Mayer v. Tucker

141 A. 799, 102 N.J. Eq. 524, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 608
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 14, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 141 A. 799 (Mayer v. Tucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayer v. Tucker, 141 A. 799, 102 N.J. Eq. 524, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 608 (N.J. 1928).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Katzenbach, J.

This is an appeal from final decree of the court of chancery. The decree adjudges that the will of Elizabeth ~W. M. Tucker, executed on September 5th, 1934, revoked a deed of 'trust made by her on October 14th, 1914.. *525 The testatrix died on July 13th, 1926. The decree provides that the trustee under the deed of trust shall assign and transfer all the securities forming said trust estate to Garrett R. Tucker, the executor of Mrs. Tucker’s will, and execute all papers and documents necessary to effectuate said transfer. Ror a proper understanding of the case it is necessary to go somewhat into the history of the deed of trust, the making of the will, and the relations of the parties to this litigation.

The settlor of the trust was Elizabeth W. McCormick. She was a widow. Her husband, Henry J. McCormick, a New York lawyer, died in 1912. He bequeathed to Mrs. McCormick a number of shares of the capital stock of the United States Gypsum Company. There was one child of this marriage, Henry W. McCormick, an infant. In 1914 one Garrett R. Tucker became ardently attentive to Mrs. McCormick. Within a short time after their introduction Mr. Tucker was ■engaged to Mrs. McCormick. The date for the wedding was soon announced. The family of Mrs. McCormick were antagonistic to the suit of Mr. Tucker. They objected to the speed of the courtship. They had heard rumors regarding Mr. Tucker which were disquieting. They were desirous that before the marriage there should be some provision made by Mrs. McCormick from her estate for the support, maintenance and education of her son, Henry -W. McCormick. Mrs. McCormick heeded the advice of her family that some provision of this character should be made for her son. On October 14th, 1914, she made an agreement by which she assigned, transferred and set over to Essie T. Watters, a sister, three hundred and fifty shares of the preferred capital stock of the United States Gypsum Company to be held in trust, the income to be used for the support and education of her son, the said Henry W. McCormick, until he arrived at the age of twenty-one years, the income was then to be paid to him until he was twenty-five years of age; upon arriving at the age of twenty-five the trust fund was to be transferred to him. In the trust agreement there was a power of revocation in these words: “The said party of the first part hereby reserves the *526 right and power to revoke the trust hereby created.” The shares of stock were duly transferred by Mrs. McCormick to the trustee. Seven days after the execution of the deed of trust Mrs. McCormick was married to Mr. Tucker.

Mrs. Tucker had three children by Mr. Tucker. The United States Gypsum Company prospered in its business. There were added to the principal of the trust estate one thousand six hundred and ninety shares of the common capital stock of the gypsum company, issued as stock dividends. The estate of Mrs. Tucker had also been enhanced by the prosperity of the gypsum company, as her first husband’s estate had consisted almost entirely of the capital stock of this company and only a part of the shares left her by Mr. McCormick had been included in the deed of trust of October 14th, 1914. Mrs. Tucker died on July 13th, 1926. The record is not clear as to the amount of the estate but at the argument of this cause it was stated to be approximately $500,000.

On September 5th, 1924, Mrs. Tucker executed her last will and testament. She was then a resident of Brooklyn. The will was drawn by Prank B. Holmes, esquire, a lawyer practicing in Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. Mrs. Tucker was at the time of executing the will living temporarily near Stroudsburg. By the terms of the will she gave one-fifth of her estate to her husband. The residue she gave to her husband in trust to divide into four equal parts, one of said parts to be held by the trustee for each of her four children. The will contained no revocation of the deed of trust. No-revocation of the deed of trust was ever expressly made.

In January, 1925, Mr. and Mrs. Tucker moved from Brooklyn to Ridgewood, New Jersey. The securities of Mrs. Tucker- and the stock certificates comprising the trust fund were-placed in a safe deposit box in the vaults of a Paterson bank. Mrs. Tucker, as has been stated, died on July 13th, 1926. Within a few hours after Mrs. Tucker’s death Mr. Tucker obtained, by not revealing to the bank’s officers the fact of the death of Mrs. Tucker, access to the safe deposit box and removed therefrom the certificates standing in the name of *527 Essie T. Watters (now Essie T. W. Mayer). Mr. Tucker refused upon the demand of Mrs. Mayer to surrender to her the certificates of stock held under the deed of trust. The situation appears to have been aggravated by a second whirlwind courtship prosecuted by Mr. Tucker resulting in his remarriage within four months from the date of Mrs. Tucker’s death. Mrs. Mayer than filed in the court of chancery the bill in the present case to secure the return of the stock certificates and to obtain a declaration from the court that the same were held as a trust fund under the deed of trust of October 14th, 1914. The answer filed by Mr. Tucker set up that the said certificates of stock were assets of his wife’s estate and that she had in fact and in law revoked the said trust agreement by the execution of the will of September 5th, 1924. An amended answer was later filed in which the defense was interposed that Mrs. McCormick was unduly influenced by her family in making the deed of trust for the benefit of her son, Henry W. McCormick.

The vice-chancellor to whom the cause was referred for hearing held that a complete and valid trust had been created. He, however, held that the will of Mrs. Tucker operated to revoke the trust and that this was shown by proof of extrinsic facts; that when she spoke in her will of “my estate” it was intended to refer to that estate over which she had retained the power of revocation as well as her untrammelled property. The evidence of so-called extrinsic circumstances, which was objected to, he declared admissible for the purpose of resolving an alleged latent ambiguity.

We agree with the learned vice-chancellor that the instrument of October 14th, 1914, executed by the then Mrs. McCormick, created a complete and valid trust. We differ, however, with his view that the deed of trust was revoked by the will of Mrs. Tucker made on September 5th, 1924. We are of the opinion that in the first place there is insufficient evidence either in the will or in the so-called extrinsic circumstances to warrant the conclusion that the execution of the will revoked the deed of trust. In the second place, we consider that the deed of trust could not be revoked by a will as *528 the right of revocation had to be exercised during the life of the donor.

When Mrs. Tucker consulted, in September, 1924, Mr. Holmes about drawing her will, she submitted to him a copy of the trust agreement. He was, as we gather from his testimony, a lawyer of high standing. He was experienced. He had been practicing law for thirty-four years. He went into the matter of the trust agreement with considerable detail and advised her that to obtain title to the certificates of stock the deed of trust must be revoked. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
141 A. 799, 102 N.J. Eq. 524, 1928 N.J. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-v-tucker-nj-1928.