Industrial Nat. Bank of RI v. Rhode Island Hospital

207 A.2d 286, 99 R.I. 289, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 433
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 19, 1965
DocketEq. No. 3178
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 207 A.2d 286 (Industrial Nat. Bank of RI v. Rhode Island Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Nat. Bank of RI v. Rhode Island Hospital, 207 A.2d 286, 99 R.I. 289, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 433 (R.I. 1965).

Opinion

*290 Joslin, J.

This is a bill in equity for the construction of and instructions in relation to the will and an inter vivos trust of Herbert G. Townsend, late of the city of Warwick, hereinafter referred to as the decedent. The complainants are Industrial National Bank of Rhode Island as it is a ooexecutor and ootrustee under that will and the sole trustee under that trust, and Marie Ann Townsend, the decedent's widow, both as a coexecutor and cotrustee under that will and individually, having joined in the suit in the last-named capacity after arguments in and pursuant to permission granted 'by this court. The coexecutors and co-trustees under the will and the sole trustee under the inter vivos trust are hereinafter collectively referred to as the fiduciary complainants.

The respondents are Rhode Island Hospital, The Providence Lying-In Hospital, and St. Joseph's Hospital, all lo *291 cated in the city of Providence, and all corporations organized and operated exclusively for charitable or scientific purposes. They are hereinafter collectively referred to as the respondent hospitals. The attorney general is also a party respondent. Each of the respondents answered the bill and concurred.in the requests for construction and instructions. After the cause was heard in the superior court and was ready -for hearing on the final decree that court, pursuant to G. L. 1956, §9-24-28, certified the.cause to this court for our determination.

On January 2, 1929 decedent created an inter vivos trust of which complainant Industrial National Bank is now acting as trustee. That trust was. several times amended. Other than for a reservation of income to the decedent during his lifetime, the material dispositive provisions of that instrument and of the residuary estate under the will, which was left in trust, .are substantially the same. The net earned income is. directed to be paid to or applied for the benefit of decedent’s wife, if she survives him, and upon her death or upon his death if she predeceases him. it is provided that 5 per cent of that income shall each year be added to the principal which is to be maintained perpetually in trust and that the balance shall be paid annually in equal shares to the respondent hospitals and their respective successors, if any, for the support of their charitable work. Under each instrument, the fund to be held in perpetual trust is designated as the Townsend Fund and hereinafter reference to those funds collectively shall be by that designation.

Death came to the decedent on July 25, 1960 and his wife survived him. In due course, after the will was probated, the executors filed a United States tax return for the estate and paid an estate tax of about $106,000. In that return almost $1,000,000 was deducted from the gross estate on the ground that the remainder interests of the respondent hospitals were charitable and not subject to diversion for *292 noncharitable purposes. That deduction was, for reasons to which we will hereinafter refer, disallowed and after payment of an assessed deficiency of approximately $350,000 including interest, the executors’ claim for a refund was denied.

Whether the executors are entitled to a refund of the deficiency is determinable only in a suit by them against the United States of America in the federal courts and their right to recover will, at least in part, depend upon the construction given to clauses eighth, ninth and tenth of the will and paragraphs 4, 9(b) and 10 of the inter vivos trust. The reason that the fiduciary complainants bring this bill is to determine whether they are justified in bringing such a suit.

The threshold question is whether the cause is properly before us. It arises because all the beneficiaries under the will — .the respondent hospitals and the complainant wife in her individual capacity' — ■ as well as the fiduciary complainants suggest substantially the same construction and instructions. Notwithstanding that posture, all the parties before us, respondents and complainants alike, contend either that this is in the nature of an adversary proceeding, the adversary being the commissioner of internal revenue or, in the alternative, that our jurisdiction should be exercised because the issues are of sufficient importance to' the administration of the estate and trust as to justify our consideration.

Consistent with their position that the commissioner was their adversary, but recognizing that he was not amenable to process in this cause, the complainant executors, patterning their procedure upon that which the parties advise us was followed in Channing v. Hosssett, 200 F.2d 514, notified the acting chief counsel of the internal revenue service of the commencement of this proceeding, sent him a copy of the bill of complaint and invited him to seek participation *293 as amicus curiae in the proceedings both before this court and the superior court. Their invitation was declined on the ground that the suit was not “by or against the United States or against the Commissioner- of Internal Revenue * * That the interests of the commissioner are antithetical to those of the parties before us is clear for if the 'construction of the instruments urged at length both in briefs and in oral arguments is' correct, it may well lend force to the contentions the executors will make before a federal court in a suit for a refund.

Whatever may be the merits of these and other arguments advanced to sustain the contention that this is in effect an adversary proceeding need not, however, be determined because in our opinion the issues warrant consideration even if the proceeding is nonadversary. There is precedent for our action. Industrial Trust Co. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, 69 R. I. 317; Duke v. Allen, 48 R. I. 127; Petition of Bailey, 13 R. I. 543. In those cases, which were in postures similar to that of the instant cause, either construction or instructions or -both were sought. While jurisdiction was exercised, no criteria were suggested as to when propriety permits action notwithstanding that both the complainants and the respondents contended for identical construction. We similarly refrain.- We decide only that in the circumstances of this proceeding it is appropriate that we act.

Among the circumstances which influence us are the following. In any suit in the federal court for a refund the ultimate decision may hinge on whether the sums set aside in the Townsend Fund are ascertainable.' That issue is not one of federal tax law, but of how the instruments are construed, and if now resolved by us may b'e given binding force by the federal’ courts. Blair v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 300 U. S. 5; Freuler v. Helvering, 291 U. S. 35; Plunkett v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 118 F.2d *294 644.

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Bluebook (online)
207 A.2d 286, 99 R.I. 289, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-nat-bank-of-ri-v-rhode-island-hospital-ri-1965.