Lepard v. Clapp

66 A. 780, 80 Conn. 29, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 5, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 66 A. 780 (Lepard v. Clapp) 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
Lepard v. Clapp, 66 A. 780, 80 Conn. 29, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 7 (Colo. 1907).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

It is apparent from the provisions of the testator’s will that it was his controlling purpose, in the disposition which he made of his estate, to treat with such perfect equality and impartiality as the circumstances would permit his five sons and only children, and upon the death of each of them to substitute for him in this scheme of equal benefaction those whom the testator conceived to be the proper persons to stand for and represent the deceased as being of or belonging to his stock. The purpose to avoid all discrimination is one which the testator carried not only to the sons but to their stocks, and to all members of them in whatever degree. It is equally apparent, however, that the testator had in mind circumstances or possibilities which led him to wish to create spendthrift trusts, in order that beyond peradventure the impartial benefactions which he desired to make might be secured to the intended beneficiaries. To accomplish this result certain provisions, giving the trustee certain discretionary control over payments of income, appear, which at first sight are suggestive of possible inequalities. But when these provisions are viewed as mere incidents, as they plainly are, of an attempt to accomplish the testator’s secondary object, his main purpose of strict impartiality is only the more clearly indicated. Mason v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co., 78 Conn. 81, 85, 61 Atl. 57. This main purpose is one which should be given controlling weight in interpreting and giving effect to the language which he has used in his attempt to effectuate it. Matthewson v. Saunders, 11 Conn. 144, 149.

Counsel for all interests agree that the gift over contained in item IV is void, as being in contravention of the statute against perpetuities in force at the death of the tes *33 tator. It is impossible to interpret the language of that item with a due regard for either the ordinary meaning of words or the intent of the testator already indicated, without discovering in it gifts to descendants generally, to take effect at some future time, and therefore gifts which the statute in question forbade. Tingier v. Chamberlin, 71 Conn. 466, 42 Atl. 718.

In items II and III the testator undertook to dispose of the income of the trust fund during the continuance of the trust. No doubt can exist as to the right of the widow, under item II, to receive that income during her life. Before her death, October 24th, 1899, two of the sons had died, each leaving a widow and child. A third has since died leaving a widow, but no children or representatives of children. The question is presented as to the effect of the provisions made in contemplation of such conditions. By the terms of item III it is provided that one fifth of the net annual income may be paid to each of the sons “ or to the legal representatives of those, if any, who may have deceased per stirpes, ” in the event that the trustee should be satisfied that the same was needed for the comfortable support of said son or his family and would not be used in the payment of his debts.

The term “ personal representatives, ” thus used by the testator to describe those whom he wished to make the beneficiaries of income in the place of a deceased son, is one of flexible meaning. Staples v. Lewis, 71 Conn. 288, 290, 41 Atl. 815. The sense in which the testator intended it to be used must therefore be gathered, if possible, from the language of the whole instrument read in the light of the relevant circumstances existing at the time of its execution. Johnson v. Edmond, 65 Conn. 492, 498, 33 Atl. 503; Crosgrove v. Crosgrove, 69 Conn. 416, 38 Atl. 219.

If it be said that the intent of the testator was to designate, as the substitute beneficiaries, either the lineal descendants of the deceased son, his heirs at law, those who would be the distributees of his estate, or those to whom his estate would immediately pass in its way to the ultimate benefiei *34 aries thereof, it is clear, that the obstacle of the statute against perpetuities would be encountered. Tingier v. Chamberlin, 71 Conn. 466, 469, 42 Atl. 718.

The uncertainty which oftentimes attends the meaning to be given to the unqualified term “ personal representatives ” is in the present instance, however, greatly relieved by the addition of the words “per stirpes,” so that it would require strong indications to the contrary to justify a belief that any different body of persons was intended than those who would inherit from the deceased son or be the distributees of his estate, to be determined either as of the time of. his death or as of the time of the several payments, or possibly lineal descendants only. For the present purposes of our discussion, it would matter not which of these somewhat variant forms the testator’s intention may have assumed, since all would alike meet the same ultimate fate of invalidity. That any other group of persons than one of these was in the testator’s mind as comprising that body who should stand in the place of a deceased son, is rendered all the harder to believe in view of the general scheme and controlling purpose of the will.

But it is urged that the language immediately following the description of the substitute beneficiaries as personal representatives per stirpes, indicates that these words were used as synonymous with “ family,” so that the body which the testator had in mind was the family of the deceased child. It is to be noticed that this word was not used anywhere in the will to describe the beneficiaries. The word only appears as a part of the testator’s attempt to create spendthrift trusts, and as furnishing to the trustee as a standard for his exercise of the discretion reposed in him, the comfortable support not only of the son but of his family also. But if the difficulties in the way of any other construction than one of those already indicated are passed by, and it be assumed that it is the family of the deceased son which the testator intended to put in his place, we shall have only succeeded in substituting one word of flexible and uncertain meaning for another, and shall not have succeeded in *35 avoiding the obstacle of the statute upon any reasonable meaning not palpably inconsistent with the testator’s intent. Crosgrove v. Crosgrove, 69 Conn. 416, 421, 38 Atl. 219.

It is to be borne in mind that the designated group of persons is one whose individual members are given the right to share directly, and in some ascertainable proportions, the testator’s bounty. It is not one whose members can only enjoy the benefits of such bounty by indirection and through benefactions made directly to another. If it be said that the word “family” thus substituted as expressive of the testator’s conception of the group whose members would be entitled to thus share between them the semi-annually recurring income which would have fallen to the lot of a son, if living, is to be interpreted as denoting a stock of descént, the statute plainly would be contravened. Hoadly v. Wood, 71 Conn. 452, 456, 42 Atl. 263.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 A. 780, 80 Conn. 29, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lepard-v-clapp-conn-1907.