Newport Trust Co. v. Chappell

101 A. 323, 40 R.I. 383, 1917 R.I. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 101 A. 323 (Newport Trust Co. v. Chappell) 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
Newport Trust Co. v. Chappell, 101 A. 323, 40 R.I. 383, 1917 R.I. LEXIS 52 (R.I. 1917).

Opinion

Parkhurst, C. J.

This is a bill in equity brought by the Newport Trust Company, as administrator with the will annexed of the Estate of Abby D. Chappell, late of Newport, deceased, having in its possession as such administrator certain personal property which was bequeathed under said will, and asking for the appointment of a new trustee under said will and for instructions as to the proper disposition of said property; such disposition involves the construction of said will.

The bill was filed in the Superior Court in the county of Newport November 10, 1916, and, after answers were filed and testimony taken, was duly certified to this court, for its determination, under the provisions of Gen. Laws, R. I. (1909), Chap. 289, Sec. 35, as being ready for hearing for final decree.

It appears by admission in the pleadings that Abby D. *385 Chappell, late of Newport, died May 10,1904, leaving the last will referred to, and that the same was duly admitted to prohate June 13, 1904; and that James H. Chappell, husband of the testatrix, named as executor in the mil, was duly appointed and qualified and thereafter acted as such executor until his death, and died intestate September 20,1914, without having fully administered the estate, leaving as his only heirs at law and next of kin said Ida Douglas Jack and said Henri Q. Chappell; and that the complainant, on October 5, 1914, was duly appointed and qualified as administrator with the will annexed; that as such administrator it received the sum of $6,495.91 as the' property of the estate of said Abby D. Chappell and has since held and now holds said estate.

It further appears that Henri Q. Chappell (son of the testatrix), one of the beneficiaries named in said will, on November 9, 1914, made a deed of trust of all his property, whether legal or equitable in fee or in remainder ” to said Newport Trust Company, in trust to pay the net income thereof to his wife, the respondent Levinia A. Chappell during his lifetime and upon his death to pay over the principal of said trust fund, or what should remain thereof, to said Levinia, or to such person or persons as he should by his last will appoint in the event of her death before him.

It further appears that said Henri Q. Chappell died at Newport February 28,1916, leaving his wife Levinia surviving him but leaving no children or issue of children surviving him, and that he left a will in which he gave all his property to his wife, but said will has never been offered for probate.

The said Abby D. Chappell and James H. Chappell had two children, a daughter Ida Douglas Chappell and a son Henri Q. Chappell; the daughter married; and in her mother’s will she is named as Ida Jack of Washington in the District of Columbia; it appears also that she sur *386 vived her mother and her father and her brother and was still surviving at the time when this bill was filed and so far as appears she still survives.

The said Ida Douglas Jack and the said Levinia A. Chappell are the sole parties named as respondents in the bill. '

The will provides as follows:

This is the last will and testament of me, Abby D. Chappell, wife of James H. Chappell, of Newport, Rhode Island.
1st. Subject to the payment of my just debts, if any, and all proper charges against my estate, I give devise and bequeath the one moiety of any property, of every kind, real and personal, wheresoever situated or being, belonging to me at the time of my decease, whether acquired prior or subsequent to the execution of this will, to my daughter, Ida Jack of Washington in the District of Columbia, and in case of the death of said Ida I give devise and bequeath the same to her children.
2nd. I give devise and bequeath the other moiety of my property, of every kind, real and personal, wheresoever situated or being, belonging to me at the time of my decease, whether acquired prior or subsequent to the execution of this Will to my husband James H. Chappell in trust, for the benefit of my son Henri Q. Chappell of said Newport.
“ 3rd. It is my will that so long as my husband shall live that there shall be no division of my estate and the rents, income and profits thereof, shall be divided equally between my husband, my daughter, and said trustee. I also direct, that if the said trustee shall become fully satisfied at any time, that my son Henri has fully reformed his life, so that he can safely be trusted with the management of property and this trust, that he transfer said property to my son as fully as if it had never been created, and that the same thereby terminate.
*387 “ 4th. It is my will, that if said trust shall continue until the death of said son, if he leave issue, the residue of said trust shall he transferred to said issue; if he leave no issue, the residue shall become the property of my daughter Ida.
£ £ 5th. It is my will and I so direct that, if my daughter Ida shall decease leaving no issue, her portion of my estate shall go to said trustee, in trust, as aforesaid. But if said trust has been surrendered by the trustee as provided in this will, then the portion of said Ida shall go to said Henri direct. If both of my children die without issue, I give devise and bequeath all of said property not expended to the next of kin of said Ida according to the present statutes of this State, excluding her husband from any part share and right therein.
6th. Finally I nominate and appoint my husband James H. Chappell to be the sole executor hereof without giving any bond, and to carry out the provisions hereof as strictly as may be; and I revoke all other former wills by me made, and publish, and establish this, and this only, as my last.
££ Witness hand and seal this 25th day of June A. D. 1887.
££ Abby D. Chappell. LS.”

The will bears the usual witness clause and names of witnesses.

It is undisputed that all the property which passed under the will was personal property; and all the property now held by complainant is personal property.

The complainant in its bill contends that the estate of Abby D. Chappell in its hands after deducting the expenses of administration should be turned over to a trustee to be appointed by the court to hold in trust to pay the income to Ida Douglas Jack during her lifetime and upon her death to pay the principal to her issue living at *388 her death, and in default thereof to her next of kin, as provided in the 5th clause of the will.

The respondent Ida Douglas Jack by her answer claims the whole of the fund in the hands of the complainant, after deducting the necessary expenses of administering said estate.

The respondent Levinia A. Chappell is under guardianship, and William M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 A. 323, 40 R.I. 383, 1917 R.I. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newport-trust-co-v-chappell-ri-1917.