Murray

45 A.2d 636, 142 Me. 24, 1946 Me. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 26, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 45 A.2d 636 (Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray, 45 A.2d 636, 142 Me. 24, 1946 Me. LEXIS 4 (Me. 1946).

Opinion

Manser, J.

Charles Locke, by his will, created a trust for the benefit of his wife for her lifetime, with remainder over to Doro[26]*26thea Locke Murray, his daughter by a former marriage. He designated his attorney and a bank as trustees, and they were appointed by the Probate Court. Their first account as trustees covered the period from August 1937 to February 1943. The account is challenged in two particulars by the remainderman. The Judge of Probate overruled the objections, and the account was allowed with certain other modifications which had been agreed to by the parties. A full hearing was held in the Probate Court, and on appeal to the Supreme Court of Probate, the entire record of the Probate Court proceedings was reported to the Law Court “to render such final judgment as the law and facts require to determine all rights of the parties.”

The first objection relates to a payment of $3,000, made in July 1939, from the corpus of the estate for the ostensible purpose of providing for the comfortable support and maintenance of the life tenant.

The second objection is to charges against principal of the estate for loss on two bonds purchased at a premium by the trustees. One bond was paid at maturity with a loss from the purchase price of $49.87. The other bond was called at a loss of $32.00. The contention was that the rule should be established that such losses must be taken from income and not charged against principal.

With relation to the first objection, the will made provisions as to use of income as follows: It authorized the trustees to retain reasonable compensation for their services; to pay out of income for the preservation and management of the estate and property, including taxes, and improvement of the property of the estate.

It further authorized and directed the trustees to distribute the net income to the beneficiary at least four times in each year. Then is found a specific provision that the

“Trustees and successors of them in said trust, are hereby authorized and empowered to pay from the principal of my estate such sums as in their absolute discretion may be [27]*27needed for the comfortable support and maintenance of my said wife, Edna Mae Oakes Locke.”

It is by virtue of this provision that the trustees assert their justification for the payment of $3,000.

The situation was as follows: Mr. Locke, the testator, died in November 1935. He had not been engaged in business since his marriage to the wife who survived him. He received by will a large sum from his mother, and a second considerable sum in securities from a source indefinitely described as a Mr. Smith in Toledo.

In addition to the testamentary trust, Mr. Locke created an irrevocable trust in August 1935, a few months before his death, under which Mrs. Locke was named as beneficiary for her lifetime, and the remainder was then payable to the living grandchildren of the donor. The bank named as one of the testamentary trustees, was appointed as sole trustee of the living trust. The funds turned over to the trustee under this trust were $344,500 United States Treasury Bonds, and over $51,000 in cash. The trust document contained a similar provision to that in the testamentary trust, that the life tenant should be entitled to the net income during her natural life “together with such part of the principal as the trustee in its sole discretion, shall deem necessary from time to time for the comfortable support and maintenance of Edna Mae Locke in a manner suitable for one of her station in life.”

The inventory filed by the testamentary trustees included the homestead at Cape Elizabeth, appraised at $25,000, other real estate appraised at $2,000, and securities and cash amounting to $250,718.62.

It, therefore, appears that the two trusts constituted the whole of the settlor’s aggregate estate of $672,000. It further appears from the record that these assets constituted the chief source of income for both husband and wife while they lived together, and that the purpose and intention of the husband, so far as his wife was concerned, was to make certain she should have the benefit [28]*28of the combined income of both trusts during her life. As beneficiary, she was to have the entire income which both had shared before her husband’s death. Consequently, the income from both must be taken into account in determining whether the trustees might properly withdraw from the principal of one. The record shows that the case was tried upon that hypothesis. The bank was trustee of the one, and the bank and the individual trustee were trustees of the other. They both, therefore,, had the opportunity of access to the sources of information as to the entire amount of income, and other relevant facts.

The testamentary trustees paid from the income of their trust fund taxes on real estate and property insurance, which averaged about $900 a year, and this went to the benefit of the life tenant, the income actually received by her being in addition thereto. Mrs. Locke received as income from the testamentary trust during the years 1937,1938 and 1939, $21,774.34, and from the living trust $37,077.19, or a total average for the three-year period of $19,600 annually. In the first six months of 1939 she received $10,000. Mrs. Locke’s health was generally good, and she estimated her medical expenses averaged $75 a year, in addition to compensation of a nurse for one period of eight weeks.

In the spring of 1939 she made some substantial renovations upon the homestead, amounting to nearly $3,000. She testified that, after these were completed, she went to the individual trustee early in July of 1939 and “told him that I had to make the repairs and that they were going to cost this amount of money and possibly more, and because of that and other commitments, I would need more money for the year, and I asked him if I was entitled to money out of the principal under the terms of the will and he said he would have to have a written request, which was done in his office at my request.” Such request, in the form of a letter, was prepared by the trustee on July 10,1939, but made no mention of “other commitments.” Mrs. Locke received from the trustees check for. $3,000 two days thereafter. She testified that the other commitments she mentioned referred to the fact that [29]*29she had agreed to purchase her brother’s share in their lather’s estate. She had already paid $550, and subsequent to the receipt of the money from the trustees, disbursed for her brother’s account about $1,400 more, making a total of approximately $1,950. This was a capital investment which was thereby diverted from income for her “comfortable support and maintenance.” Mrs. Locke testified that she did not communicate to the trustees the fact of this investment.

It also appears that, on January 1,1938, Mrs. Locke received $3,000 on account of income from the testamentary trust. This particular sum she deposited on a savings account, which she already had in the trustee bank. This deposit remained untouched until December 1939, and was on deposit at the time the $3,000 payment from principal was turned over to her. It appears that she had forgotten or overlooked the fact.

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Bluebook (online)
45 A.2d 636, 142 Me. 24, 1946 Me. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-me-1946.