Nash v. Danbury National Bank

88 A.2d 397, 138 Conn. 676, 1952 Conn. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 22, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 88 A.2d 397 (Nash v. Danbury National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nash v. Danbury National Bank, 88 A.2d 397, 138 Conn. 676, 1952 Conn. LEXIS 142 (Colo. 1952).

Opinion

Inglis, J.

The plaintiffs appealed from the decree of the Probate Court allowing the final account of the defendant as executor of the will of Luther R. Nash. That account credits the defendant with payments, totaling about $66,500, proposed to be made to various charitable organizations pursuant to the directions of an “allocator,” in accordance with the fifteenth section of the will. The Superior Court rendered judgment dismissing the appeals, and from that judgment the plaintiffs have appealed. Their principal claim is that the credits should have been disallowed because the section in question, if properly interpreted, is invalid for uncertainty. The plaintiff John W. Nash makes the added claim that, even if the section is not invalid, the credits should not be allowed because the allocator did not make his allocations either within the time or in the manner prescribed by the will. The case, therefore, turns upon the interpretation of the fifteenth section of the will.

The section in question is very long. We quote only such excerpts as have a direct bearing upon the questions to be decided: “In the event that my net estate ... is adequate for the bequests made therefrom in the foregoing Sections Thirteenth and Fourteenth to the full amount stated therein, and a balance remains in [679]*679said net estate of more than twenty-five hundred dollars ($2500.), I give, devise and bequeath said balance, being the residue and remainder of my estate, to certain organizations and agencies to be designated by an Allocator hereinafter appointed, the distribution to be made by my Executor in accordance with such designations.

“The purpose to which said residue of my estate shall be devoted include the advancement of the interests of my native town of Ridgefield or other purposes through which such interests may be directly or indirectly affected. I assign such designation to said Allocator for the reason that bequests or gifts by others in effect or in prospect at the time of my death, for similar purposes make specific designations herein inexpedient.

“For the guidance of said Allocator, the following activities are named as indicative of the character of the purposes to which I desire the said residue of my estate to be devoted: [Then follows a fist of five eleemosynary enterprises.}

“The foregoing list is not exclusive but is intended to indicate my primary purpose of promoting the interest and training of youth. It is my desire that said Allocator, hereinafter named, give careful consideration to the merits, needs and other resources of projects conforming to my purposes, whether or not herein listed. Should said Allocator find that funds from said residue can advantageously be devoted to some new project which-requires larger amounts than are available hereunder, he may condition an allocation thereto under responsible cooperation with other agencies such as the Lions Club of Ridgefield, of which I am a member. While it is my preference that said residue be used for permanent facilities, said Allocator may, in his discretion, authorize the use of any part thereof to operating purposes to meet temporary or develop[680]*680ment needs. Should the allocator find that all important needs of the character defined herein have been otherwise provided for, he may make, such wider distribution as he may find consistent with my géneral purposes or as may be indicated by my memorandum to him.

“I appoint Ralph E. Cramp as Allocator of the residue of my estate. It is my desire that he select qualified associates as advisers, preferably residents of Ridgefield, not less than two or more than five in number, to consider with him the disposition of said residue. The Allocator, however, shall have sole responsibility for all allocations after appropriate consideration of the recommendations of his associates. Said allocations may be made in designated sums or in percentages of the available residue or by any combination of these methods....

“It is my purpose to leave a memorandum in which suggestions will be made to the Allocator as to his advisers and beneficiaries under said residue. This memorandum will be subject to revision from time to time to meet changing conditions relating to the disposition of said residue. While circumstances may arise which make exact adherence thereto inexpedient, it shall be regarded by the Allocator as substantially controlling with respect to his decisions.”

The remaining four paragraphs of the section relate to the disposition of the residue in the event that the allocator fails to function.

The will was executed on September 23, 1944. On October 4, 1944, the testator transmitted to the executor the memorandum referred to in his will. In the transmitting letter he requested the executor to read the memorandum “to see that it is not in conflict with any of your functions as executor.” Referring to a memorandum which he had sent in connection with an [681]*681earlier will and which related to the distribution of his personal effects by his nephew John, he stated: “You have no responsibility over this distribution such as you have in connection with the residue covered by the attached memorandum.”

In the memorandum itself the testator explains that “the need for the Allocator provided for in this will” arises by reason of the testator’s uncertainty both as to the amount of his residuary estate and as to the extent of the needs for the bequests provided for, since the projects may be financed from other sources before his death. The testator then states his reasons for being interested in the various charities specifically given as examples in his will and what he considers their needs. He goes on to list various other charitable organizations as possible alternative selections by the allocator, giving the reasons why those organizations commend themselves to him. Nowhere in the memorandum does he direct the allocator to designate any particular organization or purpose as a recipient of any of his estate. He suggests the names of five persons to act as the allocator’s advisers. In the last paragraph of the memorandum he writes: “The extent and frequency of the allocator’s consultations with his advisers are left to his discretion. It is my hope that their recommendations and advice may be of real help in the solution of his problems and my regret that it is necessary, in the absence of the recurrent revisions of my will, to place what may be complicated burdens upon him.”

The parties are agreed that the fifteenth section of the will purports to create charitable trusts, even though the bequests are made to unnamed “organizations and agencies” and not to a trustee. See Brinsmade v. Beach, 98 Conn. 322, 334, 119 A. 233; Dailey v. New Haven, 60 Conn. 314, 324, 22 A. 945; 2 Restatement, [682]*682Trusts, § 397, comments c, f; 3 Scott, Trusts, § 388. Therefore, they are also agreed that § 6883 of the General Statutes, relating to charitable trusts, is relevant. That section provides in part: “No donor or testator shall be required to designate in [the] will, deed or other instrument the particular charitable purpose or class of purposes for which [the] property shall be used or [the] income applied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A.2d 397, 138 Conn. 676, 1952 Conn. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nash-v-danbury-national-bank-conn-1952.