Jacobson v. Mankato Loan & Trust Co.

253 N.W. 365, 191 Minn. 143, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 744
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 2, 1934
DocketNo. 29,866
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 253 N.W. 365 (Jacobson v. Mankato Loan & Trust Co.) 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
Jacobson v. Mankato Loan & Trust Co., 253 N.W. 365, 191 Minn. 143, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 744 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

HOLT, Justice.

The appeal is from the judgment and decree settling and allowing the final account of the executor. The particular part of the decree attacked is that confirming the payment of $159,000 by the executor to the trustee as part of the trust created ufider the sixth paragraph of the will of the decedent. Appellant claims the sixth paragraph of the will to be void. The paragraph reads:

“Sixth: I give, devise and bequeath to the Mankato Loan and Trust Company, of Mankato, Minnesota, the sum 'of two hundred thousand dollars, in trust for the following purposes, to-wit: To hold and invest said money in safe securities and to pay the interest or income received therefrom each year to my daughter, Margaret Sherk Elwell, for and during her natural life, such interest and income to be paid to my daughter by my executor as promptly as possible, either semi-annually, or annually, as such interest may be received by said trustee, and upon the death of my said daughter, Margaret Sherk Elwell, I direct my executor to distribute said fund of two hundred thousand dollars as follows: In equal shares to the offspring of my said daughter, Margaret Sherk Elwell, one-half of the share of each offspring to be paid to him or her when he or she arrives at the age of twenty-five years, and the other half to be paid to him or her when he or she arrives at the age of thirty-five years. In case, however, no offspring of my said daughter be living at the time of such distribution, then and in that event one-half of said fund shall be distributed in equal shares to my said five nieces, Edith Tidland, Laura Knutson, Marietta Ewing, Grace Strieker and Esther C. Wyer, the children of any of my said nieces who may then be dead to receive the share of such deceased niece, as she would have received if living, but in the event that any of my said nieces shall at such time of distribution have died, leaving no issue, then the share of such deceased niece or nieces shall be distributed [145]*145to such of my said nieces and their offspring as may then be living. The other half of said fund shall be paid to the First Presbyterian Church of Mankato. 9 9 * All taxes, which may be assessed against the property given by this paragraph ‘sixth’ of my will, shall be paid out of the income of said trust fund herein mentioned or out of the fund hereby given in trust.”

The testator by this will created a trust of personal property the income of which, less taxes thereon, is to go to his daughter, his only child, for life. This is a trust authorized by 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 8090(6), reading:

“For the beneficial interests of any person or persons, whether such trust embraces real or personal property or both, where the trust is fully expressed and clearly defined on the face of the instrument creating it: Provided, that the trust shall not continue for a period longer than the life or lives of specified persons in being at the time of its creation, and for twenty-one years after the death of the survivor of them, and that the free alienation of the legal estate by the trustee is not suspended for a period exceeding the limit prescribed in chapter 59.”

. Appellant, the daughter, claims that since she is the residuary legatee and the trust in behalf of her offspring is void, the fund should be decreed to her, and hence the court erred in approving the account of the executor which placed the fund, now $159,000, in the hands of the trustee pursuant to the sixth paragraph of the'will. The contention is, in short, that since the remainder, after the life estate or interest of the daughter, is not to go to her offspring until he or she attains the specified age, therefore between the death of the daughter and the time fixed for the offspring to take there may be an illegal suspension of the power of alienation. It is said that there may be an offspring of the daughter so young when the daughter dies that more than 21 years must expire before the share would be payable. If the will must be construed to not vest the remainder in the offspring until the age specified for the payment, appellant is right. Taylor v. Crosson, 11 Del. Ch. 145, 98 A. 375; Loud v. St. Louis U. T. Co. 298 Mo. 148, 249 S. W. 629.

[146]*146The main object in construing a will is to ascertain the intention of the testator. Not only the language used in a particular part of the will involved but the whole instrument and the situation of the testator at the time the will is made should be considered. Testator was a man of some wealth, 71 years old, when he made the will. He died about two years thereafter on October 26, 1929. He was a widower, and his only child ivas his daughter, 31 years old at the time of his death. This daughter had four children, the oldest eight years of age and the youngest three years. He had considerable real estate, which was directed to be sold subject to his daughter’s approval, but the disposition Avas left so indefinite that it has been decreed to the daughter, and no complaint is made thereof. It is plain that by the sixth paragraph of the will above quoted testator established the trust fund primarily for his young grandchildren and their mother, his only child, the corpus or fund for the children, and the income therefrom to their mother for life. There is no contingency to her children obtaining this fund except the death of all prior to the mother. In the event that no offspring survives his daughter the fund is to go to testator’s nieces and his church. There can be no doubt of his intention to vest the whole trust fund in the grandchildren upon the daughter’s death. That event disposes of the trust fund. It goes either to his daughter’s offspring or to his nieces and his church. If any of her offspring then exists, he or she obtains a vested indefeasible interest in that fund. The contingent remainder of testator’s nieces and his church is then gone forever. The language of the will is:

“and upon the death of my said daughter, Margaret Sherk Elwell, I direct my executor to distribute said fund of two hundred thousand dollars as foIIoavs : In equal shares to the offspring of my said daughter * * ®.”

At that moment every member who is to share is ascertainable, and the share of each may then be allocated to him or her. The individual, however, is not to have possession or enjoyment thereof until attaining a specified age. This construction appears to conform exactly to a rule stated in Savela v. Erickson, 138 Minn. 93, 97, 163 N. W. 1029, 1031, if the last nine words thereof are omitted:

[147]*147“Where a gift is to a class, as children or grandchildren., and the right of enjoyment is postponed beyond the time that the gift vests in right, and until the termination of a preceding estate, the members of the class entitled to take will be ascertained as of the time when the intervening estate is determined and the gift to the class vests in enjoyment.”

In that case the last nine words were applicable; not so here, where the vesting in right to the members of the class occurs upon the death of testator’s daughter; but the enjoyment is postponed as to each individual until he or she attains specified ages. The time of possession and enjoyment must be regarded as a matter of secondary importance to testator. His main purpose was that his grandchildren, if any there were when his daughter died, should have the fund. There is nothing contrary to so interpreting this will in what is said in In re Trust under Will of Bell, 147 Minn. 62, 179 N. W. 650, 652.

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Related

In Re Estate of Sherk
253 N.W. 365 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
253 N.W. 365, 191 Minn. 143, 1934 Minn. LEXIS 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobson-v-mankato-loan-trust-co-minn-1934.