Metcalf v. Gladding

87 A. 195, 35 R.I. 395
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 30, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 87 A. 195 (Metcalf v. Gladding) 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
Metcalf v. Gladding, 87 A. 195, 35 R.I. 395 (R.I. 1913).

Opinion

Vincent, J.

This is a bill of complaint filed by Cornelia 'T. Metcalf, an infant under the age of twenty-one years, by her father and next friend, for the construction of the will of the late Benjamin F. Thurston, grandfather of the complainant, against John Russell Gladding, individually and as ■executor of Cornelia R. Thurston, Ellen DeF. Gladding, Fanny R. Thurston, individually and as administratrix of •John D. Thurston, Harriet E. Ingalls, Rathbone Gardner and Brown University.

The case was certified to this court under Sec. 35, Chap. 289 of the General Laws and is now before us upon bill, .answer, replication and testimony.

Benjamin F. Thurston deceased on the 13th day of March, 1890, leaving a will which was duly admitted to probate in the municipal court of Providence on April 8, 1890. The ■will was drafted by Mr. Thurston himself in Paris, France, •during a brief visit to that city in July, 1889, and was exe•cuted there and witnessed by Mr. Lucian Sharpe and Mr. Lucian Sharpe, Jr., both of Providence, Rhode Island.

In this will the testator, after certain specific legacies, gives the residue of his estate to his wife, Cornelia R. Thurston, his son-in-law, John Russell Gladding, and his half brother, John D. Thurston, in special trust for his wife, Cornelia R. ‘Thurston, for life, which provision is stated to be in lieu of •dower. The will then continues, as follows:

*397 “I give to my said trustees full power and authority, in their discretion, from time to time and as the necessities of' the case shall require or as shall seem to them to be expedient to make any changes in the investment of the trust property in their hands and to make reinvestments thereof as often as-occasion shall require and I further authorize my said trustees if at any time it shall be deemed advisable by my said wife to-make an advancement to any one or all of my children out of the trust fund to make such advancement to them and charge the same against their interest respectively in my estate and to be hereafter deducted in any final division of the same among them or their representatives so that the shares of my said children and the representatives of such children standing in the place of their parents shall be equal as near as may be.
“Upon the decease of my said wife I direct the other trustees named and the survivor of them, their successors in the trust, their heirs, executors and administrators to divide the trust estate as it shall then be remaining into as many portions as near as may be of equal value as shall then be children of myself and of my said wife surviving and the children or other descendants of any of our children deceased; such children or descendants of any such deceased child standing in the place of and talcing the share to which such deceased child would if living be entitled under this will.”

Then follows various directions and provisions as to the disposition of the estate remaining after the death of Mrs. Thurston, which need not at this time be set forth or discussed. Mr. Thurston’s decease, March 13, 1890, occurred eight months after the execution of the will. He was survived by his wife, Cornelia It. Thurston, and his three children, Ellen DeF. Gladding, Harriet D. Thurston, and Benjamin Francis Thurston;

The daughter, Ellen DeF. Gladding, at the time of Mr. Thurston’s decease, had been married about three years and was the only child then married. She has never had any children.

*398 The other daughter, Harriet D. Thurston, in 1891, and .subsequent to the death of the testator, married Jesse H. Metcalf, the father and next friend of the complainant, and died January 30, 1903, leaving the complainant her only ■child, who was bom in 1892.

.The son, Benjamin Francis Thurston, was married September 14, 1897, his wife died the year following, and he died August 21,1906, without having had any children. The complainant, therefore, was the only child born to any of the testator’s children.

The widow of the testator, Cornelia R. Thurston, survived her daughter Harriet and her son, Benjamin, and died November 29, 1909, leaving her said daughter Ellen DeF. Gladding and her granddaughter, Cornelia T. Metcalf, the ■complainant, her only descendants.

Upon the death of the testator, the trustees named in the will accepted the trust and acted as trustees down to February 23, 1909, when one of the trustees, John D. Thurs-ton, died and was later succeeded by Rathbone Gardner. Since the death of Cornelia R. Thurston, November 29, 1909, John Russell Gladding and Rathbone Gardner have continued to act as trustees.

The original trustees collected the income of the estate and paid the net income thereof to the widow, Cornelia R. Thurston, and the same was applied by her to the uses and purposes of herself and children as she saw fit. After the death of the daughter Harriet, the amount received by Mrs. Gladding and Benjamin was increased and later, upon the death of Benjamin, Mrs. Gladding received a still larger amount.

The principal of the trust estate was retained by the trustees until March 30, 1898, but from that time until October, 1908, they, from time to time, paid from the principal of the trust estate to Benjamin Francis Thurston various sums, aggregating $75,500, and paid and transferred to Mrs. Gladding money and property amounting to some $354,806.58, more or less, according to the valuation which *399 should be properly placed upon some of the stocks involved in the transactions. The property transferred and the various sums of money paid over by the trustees, as aforesaid, from the principal of said trust fund were transferred and paid over by them upon the written request of the widow, Cornelia R. Thurston, embodying a notification to said trustees that she deemed such payments and transfers to be advisable as an advancement to said children out of her husband 's estate, Mrs. Thurston claiming that she was invested, under her husband's will, with the power and authority to so dictate the action of the trustees whenever in her judgment such advancement should be deemed advisable.

The respondents contend that these transfers and payments, made under the circumstances and conditions aforesaid, were right and proper and that the clause of the will authorizing advancements to children gave authority to the trustees to transfer principal to children whenever the widow, Mrs. Thurston, might deem such advancements advisable. On the other hand, the complainant asserts that the discretionary power to make transfers of principal was not arbitrary and absolute, but was to be exercised only when there was a reasonable occasion for so doing; and that the transfers and payments to Mrs. Gladding were made without any reasonable occasion calling for the exercise of the power. The respondents, in their answer, admit that advancements have been made and they admit that they were not made on any particular call or occasion thérefor.

•(1) The main question before this court is whether the power given to the widow, under the will, authorized her to make advancements when they were not called for by any particular occasion.

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Bluebook (online)
87 A. 195, 35 R.I. 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metcalf-v-gladding-ri-1913.