Loring v. Dexter

152 N.E. 356, 256 Mass. 273, 1926 Mass. LEXIS 1234
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 2, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 152 N.E. 356 (Loring v. Dexter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loring v. Dexter, 152 N.E. 356, 256 Mass. 273, 1926 Mass. LEXIS 1234 (Mass. 1926).

Opinion

Sanderson, J.

This is a petition for the construction of the will of Edward Linzee Amory, brought by trustees under his will.

He died November 19, 1911, without issue and unmarried, leaving a will dated November 3, 1908, and a codicil dated October 18,1911, which were duly proved and allowed. The testator, after making disposition of a part of his estate, gave the residue to trustees, and in the third paragraph dealing with this trust directed the trustees: “To pay one-third óf the net income in quarterly instalments as nearly equal as [276]*276practical to my sister Susan Greene Dexter during her life, and from and after her decease to my nephew Gordon Dexter and to his wife, Annie Louisa Dexter share and share alike during their respective lives.”

Susan Greene Dexter survived the testator and died September 16, 1924, and the executor of her will has been made a party to these proceedings. Her son, Gordon Dexter, survived her, but his wife, Annie Louisa Dexter, a niece by blood of the testator, died September 29, 1916. The respondent Gordon Dexter is surviving executor of her will. The next of kin of the testator were his sister Susan Greene Dexter, his nieces Susan C. Amory and Annie Louisa Dexter, daughters of a deceased brother, and Copley Amory, son of another deceased brother.

The trustees ask to be instructed whether they should distribute all or any of one third of the principal of the trust fund and, if so, to whom and in what proportions; and, in case they are to continue to hold it all, to whom and in what proportions the income therefrom should be paid.

The sixth paragraph of the residuary section provides that “Upon the death of my nephew Gordon Dexter, if his wife Annie Louisa Dexter shall not then be living, to transfer, convey, and pay over one-third of the principal of said residuary trust fund to and among the persons who shall then be my heirs by blood except as provided in paragraph 8 hereof; if, however, his said wife Annie Louisa Dexter shall then be living to transfer, convey and pay over to my then heirs by blood one-sixth of the principal of said residuary trust fund and the remaining one-sixth to transfer, convey, and pay over to the said heirs upon the death of the said Annie Louisa Dexter; provided, however, that the distribution of principal herein provided shall not affect the Ufe interest hereinbefore given to my sister, Susan Greene Dexter, and shall be made only after her death.”

• In the eighth paragraph of the part of the will dealing with residue the testator provided that “for the purposes of this will neither my sister Susan Greene Dexter nor my nephew Gordon Dexter nor my niece Annie Louisa Dexter is to be deemed an heir of mine by blood.”

[277]*277The general plan of the testator in creating the trust seems to have been to divide the net income into three parts; directing the trustees to pay one of them to his sister for life and. at her death to her son and his wife “share and share alike during their respective lives ”; one part to one of the two daughters of his deceased brother for life; and one part to the son of another deceased brother for life. When these objects had been accomplished the principal was to be divided, and the part that had produced the income for his sister and her son and her son’s wife was to go at the times and in the manner therein provided to the testator’s heirs by blood; the share which had been producing the income for the daughter of his deceased brother was to go, upon her death, to her issue if she left issue, otherwise to the testator’s heirs by blood; and the part which had been producing the income for the son of his deceased brother was to go at his death to his issue if he left issue, otherwise to the testator’s heirs by blood, excluding in each instance from those who should take as heirs the testator’s sister, her son and his wife. The parties who were ultimately to take were to be determined as to one third at the death of Susan C. Amory, as to one third at the death of Copley Amory, and as to the remaining third at the death of Gordon Dexter if he survived his wife, but in the event of his wife’s surviving him the distribution of one half of this third was to be postponed until her death.

No specific provision was made for the payment during the life of Gordon Dexter of the part of the income which his wife would have received if living. The four contentions concerning this income are (1) That it should be paid to the personal representative of Annie Louisa Dexter; (2) That it is to accumulate for those who may be entitled to the principal upon the death of Gordon Dexter; (3) That it should be paid to Gordon Dexter; and (4) That it is intestate property.

■ The contention that it is to be paid to the personal representative of Annie Louisa Dexter is inconsistent with the expressed terms of the will limiting the gift of income to her for life, and cannot prevail.

It is apparent from the will that it was drawn by a person familiar with the accurate use of legal terms, and it is of some [278]*278significance that there is an absence of the expressions which have often been held to give the rights of the one who should die first to the survivor. The words used in paragraph 3 taken by themselves are apt words to create rights in severalty and to exclude the acquiring of additional rights by survivorship. Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Reed, 229 Mass. 267, 270. The words of the sixth paragraph are not such as are commonly found where it has been held that there is an implication of a life estate in the survivor. Clarke v. Rathbone, 221 Mass. 574, 578. Monks v. Bradford, 248 Mass. 296.

So far as the expressed terms of the will are concerned, Gordon Dexter and his wife (who were nephew and niece of the testator) were treated alike. They were to share equally the net income of one third of the trust estate for life and each was excluded from taking any part of the principal as heir by blood. The will does not disclose an intention to prefer one to the other. The obvious meaning of sharing this net income alike is that each is to receive one half of it or one sixth of the net income of the whole trust fund, and Gordon Dexter’s interest must be confined to that fractional part unless it appears from the will that the testator intended to give him more. There is no gift by implication unless a “reading of the whole will produces a conviction that the testator must necessarily have intended an interest to be given which is not bequeathed by express and formal words.” Metcalf v. First Parish in Framingham, 128 Mass. 370, 374. Crocker v. Crocker, 230 Mass. 478, 480. The “intent so to be carried into effect must be one which appears from the terms of the instrument and not one founded on a construction based merely upon silence, conjecture or the relationship of the parties.” Bailey v. Bailey, 236 Mass. 244, 247. Frye v. Saunders, 248 Mass. 285.

The expression “share and share alike during their respective lives,” although indicating that the parties named take severally and not as' a class, would not prevent an increase in the amount to be taken by Gordon Dexter as the survivor if it appeared from the other terms of the will that the testator so intended. Smith v. Haynes, 202 Mass. 531. [279]*279Wheaton v. Batcheller, 211 Mass. 223. Purdy v. Hayt, 92 N. Y. 446.

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Bluebook (online)
152 N.E. 356, 256 Mass. 273, 1926 Mass. LEXIS 1234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loring-v-dexter-mass-1926.