Kelaghan v. Lewis

204 A.2d 633, 98 R.I. 458, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 18, 1964
StatusPublished

This text of 204 A.2d 633 (Kelaghan v. Lewis) 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
Kelaghan v. Lewis, 204 A.2d 633, 98 R.I. 458, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 196 (R.I. 1964).

Opinion

Powers, J.

This proceeding in equity was brought by the administrator djb.n. c.t.a. of the estate of Ellen N. Tillinghast, praying for construction of the will of said testatrix and for instructions thereunder in accordance with the provisions of G. L. 1956, §9-24-28. When the cause was ready for hearing for final decree in the superior court, it was duly certified to this court for our determination.

It appears that Ellen Nichols married Winfield A. Tillinghast, a widower and the father of a five-year-old daughter Mary. No .children were bom to Winfield and Ellen Tillinghast, but Mary resided with them and Ellen Tilling-hast treated her as her own daughter.

In 1929 Mary married S. Fay Isaacs and of this marriage three children were born, namely, Nancy, Elizabeth and Philip. The first two named children were living on July 22, 1933 when Ellen N. Tillinghast executed her last will and testament. The third child, Philip, was born some two years later in 1935.

The testatrix died on November 7, 1950. By clause Second of her will she gave, bequeathed and devised to [460]*460her husband a life estate in all her property, which upon his death was disposed of ,by bequests under separate paragraphs. The beneficiaries of six specific bequests, however, need not be identified.

There then follows paragraph (7) in said clause Second as follows:

“All the rest of said rest, residue and remainder to be divided equally among the issue of Mary T. and S. Fay Isaacs, if any such be living at the decease of my said husband, but, if there be no such issue of said Mary T. and 6. Fay Isaacs living at that time, then I give said rest, of said rest, residue and remainder in equal shares to Mary T. Isaacs, 8. Fay Isaacs, Frank B. Littlefield, Richard W. Littlefield and Marion Littlefield.”

It is for the construction thereof that the instant proceedings were instituted.

The life tenant lived until May 2, 1962 at which time the three children of Mary and S. Fay Isaacs were living. The two- girls had married but the son Philip, who was retarded, remained single and on July 31, 1963, Ralph T. Lewis, Jr. was qualified as his guardian by the probate court of the city of Warwick.

Nancy Isaacs married Ernest Ward, Jr. on June 26, 1954. There were no children born of this marriage, but on May 10, 1962, after the death of the life tenant, the adoption of a daughter, Patricia, bom June 22, 1961, was approved by the probate court of the district of Hartford in the state of Vermont.

Elizabeth Isaacs married William Burton on November 27, 1954 and of this marriage three 'children were born who were living at the death of the life tenant, and a fourth child was en ventre sa mere.

The bill avers that Nancy Isaacs Ward, through her attorney, made demand on complainant for distribution of the residue remainder in equal shares among Nancy Isaacs Ward, Elizabeth Isaacs Burton and Ralph T. Lewis, Jr. in [461]*461his capacity as guardian of Philip Tillinghast Isaacs, and that complainant, being uncertain of his obligation in the premises, prays for construction of the subject clause and for instructions. Pursuant to his prayer, citations issued to Ralph T. Lewis, Jr. in his capacity as guardian of Philip, Nancy Isaacs Ward and the adopted daughter Patricia, Elizabeth Isaacs Burton and the four Burton children. All minors are represented by guardians ad litem.

At the hearing in the superior court, Mary Isaacs stated that her stepmother, the testatrix, had treated her with the kindness of a mother and had been very fond of the three Isaacs children. She testified in some detail as to how the testatrix had always treated them equally and that they thought of her as their grandmother. She added that Nancy and Elizabeth always spent the summers with the testatrix at her summer home in Maine and that Philip did on some occasions, but not being well, did n'ot visit out of the state with the regularity that marked the girls’ vacations. It appears that, except during the summer, the testatrix lived in her Warwick, Rhode Island home, almost across the street from the Isaacs and that during such time the children were frequent visitors at the home of the testatrix.

Nancy Isaacs Ward, Elizabeth Isaacs Burton and the guardian of Philip Isaacs contend that, by the language she employed in the gift over, the testatrix evinced an intention to divide the remainder lamong them equally. On the other hand, the guardians ad litem of the five minor children contend that, by the use of the words “divided equally among the issue of Mary T. and S. Fay Isaacs,” the remainder should be distributed per capita among all eight as a matter of law, absent a clear intention to the contrary, citing Pearce v. Rickard, 18 R. I. 142. In seeking construction of the testatrix’ intention, complainant has framed the following five specific questions:

“1. Under the provisions of said Will, may Complainant distribute all the residue of said Estate equally [462]*462among Respondents, Ralph T. Lewis, Jr. in his capacity as Guardian of Philip Tillinghast Isaacs. Nancy Isaacs Ward, and Elizabeth Isaacs Burton as being the only issue of Mary T. and S. Fay Isaacs entitled to share in such distribution?
“2. If the answer to question -1- be in the negative, should distribution of the residue be made equally among the aforesaid three Respondents and also among the Respondents Stephen A. Burton, Jeffery [sic] M. Burton, and William K. Burton?
“3. If the answer to questions -1- and -2- be in the negative, should distribution of the residue be made equally among the aforesaid six Respondents and also to the Respondent Lyn Burton?
“4. If the answer to questions -1-, -2-, and -3- be in the negative, should distribution of the residue be made equally among the aforesaid six respondents listed in questions -1- and -2-, and also to the Respondent Patricia Ward?
“5. If the answer to questions -1-, -2-, -3-, and -4-be in the negative should distribution of the residue be made equally among all eight of the respondents named in these questions?”

It is to' be noted that the questions are so posited as to render moot all succeeding the one first answered in the affirmative. Since, in our judgment, the first should be answered in the affirmative, the remaining questions' need not be considered.

In the Pearce case on which the five minor respondents rely heavily there was a gift for life with distribution of the trust property to' such of the life tenant’s issue who might be living at her death.

This court followed the unanimous rule prevailing in England at that time to the effect that, in the absence of an intention (to the contrary, the word “issue” was one of purchase and not of limitation, thus including per capita all lineal descendants of the life tenant alive at the time the gift took effect.' The learned justice noted that there was [463]*463a division of authority among the courts of this 'country and an increasing tendency among the courts of England and the United States to find very little as being necessary to establish a contrary intention. Such tendency, he concluded, was an outgrowth of an underlying suspicion that the rule more often than not defeated the true intention of the donor.

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Bluebook (online)
204 A.2d 633, 98 R.I. 458, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelaghan-v-lewis-ri-1964.