Marshall v. Boyle

288 N.W. 257, 232 Wis. 631, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 312
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 288 N.W. 257 (Marshall v. Boyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. Boyle, 288 N.W. 257, 232 Wis. 631, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 312 (Wis. 1939).

Opinion

Fairchild, J.

The petitioner seeks to modify the provisions in a will made by the testatrix for the distribution of income from two certain testamentary trusts. He is seeking an augmentation of income so that he can pay debts owed by him to others than the estate and meet obligations, which will be possible if a variation of the terms of the trust as prayed for is made. This cannot, however, be allowed. To contravene the will as prayed for would be making a disposition of property contrary to the provisions of the instrument creating the trusts; and would amount to a gift over to him of property of others, he being so situated by the terms of the will with regard to title and succession that the property not only does not belong to him but he will never be entitled to it.

A right of the petitioner to any income from the two testamentary trusts arises as it must from the provisions of the will. For while in addition to the paragraph from the will quoted in the statement of facts there is, among others, a provision that one half of the net income remaining in the hands of the trustees is to be paid over to Francis H. Boyle, this is subject to the clause in which the testatrix requires that the notes, if not paid before her death or during the *637 administration of the estate while probate proceedings are pending, are to be paid within five years after the trusts are set up. The court must exercise its power to prevent enlarging or modifying the terms of the trusts and preserve the corpus of the trusts. Will of Caswell, 197 Wis. 327, 222 N. W. 235; Upham v. Plankinton, 152 Wis. 275, 140 N. W. 5; Will of Rice, 150 Wis. 401, 136 N. W. 956, 137 N. W. 778; and sec. 231.21, Stats.

Little room for doubt about the purpose and the method to be used to carry out her intention can exist in the face of the plain language of the will. At the conclusion of article fourteen of the will she says it is her intention that the money owed by Francis be paid. She provides further that when paid it is to become part of the corpus of the estate. Whatever consideration may have been in the mind «of the testatrix when drawing her will and codicil, it appears that the inheritance of the grandchildren and the possible inheritance of others was associated with the bequest tO' Francis H. Boyle. The conserving of the estate was made of primal importance. While the provision for a sufficient income to Francis was desired, at the same time the possibility of extravagance on the part of any member of the family endangering the strength of the fortune was given consideration and was guarded against. She created a plan under which her son was to have a suitably furnished residence, a position which would pay him $200 per month, and the benefit of an income from a trust independent of and separate from the testamentary trusts. The proportion of income from all these trusts which goes to him is only during his life. The residue, with minor exceptions, she wills and directs to be added to' the corpus of her estate and this direction is mandatory. The “living trust” afforded a sufficient income as she viewed it to maintain his family. The form and manner of the creation of the restrictions and limitations point to a desire for a plan under which former extravagances could no longer be in *638 dulged, and a plan under which by instalments a large indebtedness of Francis to his mother’s estate would gradually be paid, thus saving the estate from loss of the principal of the loans at least. The trustees cannot lawfully accede to the demands of the petitioner. There is to be no-compromise of his indebtedness, and in the will the testatrix fixes the terms of repayment and directs the trustees to- withhold enough of respondent’s income from the testamentary trusts to pay the notes within five years. The finding that it was her intention to provide for this particular beneficiary overlooks the specific requirement that out of the income which may be said to be his, he is to be obligated to reimburse the estate for moneys loaned him, and that this when collected is to take its place in property which eventually goes under the will to others than himself and is against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence. Pie has but part of the income over and above enough to discharge his obligations on the notes, and as suggested in appellant’s brief, the granting of the relief prayed for by the petitioner would violate “a decidedly fundamental part of testatrix’s will.” It would permit him to remain indebted to the estate while paying other creditors. In the event that petitioner were to receive the payments directed by the county court and nothing be paid upon his notes, should he die before more prosperous times with the notes unpaid, the very plan of securing the payment would be destroyed.

There is no occasion here for resorting to judicial construction. The evidence indicates the occasion for the testatrix’s scheme as outlined in her will and codicil. She provided that in the event her son survived her a certain course was to be followed. After the payment of certain amounts, one half of the net income was to be for the benefit of her son during his lifetime. The other one half of the net income was to be added to the corpus of the estate. After the death of the son, assuming living issue, the trusts continue for a *639 period of twenty-one years, or so long during said period as any issue of him survives, and the trustees are to disburse the income by applying it to the maintenance, support, benefit, care, and comfort of each of his children. When the first one of such children reaches the age of twenty-five years, and so becomes entitled to an equal portion of said net income with the others, the portion thereof to which those of said children who are still under the age of twenty-five years, in excess of the annual allowance, and the educational allowance, if any, shall accumulate to the credit of such children under the age of twenty-five years, respectively, and be held by the trustees until said children, respectively, reach the age of twenty-five years; at which time such income accruals, with accumulated interest thereon, shall be turned over to each child.

The testatrix planned building up an estate which eventually will go to her son’s children, and in the event of their failure to survive, to others named in the will, a sister of testatrix, her brother, and a nephew of her deceased husband or their issue free and clear of any trust and in equal shares. The facts on which the argument in favor of the order granted by the county court is made do not raise a legal basis to support the respondent’s contention.

A purpose of the testatrix to- exclude the petitioner’s wife, so far as possible, from the enjoyment of the money may or may not have prompted the provisions which now appear to threaten the reduction of the amount available to the wife for support of the children. The testatrix provided a home in which the petitioner and his family may live free from expense so far as taxes and upkeep are concerned. This present pressure of circumstances may result in compelling members of the now scattered family to readjust their plans and live in a proximity to' each other that will enable both parents to have some association with their children, and thus approach a satisfying of the testatrix’s evident desire that her son have a life approaching to normal.

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Bluebook (online)
288 N.W. 257, 232 Wis. 631, 1939 Wisc. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-boyle-wis-1939.