Knight v. Carter

31 Haw. 535, 1930 Haw. LEXIS 23
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 1930
DocketNo. 1866.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 31 Haw. 535 (Knight v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knight v. Carter, 31 Haw. 535, 1930 Haw. LEXIS 23 (haw 1930).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PERRY, C. J.

This is a suit in equity, instituted by one Frederick S. Knight, to compel the performance of a trust and the payment of a legacy.

*536 On April 25, 1912, a deed was executed by Annie T. K. Parker, then an unmarried woman, to Alfred W. Carter, conveying certain valuable lands and other property, comprising in the aggregate the property known as the Parker Ranch on the Island of Hawaii, upon certain trusts therein specified. The trust was to continue in force and operation until the death of the survivor of the grantor and her mother, Elizabeth J. Knight. It was provided that until certain existing indebtedness of the trust estate should be paid off and after paying for certain permanent improvements and stock purchases the trustee should pay out of the net income the sum of $2000 per month to the grantor and the further sum of $1000 per month to her mother and should apply the remainder of the net income to the payment of the said indebtedness, the making of the improvements and the stock purchases. The trustee Avas also authorized to expend up to $5000 per year out of the net income for certain stated charitable purposes. It Avas further provided that after the payment of the existing indebtedness and after making the other deductions already referred to the trustee should pay each and every month during the remainder of the term of the trust fifty per cent of the entire net income of the trust estate to the grantor and tAventy-five per cent to Elizabeth J. Knight, —with the proviso that said amount so paid each month should not be less than $3000 to the grantor and not less than $1500 to Elizabeth J. Knight. The trustee Avas further authorized to expend, after the payment of the indebtedness and the making of provision for the other deductions, the remaining twenty-five per cent of the net income for charitable and public welfare purposes and for the purchase of real estate and in the making of other investments. The grantor expressly reserved to herself, in the event of her death before her mother, the power “to bequeath and dispose of” by Avill “all the income Avhich Avould *537 have been paid to lier if she had survived until the termination of the trust,” and also in the same event “to bequeath, devise and dispose of all the principal of the said trust estate existing at the said time of the final termination of the trust;” and in the deed the trustee was expressly directed to pay the said income (that which the grantor would have received if she had lived until the termination of the trust), and to convey at the death of the grantor the principal of the trust estate, “to the person or persons appointed to receive the same respectively by the will of” the grantor. It was expressly provided that in the event of the failure of the grantor to bequeath and dispose of by will all or any portion of the income Avhich Avould have been paid to her if she had survived until the termination of the trust the trustee should after the death of the grantor and until the termination of the trust “pay said income or said portion thereof so unbequeathed and undisposed of to the person or persons who would be entitled to receive the property” of the grantor if she should be intestate at the time of her death and in the same proportions, and that if the grantor should fail to bequeath, devise or dispose of by aat.11 all or a portion of the principal existing at the termination of the trust the trustee should at such termination convey the “said principal or said portion thereof so undevised, unbequeathed or undisposed of” to the person or persons Avho would have been entitled to receive the property of the grantor if she had died intestate at the time of the termination of the trust and in the same proportions.

After the execution of the deed of trust the grantor married Henry Gaillard Smart.

On January 16, 1914, a will Avas executed by Annie T. K. Parker Smart containing eight clauses. The first directed the payment of debts and funeral expenses. The second Avas a bequest of all of the “personal goods and *538 effects” of the testatrix. The third was a bequest of all of her “household furniture and goods and effects.” The sixth was a request, addressed to her husband, children and descendants, not to transfer, pledge, mortgage or assign their respective interests in the income of the capital of the trust estate given by the will and not to sell or mortgage their respective interests in the Parker Ranch. The seventh was a statement that the provisions in the will made in favor of the husband were in lieu of his right of curtesy and the eighth was a nomination of executors. The fourth clause was as follows: “Fourth: If I die be- ■ fore my mother, Elizabeth J. Knight, and therefore before the termination of the trust established by me under trust deed dated April 25, A. D. 1912, * * * to Alfred W. Cartel4' as Trustee, I, acting under and by virtue of the power given me under said trust deed and also under and by virtue of every other right and power hereunto enabling me, do hereby give, bequeath and dispose of all the income of the trust estate established by said trust deed which would have been paid to me if I had survived until the termination of the said trust (to-wit, the death of the survivor of my said mother and myself), as follows, and do hereby appoint the following persons to receive the same,' and do hereby direct the trustee under said deed of trust to pay the said income until the termination of said trust, as follows: I give and bequeath to my said husband, Henry Gaillard Smart, the entire income so long as he shall live, subject, however, to the termination of said trust, and I request my said husband, Henry Gaillard Smart, to give, until the termination of said trust, to each of my children from the time that he or she becomes of age, one share of two-thirds of said entire income, and I further request my said husband, Henry Gaillard Smart, in case of the death of any of my children before the termination of said trust leav *539 ing lawful issue surviving, to give to sucli issue the share of said income which he would otherwise have given to the child so dying. Should my said husband, Henry Gail-lard Smart, be dead at the time of my death, I give and bequeath said entire income to all of my children then living and the lawful issue then living of any deceased child, such issue taking by right of representation.” The fifth clause Avas as folloAvs: “Fifth: Whether I die before or after or together with my mother, Elizabeth J. Knight,. I do hereby, acting under and by virtue of the power given me under said trust deed and also under and by virtue of every other right and poAver under or independent of and apart from said trust deed hereunto enabling me, give, bequeath, devise and dispose of all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and personal, wherever situated and of Avhatever nature, Avhether legal or equitable, vested or contingent, present or future interests, including all the principal of said trust estate established under said trust deed and existing at the time of the final termination of the trust, (toAvit, the death of the survivor of myself and my mother, Elizabeth J.

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Related

Cooke Trust Co. v. Kam Hon Ho
501 P.2d 973 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1972)
Bishop Trust Co. v. Cooke Trust Co.
39 Haw. 641 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1953)
Von Holt v. Carter
56 F.2d 61 (Ninth Circuit, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Haw. 535, 1930 Haw. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-carter-haw-1930.