Levi v. Bergman

50 A. 515, 94 Md. 204, 1901 Md. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 50 A. 515 (Levi v. Bergman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levi v. Bergman, 50 A. 515, 94 Md. 204, 1901 Md. LEXIS 93 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The testatrix, Henrietta Bergman, devised and bequeathed all her property, except two small amounts, to her two sons Michael Bergman and Isaac Bergman in trust for all her six children, the income of the estate to be paid them equally during their respective lives, and if any should die leaving children, the share to which the parent would have been entitled to be paid to them. After the death of the last survivor the property was to descend and be vested in their descendants per stirpes, and if there were no descendants, then to the “ heirs at law of herself and her husband and Philip Bergman as tenant in common.”. By the sixth paragraph, the testatrix' made additional provision for three of her children, which will be more particularly referred to hereafter.

The testatrix made and executed her will in October, 1882, and died in 1895.

Of her children who were living when the will was executed, two of the sons, Michael Bergman and Levi Bergman, died in the lifetime of their mother, unmarried, intestate and without leaving descendants. On the death of the testatrix, letters of administration were granted to Isaac Bergman, the surviving executor named in the will, who later on distributed, as *208 appears by his second and final account, the sum of $4,568.56, and transferred the same to Isaac Bergman and Meyer Bergman, trustees under the will; the last named having succeeded Michael Bergman in the trust under the fourth clause of the will. There appears in the record a “ memorandum ” of receipts and expenditures made out and filed by the trustees for the years 1896 and 1897. The receipts for these two years amount to $1,524.85 and the expenditures $1,265.58, leaving a balance of income for distribution under that account of $259.25, and this amount, the trustees state in the “ memorandum,” they “ propose, pursuant to the power conferred upon them by the will' to pay over for the benefit of Samuel Bergman to the executors of Joseph Cohn in reduction of the debt from said Samuel Bergman to the said Joseph Cohn, &c.” The indebtedness thus referred to was created by Samuel in the conduct of a. merchandizing business in Wytheville, Virginia, and the consideration for it, was goods sold to him and bills guaranteed for him, by Mr. Cohn.

At the time of .the execution of the will Levi was about twenty-five years of age, Samuel about nineteen and Bella about seventeen, so that at her death Samuel and Bella were respectfully about .thirty-two and thirty years of age.

The bill, which was filed by Bella and her. husband Jacob Levi, charges that the proposed payment by the trustees, to Joseph Cohn’s estate is not warranted or within the power .of the trustees under a proper construction-of the sixth paragraph of the will. The trustees in their answer claim that the trustees have the right and power under that paragraph, whenever in their judgment it may be necessary for the support of Samuel, “to pay to or on behalf of said Samuel the sum of five hundred dollars, before making distribution of the income from the trust estate among all the- children of said Henrietta Bergman.”

The Court below sustained the contention of the appellees and among other things decreed that the trustees might “ in the exercise of the discretion vested in them by the sixth clause of the will, pay over annually the sum-of $500, before *209 making any distribution of the income, &c., to the estate of said Cohn, until by said payments said trustees shall have extinguished the debt, &c., and thereafter may continue said payments as aforesaid to the said Samuel Bergman directly.” From that portion of the decree the appellants have appealed.

This appeal therefore imposes upon us the duty of construing the sixth paragraph of the will, and of determining whether the proposed application of the balance of the net income, remaining after the expenditures have been deducted from the gross income is a proper exercise of the discretion vested in the trustees by that section.

The sixth paragraph of the will is as follows : “I hereby authorize and direct my said trustees to pay to each of my three youngest children, Levi, Samuel and Bella, the sum of $500 per annum before making any distribution among all my children, as hereinbefore provided of the net income of my estate so long as and whenever such extra allowance may in the judgment of my said trustees, be necessary for the proper support of those young children or any one, or more of them.”

Now it must be conceded that if the trustees act in the attempted exercise of their discretion within the limitations imposed upon them by the will itself, a Court of Equity cannot interfere, provided such discretion is reasonably and honestly exercised. But trustees cannot under the cover of discretionary power, disregard the wishes of the testator, as derived from the terms of the will, and from the nature and character of the trust reposed in them. Pole v. Pietsch, 61 Md. 572.

We must therefore seach the' entire will, to ascertain, if possible, what were the objects of the testatrix in conferring such an extraordinary power. And we may also consider in connection with the language of the document itself, “ the peculiar situation of the testatrix, and other circumstances that existed, in order that we may be enlightened in regard to the intent, that controlled her.” Henderson v. Henderson, 64 Md. 189. “ Without knowing how the testator was situated the meaning and application of his words would oftentimes be incomprehensible.” Frick v. Frick, 82 Md. 222.

*210 It is clear from the provisions of the will that the testatrix did not intend that invidious distinctions should be created among her several children. By the third paragraph, almost her entire estate is appropriated for their use and benefit in equal proportions until the last survivor of them shall have died ; and when that period shall have arrived, the estate is to devolve upon their descendants, without favor with respect to any of them. But it is also beyond question, we think, not only from the terms of the will but also from the testimony that appears in the record, that there were three of her children whom she regarded with especial solicitude. These were her three youngest, Levi, Samuel and Bella. Levi at the time she made the will, was twenty-five years of age and Samuel twenty. Neither of these two had ever exhibited any capacity for earning money, and the subsequent history of both of them since that date will fully justify the opinion she may have acquired, that on account of their want of capacity and general thriftlessness, they would' often need a helping' hand to rescue them from absolute want.

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Bluebook (online)
50 A. 515, 94 Md. 204, 1901 Md. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levi-v-bergman-md-1901.