In Re Trust Under Will of Murray

90 N.W. 312, 207 Minn. 7
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 19, 1940
DocketNo. 32,188.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 90 N.W. 312 (In Re Trust Under Will of Murray) 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 Murray, 90 N.W. 312, 207 Minn. 7 (Mich. 1940).

Opinions

1 Reported in 290 N.W. 312. This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Ramsey county directing the distribution of the one-third share of the income from the trust created in the will of Carrie C. Murray which by the terms of the testamentary trust had gone to Neel C. Murray during his lifetime. The court directed its distribution to Jane Murray Disque, Doris Murray Vance, and Gerard A. Murray, the respondents herein. Appellant is the remarried widow of William P. Murray, who was a son of Neel C. Murray and grandson of the testatrix. William was a brother of the respondents and died prior to the remarriage of his mother, Lucy Alexander Murray, who survived her husband as beneficiary of the trust during her widowhood.

Testatrix, Carrie C. Murray, owned valuable real estate in the loop district of the city of St. Paul. She died in March, 1911, and her will was admitted to probate in Ramsey county in April of that year. A final decree was entered in her estate on June 16, 1914, assigning to Winifred [Winnefred] Murray Deming, Lucy Alexander Murray, Fenton C. Murray, and Hermon W. Phillips, as trustees, her entire estate consisting of real estate "in trust however, upon the terms, conditions and limitations * * * expressly contained in said will." The testatrix began her will by announcing her purposes as follows:

"I, Carrie C. Murray, being of sound mind and wishing to leave my property so that my children, and grandchildren after them shall derive most benefit out of it, do hereby * * * leave all * * * the 'Golden Rule Property' in trust, and desire, * * *"

Then, by paragraph one she provided that the trust should endure until the death of the last survivor of her children and the wives of her sons; and by paragraph two she directed that if her husband should survive her the entire net income of the trust be paid to him "for his use and benefit and the benefit of our children and our grandchildren." Paragraphs three, four, and fire read as follows: *Page 9

"3. After the death of my husband William Pitt Murray should he survive me, I desire that the net income derived from such property, or the proceeds thereof, shall be divided into three equal parts, or shares. One share to be paid to my son Neel C. Murray, for his use and benefit and the benefit of his wife and children. One share to be paid to my daughter Winnefred Murray Deming for her use and benefit and the benefit of her children. One share to be paid to my son Fenton C. Murray for his use and benefit and the benefit of his wife and children.

"4. I desire that my Executors and Trustees shall pay to each child direct the share of such income belonging to such child and it shall not be liable for any debt or obligation which may have been made previous to my death. However, should the Executors and Trustees deem it for the best interests of any of my children or grandchildren to pay the amount due such child or grandchild to a guardian for the benefit of such child or grandchild, they may do so.

"5. Should Lucy Alexander Murray wife of my son Neel C. Murray outlive my son I desire that his share of said income shall be paid to her for the benefit of herself and children so long as she remains unmarried. In the event of her remarrying Idesire the income to be paid direct to the grandchildren, or to a guardian for their benefit." (Italics supplied.)

Paragraph six made a similar provision for Fenton's wife.

Neel C. Murray died in 1914, before the final decree of the probate court was entered. His widow, Lucy Alexander Murray, was appointed trustee in his stead. She received one-third of the income and used it for her benefit and for the benefit of her children until 1938, when she remarried. Since that time the trustees have divided this one-third share into four equal parts, paying one part to each of the following children of Neel and Lucy: Carrie Jane Disque, Doris Vance, Gerard A. Murray. The other one-fourth part of this one-third interest has been held by the trustees abiding an order by the court. They petitioned the district court of Ramsey county for a determination of the disposition of the *Page 10 remaining one-fourth, with the result above stated, and this appeal followed.

The fourth part would have gone to William P. Murray, the other child of Lucy and Neel, were he living. However, he died in 1938 prior to his mother's remarriage and left a widow, Marjorie Howard (this appellant, who has since remarried) and no children. Appellant's contention is that the interest of her husband, William P., vested upon the death of the testatrix, and that his interest was devisable and descendible. A family tree appended in a note indicates the relationship insofar as relevant.2

The trial court held that the remaining one-fourth interest should be distributed to the respondents, the surviving three children of Neel C. and Lucy Murray. Each side of the controversy here presented asserts that the intent of the testatrix is clear and requires no resort to rules of construction, but opposite conclusions are arrived at. *Page 11

Appellant contends that under R. L. 1905, §§ 3202, 3224, 3250, and 32513, which appear in 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927 as §§ 8043, 8065, 8091, and 8092, the gift to the grandchildren vested at the death of the testatrix, subject only to be opened up to let in after-born grandchildren; that being vested the estate possesses the characteristics of devisability and descendibility and that she is entitled to her husband's share as his heir and devisee. Respondents claim that the intent of the testatrix prevails over the statutes cited and that, even though the gift be deemed vested, still the members of the class by the terms of the trust are to be determined at the termination of the prior interest — in this case the *Page 12 remarriage of their mother, and that the intent of the testatrix was so to limit beneficial interest in the income to the grandchildren.

We first dispose of the question whether the statutes cited by appellant prevented the testatrix from directing when the remainder should vest. In Levings v. First Nat. B. T. Co.192 Minn. 143, 148, 255 N.W. 828, 830, the same question arose, and § 8043 was invoked as controlling. This court held:

"We do not think this statute was intended to control a testator in respect to the time that a bequest should take effect or vest. The important matter here is not any statute, but the language of the will. It is not unlawful to postpone the vesting of the remainder until the life estate ends."

This court held that the plainly expressed intention of the testator must prevail. To like effect is In re Trust of Bell,147 Minn. 62, 179 N.W. 650, and cases cited. There, as here, the testator may have entertained a different purpose as to the income from that as to the corpus.

Does the will here under consideration evince an intention on the part of the testatrix that the then living grandchildren should be the beneficiaries should their mother remarry, when it is provided that they shall come into the enjoyment of the income formerly paid to her. The trial court found that such was her intent, and we think that it was justified in so concluding.

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Related

Smith v. Dolan
197 N.W.2d 416 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1972)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 N.W. 312, 207 Minn. 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-trust-under-will-of-murray-minn-1940.