Lyman v. Sohier

266 Mass. 4
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 266 Mass. 4 (Lyman v. Sohier) 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
Lyman v. Sohier, 266 Mass. 4 (Mass. 1929).

Opinion

Carroll, J.

This case is before us on appeals from a decree of the Probate Court allowing, in part, the accounts of the trustees under the will of John A. Lowell, deceased, and modifying the accounts, in part.

The testator died October 31, 1881. His will, executed May 23, 1859, consisted of a residuary clause only. It provided: “After the payment of all my just debts and of all lawful charges against my estate, I give, devise and bequeath all the rest residue and remainder of my estate and property [6]*6of whatsoever nature” in trust, which trust, after providing for his wife, who predeceased him, was to be held in six equal shares for his six children. A testamentary power of disposition was given to all his children with the exception of his daughter Susan, who died June 9, 1868. On May 28, 1870, the testator made a fourth codicil. At this time three children of Susan were living, Elizabeth Sohier, Alice De V. Sohier and William D. Sohier. This fourth codicil provided that the income and eventually the principal that would have enured to his daughter Susan were to be paid to her children; and if his grandson William Davis Sohier should die under age and unmarried his share was to go to his sisters Elizabeth and Alice Sohier. By the sixth codicil, executed July 16, 1873, the testator provided: “I hereby direct that the income only of the capital that would have accrued to my daughter Susan be paid to her children; and that on the death of either of said children, one-third part of said capital be paid to his or her issue and in default of such issue shall revert to my estate.” The three children of Susan (William D. Sohier, Elizabeth Sohier and Alice De V. [Sohier]Clarke) were alive at the death of the testator. Elizabeth Sohier died on November 9, 1926, leaving no issue. Her brother, William D. Sohier, and .the issue of Alice De V. Clarke survived her. The question in the case is the distribution of the share of the principal, the income of which had been Elizabeth’s during her life.

The trustees interpreted the will and these six codicils, particularly the words “revert to my estate” in the sixth codicil, to mean that the share of the principal of which Elizabeth had had the income during her life on her death without issue should be added to the entire trust estate created by the residuary clause of the will and should be made subject to all of its terms; and accordingly they distributed that share equally among the six trusts created by the residuary clause, and divided into two parts the one sixth portion thereof set aside for the benefit of issue of Susan, retaining one half of that one sixth in a trust fund for the benefit of William D. Sohier, and distributing the other half equally among the issue of Alice De V. Clarke.

[7]*7The allowance of the trustees’ accounts showing this distribution was opposed by the executor of the will of Elizabeth Sohier, by the living issue of Susan Sohier, and by the guardian ad litem who had been appointed to represent the interests of persons unborn and unascertained. The contention of the living issue of Susan and the guardian ad litem was that the share of which Elizabeth had had the income should be added to the particular trust created for the benefit of Susan’s children and their issue. The executor of the will of Elizabeth Sohier contends that that share should be distributed to the heirs at law of the testator to be determined as of the date of his death. The Probate Court ruled in accordance with the contention of the executor of the will of Elizabeth Sohier, and a decree was entered amending the trustees’ accounts. The living issue of Susan, the guardian ad litem, and the trustees under the will of John A. Lowell appealed.

The controlling question is the meaning to be given to the words “revert to my estate” in the sixth codicil. To discover the meaning to be attached to the words “revert to my estate,” we must be governed by the testator’s intention. That intention, if shown by the words used, is to govern if it is not contrary to some rule of law. Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Blanchard, 196 Mass. 35, 38. Security Trust Co. of Lynn v. Boyce, 257 Mass. 586.

The construction adopted by the Probate Court that “revert to my estate” means “should be distributed to the heirs-at-law of the testator ... as of the date of his death” results either in a distribution to the heirs at law under the will, as the executor of the will of Elizabeth contends, or it results in a partial intestacy. Both of these results would be contrary to the testator’s intent as shown by the will itself.

John A. Lowell, the testator, did not intend to die intestate. As early as 1859 he made the will in question; from time to time he made six codicils, the first one in 1864 and the sixth in 1873. He anticipated many contingencies and intended to provide for a complete distribution of his property. Subject only to the payment of debts, he gave “all the rest residue and remainder of my estate” in trust. [8]*8His purpose as shown by his words was to devise and bequeath everything. It is well settled that a construction of a will resulting in intestacy is not to be adopted unless plainly required; and it is to be presumed that when a will is made the testator intended a disposition of all his property and did not intend to leave an intestate estate. Hedge v. State Street Trust Co. 251 Mass. 410. In the third paragraph of the will, the testator provided that in the division of "my estate ” allowance was to be made for advances to his children; and in the first codicil he again uses these words, directing that if the nine tenths of the net annual income and produce "of my estate” payable to his wife shall in any one year exceed $20,000, the trustees were to pay to each of his children one sixth part of such excess. He referred to the residuary trust fund when in the third paragraph of the will and in the first codicil he spoke of “my estate”; the natural meaning of these words as used by the testator was the residuary trust fund; and in the sixth codicil also he referred to this fund. No property passed as intestate to the next of kin. All of the estate including the gift under the sixth codicil went into the trust and is to be distributed according to its provisions.

We can discover nothing in the language of the sixth codicil indicating that the testator intended to give the one third part of the capital to his heirs at law, thus differentiating "between his estate and that part of his estate constituting the trust fund,” as argued by the executor of the will of Elizabeth Sohier. Nor did the gift lapse. It has been held that lapsed or void legacies in the residuary clause of a will pass under the law of intestacy. Worcester Trust Co. v. Turner, 210 Mass. 115, and cases cited. But this rule is not applicable here because the share did not lapse: it was directed that it should revert and become a part of the estate which had been disposed of by the will. Nor do the words "my estate” mean "my heirs.” If the testator intended that the share should revert to his,heirs he could easily have said so. But he did not say this. He clearly stated it was to revert as he directed; he did not make a gift to his heirs.

[9]*9The contention of the guardian ad litem and the living issue of Susan Sohier, that the share of which Elizabeth had had the income should be distributed one half to the trust for William D. Sohier and one half to the issue of Alice De V. Clarke, cannot be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
266 Mass. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyman-v-sohier-mass-1929.