Maycel W. Fitzgerald v. Robert W. McChesney Jr., Trustee Under a Trust Indenture and Named in the Will of Francis E. Fitzgerald, Deceased

336 F.2d 905, 118 U.S. App. D.C. 401, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5686
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 1964
Docket17754_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 336 F.2d 905 (Maycel W. Fitzgerald v. Robert W. McChesney Jr., Trustee Under a Trust Indenture and Named in the Will of Francis E. Fitzgerald, Deceased) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maycel W. Fitzgerald v. Robert W. McChesney Jr., Trustee Under a Trust Indenture and Named in the Will of Francis E. Fitzgerald, Deceased, 336 F.2d 905, 118 U.S. App. D.C. 401, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5686 (D.C. Cir. 1964).

Opinion

McGOWAN, Circuit Judge:

This litigation is before us because of an incompatibility between husband and wife with respect to the religious training and education of their three minor children. As is so often the case, it is the welfare of the children which may be jeopardized by the conflict between the parents. Having been either unable or unwilling in life to make his wishes prevail, the father has made some effort' to have the last word from beyond the grave by means of the conditional dis-, position he has made of his property. In the view we take of the record before us, we think it premature to decide whether this effort, assuming its implementation, can prevail as against the assertion that, on the facts of this case,' the interests of the children themselves override the clashing views of the parents. Because the proceedings in the District Court appear to us to have been founded upon a mistaken construction of the father’s directions, we think that judicial intervention was unnecessarily invoked and should have been withheld.

I

Appellant is the widow of one Francis E. Fitzgerald, who died February 27, 1961. 1 The children of the marriage were three in number, of whom the oldest was about thirteen at the time of Fitzgerald’s death. The marriage itself had been of almost exactly twenty years’ duration, it having been entered into on January 17, 1941. Fitzgerald was a Catholic who had been married before, and it was for this reason that he informed appellant at the time of their marriage that the basic rites of his church would be denied him so long as he lived with her as man and wife. For a long period of time after the marriage, Fitzgerald attended no church. In the case of the children, although bap *907 tized as Catholics, they did not attend churches or schools of that faith, nor were they permitted by their father to attend any other church.

In 1956 Fitzgerald had a second heart attack, after which he decided to discontinue marital relations with appellant in order that he might receive communion and the last rites from the Catholic Church. It was apparently at about this time that appellant began taking the children with her to Sunday school and services at a Protestant church. This continued until Fitzgerald’s death, as well as did the attendance of the children in the public schools. The record indicates that it was during these years that strains developed between appellant and Fitzgerald over these matters, growing to a point where Fitzgerald suggested a voluntary separation as the best solution. But he was unable to work this out, or to effect a transfer of his children to a parochial school. The home and family thus remained in this unbroken, albeit uneasy, situation until his death.

In 1953 Fitzgerald had executed a will in favor of appellant and the children. About 1960 he started consulting with, his lawyer (appellee here) about his domestic difficulties in seeking to commit his children to Catholic training and education. One result of these consultations was the execution on April 21,. 1960, of a trust agreement, naming appellee as trustee to receive the proceeds of the life insurance policies held by Fitzgerald, and to hold such other property as might be transferred by Fitzgerald to the trust. A few days later, Fitzgerald executed a new will which, at the least, left Fitzgerald’s interest in a parcel of real estate to the trustee under the trust agreement. The effect of these transactions was to cause Fitzgerald’s property upon death to come under the trust agreement and to be administered and eventually disposed of under the terms of such agreement. 2

It is the trust agreement which is in issue before us, and the questions presented arise out of Article Second thereof, which is set forth in full in the margin. 3 The terms of Article Second mayi be summarized in this wise: The income and principal of the trust estate are to *908 be devoted in the first instance to the support, maintenance, education and welfare of the children, with any undistributed balance, at the time the youngest child becomes 21, to go to appellant or, if she be not then living, to the children. If and when, however, the trustee is not satisfied that the children are being raised in the Catholic faith and educated in Catholic schools, he may thereafter apply both principal and income for the use and benefit of any children in the charge of any Catholic charitable institution or order until the youngest of Fitzgerald’s children becomes 21, at which time the entire remaining trust estate shall go to such charitable order or institution as the trustee may select.

This action was initiated by the trustee in the form of a suit for declaratory judgment. His allegations are that he has come into possession of the trust res; that he has been confronted with the defendant-widow’s refusal to conform the childrens’ education and training to that specified in the agreement; that he considers himself under the necessity of administering the trust in accordance with the terms of the agreement; and that he is fearful of diverting the benefits of the grantor’s property from the grantor’s own children to others because of possible personal liability in the event the trust terms are ever held invalid. The answer alleges the invalidity of these terms, and envisages the holding of the trustee to strict accountability. Plaintiff-trustee moved for summary judgment, and it was urged in opposition that the trust agreement was invalid in two respects, namely, its religious conditions conflicted with public policy, and, to the extent that such conditions become operative, there was inadequate precision and certainty in the identification of the alternative beneficiaries. The District Court was not persuaded by either of these objections, and entered judgment to the effect that not only was the trust agreement valid in all respects but that the trustee had the “legal right and obligation” to administer it in accordance with its terms. This appeal is from that judgment.

II

Our difficulty with the proceedings had in the District Court resides in the assumptions seemingly entertained there with respect to the obligations imposed upon the trustee by Article Second. That provision is something less than a model of clarity in draftsmanship, but we think a fair reading of it in its entirety is consistent with these conclusions: The primary objects of Fitzgerald’s concern continued to be his own minor children and, secondarily, appellant as the mother of them and his wife of twenty years’ standing. This seems evident to us from the introductory language of the Article, as well as the specific directions in sub-paragraph (1) that the entire income and principal shall, subject to the absolute discretion reposed in the trustee by sub-paragraph (2) to channel the same funds at any time to appellant, be devoted to the support and education of the children during their minorities, with distribution of the corpus thereafter to : appellant. If, however, the children are ¡ *909

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Bluebook (online)
336 F.2d 905, 118 U.S. App. D.C. 401, 1964 U.S. App. LEXIS 5686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maycel-w-fitzgerald-v-robert-w-mcchesney-jr-trustee-under-a-trust-cadc-1964.