Leake v. Watson

21 A. 1075, 60 Conn. 498, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 21 A. 1075 (Leake v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leake v. Watson, 21 A. 1075, 60 Conn. 498, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 55 (Colo. 1891).

Opinion

Tobkance, J.

This is an action by the plaintiff as trustee of certain estate for Georgianna Nichols, under the will of her father, Charles Bulkley, against the defendant, to recover the value of sundry stocks and bonds, alleged to belong to the trust estate, and to have been received and sold by the defendant as a broker, with knowledge that the same were being sold and disposed of in violation of the trust.

Upon a former hearing before this court, on a reservation made by the Superior Court, it was found that the claims of the parties virtually called for the judicial construction of the will of Charles Bulkley, and that the questions involved could not properly be considered or determined without the presence, as parties, of all persons interested in and under the will. The case was therefore remanded to the Superior *501 Court, to give the defendants the opportunity to summon into the court, and make .parties to the cause, all such interested parties, to the end that the measure of right in Mrs. Nichols to the shares set apart in trust for her, and all questions presented by the respective parties, might be finally determined in one proceeding. See the case of Leake v. Watson, 58 Conn., 332.

Thereupon in the Superior Court all persons interested in or under the will were made parties to this cause, and upon pleadings filed by them were heard by the court. The Superior Court made a supplemental finding, and, upon the facts found in the original and supplemental findings, reserved the case for the advice of this court.

Charles Bulkley died in October, 1875. At the date of the execution of his will, in April, 1875, there were living four children of the testator, to wit, Georgianna Nichols, Mary Elizabeth Jennings, Elizabeth Whitney Hyde, and Catherine Bulkley; also nine grandchildren, including three children of Charles H. Bulkley, a deceased son of the testator. Catherine Bulkley, one of the daughters, died before the testator. His other three children and his nine grandchildren survived him, and are all parties to this suit. Since his death three great grandchildren have been born.

One of the principal questions in the case as now presented, arises upon the construction of the fourth clause of Charles Bulkley’s will, which reads as follows:—

“Fourth. All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real and personal, I give, devise and bequeath unto trustees, as hereinafter named, for the uses and purposes hereinafter set forth, as follows :

“ One fifth to be held in trust, and the income, use, interest and improvement thereof to be paid over annually, or in more frequent installments, if deemed expedient and convenient by the trustees, unto and for the use and benefit of my daughter Mary Elizabeth, wife of Isaac Jennings; the remainder to go to her heirs forever; provided that said Mary Elizabeth may, if she shall deem it expedient and necessary, from time to time take and receive portions of the *502 principal, not exceeding in all one-balf of such principal, and not to exceed the sum of one thousand dollars in any one year; such portion of the principal to be paid over by the trustees upon notice in writing so to do, and the receipt of said Mary Elizabeth to be a sufficient voucher to the trustees in the premises.

“Three other parts, of one-fifth each, to be held in trust in the same manner as aforesaid, with the privilege of receiving portions of the principal, for the use and benefit respectively of my other daughters, Elizabeth Whitney, wife of Rev. Frederick S. Hyde, Georgianna, wife of William B. Nichols, and my aforementioned daughter Catherine, with remainder to their heirs forever.

“And I appoint as trustees to execute the trust aforesaid, my wife, Elizabeth Bulkley, and my nephew, Oliver Bulkley, and direct that they be not required to give bonds for the performance of their duties as such trustees.

“ The remaining one-fifth of said residue I give, devise and bequeath unto my wife, Elizabeth Bulkley, and Francis D. Perry, of Fairfield, to hold in trust, to appropriate the use, income, interest and improvement thereof for the support, maintenance and education of Annie E. Bulkley, Erastus B. ■Bulkley and Grace E. Bulkley, children of my deceased son Charles H. Bulkley, in such manner as they, the said trustees, shall deem proper and expedient; and using so much of the principal as said trustees may find necessary to do during their minority, and to pay over unto each, at attaining’ majority, all, or so much as said trustees may deem fit, of the share then due such one arriving at majority; and upon arriving at majority of the youngest living of said children, to pay over unto each child, or its heirs if deceased, the principal sum, or so much thereof as shall not have been before expended, to hold to them respectively and their heirs forever.”

Whether the “rest, residue and remainder” spoken of in this fourth clause, consisted, at the time of Charles Bulkley’s death, wholly of personal estate, or partly of personal and partly of real estate, and if of both, what proportion was *503 real and what personal, does not perhaps clearly appear from the record. Presumably it consisted of both, for the clause in question speaks of “my estate, real or personal,” and the sixth clause gives the executors power to dispose of any and all of the real estate, except that described in the second clause of the will. However this may be, the record shows that the estate actually distributed to the trustees under this fourth clause consisted wholly of personal estate.

An examination of this fourth clause of the will shows clearly two things : — first, that whatever disposition the testator intended to make of any one of the shares given in trust for the daughters, that same disposition he intended to make of all; and second, that the clause in question, in the case of each daughter, contains, in form at least, two gifts, namely, one of the equitable life use to the daughters, coupled with certain rights, powers or privileges to take part of the principal, and a further gift of what shall remain of the trust property to their heirs. The fourth clause as clearly in form contains these two gifts, as the second clause contains a gift to the wife of the life use of the homestead and a gift over to the children or their heirs.

The defendant claims, in substance, on this part of the case, that if the fourth clause does in fact contain two such distinct gifts, the gift of the remainder to the heirs is void, because it violates the provisions of our statute against per-petuities. The plaintiff, on the other hand, claims that the clause in question either does not contain two such distinct gifts, or, if it does, that the gift of the remainder over does not come within the prohibition of the statute.

The first question then is, whether the clause in question contains in fact, as well as in form, a separate and distinct gift of the remainder to the heirs of the daughters.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 A. 1075, 60 Conn. 498, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leake-v-watson-conn-1891.