Industrial Trust Co. v. Lathrop, Jr.

47 A.2d 916, 72 R.I. 62, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 9, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 47 A.2d 916 (Industrial Trust Co. v. Lathrop, Jr.) 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 Trust Co. v. Lathrop, Jr., 47 A.2d 916, 72 R.I. 62, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 36 (R.I. 1946).

Opinion

Capotosto, J.

This is a bill in equity for the construction of the will of John Champlin, late of the town of Westerly, deceased. The cause was heard in the superior court for *63 the county of Washington on bill, answers and oral proof, and when it was ready for hearing for final decree it was certified to this court for our determination in accordance with general laws 1938, chapter 545, §7.

The complainant is the sole executor and trustee under the will. The respondents, who are all the parties in interest, are Frida Moehl Champlin, widow of the testator, and Francis C. Lathrop, Jr. and John Champlin Lathrop, both minors when this cause was brought, children of testator’s deceased daughter, Elizabeth Champlin Lathrop. These grandchildren of the testator are represented by a guardian ad litem.

John Champlin, a resident of the town of Westerly, died on November 27, 1938, leaving a will, dated January 27, 1936, which was duly admitted to probate by the probate court of that town. The testator was married twice. By his first wife, he had two children, a daughter, Elizabeth Champlin Lathrop, and a son, John Champlin, Jr. The son predeceased the testator, dying on May 2, 1938, without issue but left an adopted child, Robert McDonald, so named in paragraph fifth of the will before us. The daughter survived the testator but died July 24, 1944, leaving two children, who are the minors named as respondents in the instant cause. The other respondent, Frida Moehl Champlin, is the testator’s second wife and by her he had no issue.

The only provisions of the will which are in question in this cause are paragraphs twelfth and fourteenth, hereinafter referred to as paragraphs 12 and 14 for convenience, in which the residuary estate of the testator is given to the complainant in trust. Paragraph 12 directs the trustee to pay from the net income:

“(1) The sum of Four Hundred ($400.) dollars to my wife, the said Frida Moehl Champlin, quarterly, for and during the term of her life, and so long as shall remain my widow.
“(2) The sum of Six Hundred ($600.) dollars, to be divided equally between my son John Champlin, Jr., *64 my daughter Elizabeth Champlin Lathrop, and any child or children which may be born to me and my said wife Frida Moehl Champlin, living at the time of my decease, share and share alike, to be paid to them and each of them quarterly, for and during the term of their respective lives.”

Paragraph 14 is as follows:

“Upon the death of my wife, or upon her re-marriage, I direct my said Trustee to pay the whole of said net income of the trust created in paragraph 'Twelfth’ hereof, to my son John Champlin, Jr., and my daughter Elizabeth Champlin Lathrop, and any child or children born to me and my said wife Frida Moehl Champlin, then living, to be divided between them share and share alike, to be paid to them quarterly for and during the term of their respective lives; and upon the death of my said son John Champlin, Jr., his share of the income therefrom shall go to the heirs of his body, should such survive him, to be paid to them quarterly until the youngest of such issue of his body shall have reached the age of twenty-one (21) years, at which time I direct that the proportionate part of the principal of said trust estate set aside for the benefit of my said son, John Champlin, Jr., as measured by the number of children surviving me or surviving my said wife or living in the event of her re-marriage, shall go to the living issue of the said John Champlin, Jr., should such issue of his body survive him, to be theirs absolutely and forevqr, and freed and discharged of said trust. In case my said son John Champlin, Jr., die without living issue, then and in that case I direct that his share of said net income be divided equally between my said daughter Elizabeth Champlin Lathrop and any child or children issue of my present marriage then living, for and during the term of their respective lives, in the manner provided above. Upon the death of my said daughter Elizabeth Champlin Lathrop her share of said net income shall go to the heirs of her body, should such survive her, until the youngest of said heirs of her body shall have reached the age of twenty-one (21) years, at which time I direct the share of said Elizabeth Champlin Lathrop in the principal of said trust estate *65 as measured by the number of my children sharing in said trust, be divided equally between the heirs of her body, or the heirs at law of such children, to be theirs absolutely and forever. And I further direct that in case my daughter Elizabeth Champlin Lathrop should die without leaving issue living, then and in that case I direct that the income from her share of said trust estate be paid to my children then living, to be divided equally between them, share and share alike, for and during the term of their respective lives, to be paid to them quarterly, and upon the death of my last surviving child, I direct that the remainder of said trust estate be paid and turned over to the heirs of said last surviving child, to be theirs absolutely and forever, free of said trust.”

The testimony shows that the respondents Francis C. Lathrop, Jr. and John Champlin Lathrop are now twenty-one and eighteen years old respectively. The age of the only other respondent, Frida Moehl Champlin, testator’s widow, is given as about forty-five years. The testimony further shows that the income of the estate, especially in recent years, has been more than adequate to produce the amount payable by the trustee under paragraph 12, so that, on December 31, 1944, there was an undistributed balance of accumulated excess income in the hands of the trustee.' The trustee has made the quarterly payments to the widow regularly and to the testator’s daughter, Elizabeth Champlin Lathrop, up to the time of her death, July 24, 1944. It has made no payments to the latter’s children, the respondents Francis C. Lathrop, Jr. and John Champlin Lathrop, since the death of their mother.

Testator’s grandchildren contend that they are entitled to the payment of the income which their mother, if living, would have received under paragraph 12; that, because they or their heirs are entitled to the corpus of testator’s residuary estate upon the termination of the .trust under paragraph 14, they should receive the current income in excess of the amount required for the quarterly payment of $400 *66 to the widow; and, further, for the same reason, that they are entitled to the excess income heretofore accumulated and not needed for payments to the widow and to their mother from the death of the testator to the death of their mother.

In her argument before us the widow seemed to concede that the testator’s grandchildren are entitled to the quarterly payments of income provided for their deceased mother in paragraph 12, but she expressed no opinion as to the disposition of the accumulated income. The only contention which she makes in her brief is that since the will does not provide in paragraph 14 for “the distribution of the trust fund in its entirety”

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Bluebook (online)
47 A.2d 916, 72 R.I. 62, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-trust-co-v-lathrop-jr-ri-1946.