Matthew Watson, Trustee v. Alva Woods

3 R.I. 226
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 6, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 3 R.I. 226 (Matthew Watson, Trustee v. Alva Woods) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matthew Watson, Trustee v. Alva Woods, 3 R.I. 226 (R.I. 1855).

Opinion

Bratton, J.

— This bill is brought by Matthew Watson, surviving trustee of certain estate mentioned in the bill, Mary Rivers, a cestui-que-trust, under the will of Seth Wheaton, late of Providence, deceased, Geraldine Rivers, the widow of G-eorgo Rivers, late of said Providence, deceased, (which said G-eorge was one of the children of said Mary Rivers) and by George Rivers, Mary Rivers and Genevieve Rivers? infant children of the said George Rivers, deceased, against the defendants, Alva Woods, Charles T. James, and his assignee Lyman B. Frieze, Avery Pettis, and his assignee Camden Dike, and George R. Russel, mortgagees under said George Rivers, deceased, of said estate, and James H. Butler and William H. Carder, who claim a lien on said estate under the lien law, for instruction to be given to the said trustee.

The bill states that one Seth Wheaton, deceased, in and by his last will and testament duly proved, made among others the following devise, viz:

“ Item. — I give arid deviso unto my said son Henry Wheaton and unto Matthew Watson, the husband of my daughter Abigail, and unto the survivor of them, and after the decease of such survivor, unto such person or persons as he may have appointed by deed or mil, or, and in default of such appointment, or of persons to execute the same, then unto such person or persons as the Judges of the Circuit Court of the united States within the Rhode Island District for the time being may from time to time, as often as it may become necessary, appoint, for and during the life of my daughter Mary, the wife of Thomas Rivers, of said Providence, and until the performance and termination of the trusts hereinafter mentioned, and no longer,” [two distinct estates, — one of them situate on the west side of North Main street, in Providence, particularly described.] “To have and to hold the aforesaid described premises and appurtenances^to them,the said Henry Whea- *228 ton andMatthew Watson,and the survivor of them,and the person or persons tc> he appointed as aforesaid, upon such trusts, and for such purposes and intents us are hereinafter mentioned, that is to say, in trust, that they, the said trustees, shall receive the annual rents and profits of the said estates, and shall, during the life of my said daughter Mary, pay over the same to her quarter-yearly, or to such person or persons as any writing signed with her proper name shall from time to time direct and appoint, notwithstanding her present or any future coverture, provided the said direction he for such part of the same as may he due at the time of such direction, to the intent that the said rents and profits may be at her own solo and separate disposition, and for her own use and benefit, and the receipt of the said Mary, signed with her own proper hand, shall be a good and sufficient discharge for so much of the said rents and profits as shall be therein acknowledged to have been received. And in ease the said Thomas Rivers shall survive my said daughter Mary, then my will and direction is, that the said trustees tliall receive and pay over unto the said Thomas Rivers, during his life, one-third of the said rents and profits. And after the decease of my said daughter Mary,. I devise the said promises, should the said Tilomas Rivers not then bo living, otherwise two-thirds thereof, and after his decease the remaining one-third thereof, unto the children of my said daughter Mary and their issue, in the same manner as they would have taken the same, if the same had been devised unto my said daughter Mary and her heirs, but free from all tenancy by the curtesy:■ Provided, however, that such child or children of my said daughter Mary, or the issue of any such child or children as at the time of her decease may bo under the age ef twenty-one years,, shall not be entitled to the possession of the portion of the said premises to which he or she may he entitled at the decease of tlxe said Thomas and Mary Rivers as aforesaid, until his or her arrival at the age of twenty-one years, but such portion shall remain in the possession of the said trustees until the arrival of the person entitled to the same- as aforesaid, to the age of twenty-one years, and no longer, and in the meantime, the said trustees shall apply so much of the said rents and profits as may accrue thereon, as may bo necessary, unto the maintenance of the persons respectively entitled to the same, and shall account with him or her, his or her executors or administrators, for the residue, if any. B lit if there should bono child of my said daughter, nor issue of any such child, living at her decease,or in case of the subsequent death of all such children, leaving no issue, then X devise two-thirds of the same promises, if the said Thomas Rivers bo then living, otherwise the whole, and (if then living) after his decease, the other one-third thereof, rrnto my children, Henry, Eliza Ann and Abigail, and to their respective heirs and assigns forever, to be equally divided between them.”

The bill then, further states, that the complainant, Matthew Watson, is now the sole surviving trustee under said devise: that Q-eorge Rivers, (one of the children *229 of the said Mary Bivers referred to,) now deceased, in Iría life-time executed four several mortgages upon Ms interest in the property devised, viz: one to Alva Woods, dated June 5th, 1855; one to Charles T. James, dated October 12th, 1850; one to Avery Pettis, dated August 20th, 1853; and one to George B. Bussel, dated July 1st, 1853, copies of which are annexed to the bill; that during the life-time of said George Bivers, certain repairs and improvements were put upon a portion of the estate devised, viz: on that portion situated on the west side of North Main street in Providence, by the respondents, James H. Butler and William H. Carder, who claim a lien therefor upon the supposed interest of the said George Bivers in said estate, under the provisions of an act securing to mechanics and others payment for repairs and improvements by them made on real estate, passed July, 1841: that said George Bivers had an undisputed title to another undivided fourth part of the es'tate on the west side of North Main street, derived from Ann Wheaton, a devisee in said will: that said Alva Woods, one of the mortgagees aforesaid, has advertised the said estate mortgaged to him for sale, under the power contained in said mortgage: that there is a cloud upon the title of the said George Bivers, and great doubt as to the quantity and nature of his interest in said estates, arising out of the ambiguity of the language employed in said will: that without some authoritative construction, purchasers cannot know whether said George Bivers had any interest in and to said estates devised in trust, which he could sell or mortgage against his issue, and if he had any interest therein, the same is liable to be sacrificed, and the complainant and the creditors of said George, and all parties interested in said *230

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 R.I. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthew-watson-trustee-v-alva-woods-ri-1855.