosgrave appeal from an order procured upon the petition of the corporate trustee authorizing and directing the trustees to pay out of the corpus of the trust estate the excess of the cost of the widow's care and support over the income therefrom.

The questions for decision are: (1) Whether under a testamentary trust testator's widow is entitled to support out of the corpus of a trust, if income therefrom is insufficient, where testator by his will, after directing payment of his debts, the expenses of his last illness, funeral, administration, and inheritance and estate taxes, and giving part of his estate consisting of the homestead and certain personal property outright to his wife for life, with remainder to his daughters by a prior marriage, gave the residue of his estate to trustees, if his wife survived him, in trust "to manage" his "estate" and "to pay the income of such trust" monthly in equal shares to his widow and his two daughters; but with the proviso that, if "one-third of the proceeds of said trust" should be insufficient to support the widow in the style and manner in which testator supported her, the trustees in their discretion were authorized to pay for such purpose from the "proceeds" of the "trust" such additional sums as they deemed necessary and proper, in which event "the share of the proceeds of said trust hereinbefore given" to the daughters, which was referred to in the next clause as "income" given to them, should be "decreased accordingly"; and the codicil contained identical provisions relative to the terms of the trust, except that in the proviso authorizing the trustees to pay more than one-third of the proceeds, etc., for the widow's support it used the word "estate" instead of the word "trust" wherever that word occurred in the will itself; and (2) whether, if the preceding question is answered in the negative, *Page 446 the court may confer power upon the trustees to encroach upon the corpus of the trust for the purpose of paying for the widow's support to the extent that it exceeds the amount of the income from the trust.

The will, after a general direction that testator's debts and the expenses of last illness, funeral, and administration be paid, and a specific direction that inheritance and estate taxes be paid out of the "principal" of the estate, disposed of testator's property in part outright and in part in trust contingent upon his wife's surviving him.

Outright disposition of the homestead and certain personal property was made to the widow for life and at her death to his two daughters by a prior marriage and, if they died before his widow, to their children by right of representation. If the widow did not continue to occupy the homestead, the trustees were empowered to lease it and to pay the income in equal shares to the widow and the daughters, and if the widow and the daughters gave their written consent, to sell and convey the homestead and to distribute the "net proceeds thereof" in equal shares to the widow and the two daughters.

The residue was given in trust during the widow's life, contingent upon her surviving the testator. The trustees were directed "to manage my said estate and to pay the income of such trust" (italics supplied) monthly in equal shares to his widow and his two daughters; but with the proviso that, if one-third of the "proceeds of said trust" should be insufficient to support the widow in the style and manner in which testator supported her during his lifetime, the trustees were directed to pay to her "from the proceeds of said trust" such additional sums as might be needed for the purpose, in which event "the share of the proceeds of said trust hereinbefore given" to the daughters "shall be decreased accordingly." The codicil contains identical provisions, except that the word "estate" is used therein wherever the word "trust" occurs in the proviso in the will authorizing the trustees to pay more than one-third of the proceeds, etc., for the widow's support. *Page 447

Upon testator's wife's death, whether she predeceased or survived him, he gave the principal and accrued interest in said trust or in the residue of his estate, as the case might be, to his two daughters. If a daughter or the daughters died before his wife, he gave "the share or portion of theincome devised to such daughter or daughters (italics supplied) to her or their children by right of representation, and if a daughter or the daughters died prior to receiving the principal and accrued interest, he made like disposition of their shares thereof to their children.

The will further provided: (a) That the trustees might retain and change investments coming into their hands as such, sell real and personal property, and "buy, sell, invest and reinvest the proceeds of said estate" (italics supplied) in securities which are legal investments for trust companies, which powers were enlarged by the codicil so as to authorize the trustees to invest and reinvest "available cash funds of the trust estate" (italics supplied) in preferred and common stocks, regardless of whether such were authorized investments for trust companies; (b) that the provisions for the benefit of the widow should be in lieu of all dower and statutory rights which she might have in the estate and not in addition thereto, except the widow's allowance during the pendency of probate proceedings; and (c) that if the widow should die before the testator, the will should be automatically revoked as to her without affecting the other provisions thereof.

The will names the corporate trustee and S.D. Balch, the husband of one of the daughters, as cotrustees. The codicil names Robert G. Reiniger, the husband of the other daughter, as an additional cotrustee.

The wife and daughters survived the testator, who died prior to May 1, 1941, when the trustees were appointed. The residue of the estate held in trust by them exceeds in value $122,000. The annual net income from the trust was about $3,900 for 1941-1942 and has decreased to about $2,900 for 1945-1946. The widow, who is now over 85 years of age, has continued to occupy the homestead and to use the household furniture and furnishings. One-third of the income *Page 448 of the trust has been insufficient for the widow's support. From May 1941 to April 1944, the trustees paid her $200 per month for support and thereafter the entire income of the trust. In 1944 she was injured. Thereafter, it required about $6,500 per year to maintain the widow and her niece in her home and to pay doctor's and nurses' bills. The support of the niece is justified upon the ground that she contributes to the widow's care. The net income of the trust apparently is adequate to pay for the care and support of the widow in a hospital, but she objects to leaving her own home, and her doctor advises against her doing so. The court authorized encroachment upon the corpus to an extent necessary to provide in the aggregate $6,500 per year for the widow's care and support, $800 for doctor's bills, and approximately $1,000 for attorneys' fees, an aggregate of about $5,400, with leave to apply to the court in the future for still further encroachments.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.W.2d 20, 225 Minn. 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-trust-under-will-of-cosgrave-minn-1948.