Nina G. Auchincloss v. City Bank Farmers Trust Co.

15 Conn. Super. Ct. 456, 15 Conn. Supp. 456, 1948 Conn. Super. LEXIS 63
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1948
DocketFile 76519
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Conn. Super. Ct. 456 (Nina G. Auchincloss v. City Bank Farmers Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nina G. Auchincloss v. City Bank Farmers Trust Co., 15 Conn. Super. Ct. 456, 15 Conn. Supp. 456, 1948 Conn. Super. LEXIS 63 (Colo. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

CORNELL, J.

In this action a construction of certain portions of the will and codicils of Emma Brewster Auchincloss, late of Fairfield, deceased, is sought. Such a cause can only be brought by one in a position of trust for guidance in performing the duties imposed upon him. Ackerman v. Union & New Haven Trust Co., 90 Conn. 63, 70. Heirs and legatees have no right to ask the court to intervene in any controversy between them. Belfield v. Booth, 63 Conn. 299, 309. When the construction of a will is so sought by an executor, administrator, c. t. a., or trustee, the court will ordinarily refuse its advice unless all persons having an interest under the testament are made parties to the action. O’Connell v. Remington, 102 Conn. 401, 409; White v. Smith, 87 Conn. 663, 677. These requirements are not met in the instant case. However, in view of the conclusions reached here, it is obvious that no party not present will be injuriously affected if the questions propounded are answered. See Hill v. Wright, 128 Conn. 12, 19; New Britain Trust Co. v. Stanley, 128 Conn. 386, 392. To that end, the proceeding will be treated as an action for a declaratory judgment as in Ackerman v. Union & New Haven Trust Co., supra, to which an action for the construction of a will by one occupying a fiduciary relation under the same bears analogy in some respects. Hill v. Wright, supra, 18. So considered, the cause must be viewed as one in which the plaintiffs who are grandchildren of the testatrix seek a declaration of their rights as beneficiaries of the trusts created in subdivision C of article 3 of the will with particular reference to whether or not the trustees therein named are vested with absolute discretion to refrain from paying any of the income therefrom to plaintiffs or for their benefit.

The decedent was survived by three children of whom one, Hugh B. Auchincloss, is the father of the plaintiffs. The will, after bequeathing personal and household effects in equal shares to her children, disposes of the rest of her property, referred to as the “residuary estate” as follows: Such residuary estate is divided among the three children of ■ the testatrix in equal shares in which connection an inter vivos gift to the father of the plaintiff children in the sum of $1,000,000 is brought into *458 hotchpot by adding that amount to the residuary estate and subtracting it from the share to which Hugh B. Auchincloss would otherwise be entitled. Out of the shares so bequeathed to the three children of the testatrix, the latter directed that subshares be created sufficient in amount to produce an annual net income of $7,500 for each of the children of her own children. The subshares so created for the benefit of the plaintiffs in this action constitute the principals, respectively, of the trusts involved. There is some intimation that because of the manner in which the will treats the gift of $1,000,000 to the father of the plaintiff children, the amount of the trust funds for each of such children may not yield an annual income of $7500, but no question on that score is presented in the instant action.

Subsection C of article 3 of the will provides as follows:

“My Trustees shall hold, manage, invest and reinvest the principal of each subshare set apart for the benefit of a grandchild of mine pursuant to the provisions of Subdivision A of this Clause THIRD, and shall collect and receive the income therefrom and until such grandchild shall attain the age of twenty-one years, my Trustees shall apply to the use of such grandchild so much of the net income from such subshare as my Trustees shall in their absolute discretion deem advisable for the support, maintenance and education of such grandchild and shall accumulate any portion of the net income of such subshare not so applied and add such accumulated income to the principal of such subshare; after such grandchild shall attain'the age of twenty-one years, my Trustees shall apply the net income from such trust fund (whether the same shall be more or less than Seventy-five hundred Dollars ($7,500) as the case may be) to the use of such grandchild during the remainder of such grandchild’s life; and upon the death of such grandchild my Trustees shall transfer, pay over and distribute the principal of such subshare, in equal parts, to such grandchild’s then living lawful issue, or if there shall be no such issue, and such grandchild’s parent who was a child of mine shall be then living, my Trustees shall add the principal of such subshare to the principal of that portion of the share set apart for such grandchild’s said parent which is then held in trust for such grandchild’s said parent under the provisions of Subdivision B of this Clause THIRD, the fund so added to follow the disposition of the fund to which it is added, in all respects, both as to income and as to principal; or if such grandchild’s said parent shall not be then living, my *459 Trustees shall transfer, pay over and distribute the principal of such subshare, in equal parts, to the then living issue of such grandchild’s said parent, or if there shall be no such then living issue, to my then living issue, in equal parts; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that any part which would thus become distributable to any person for whose benefit a trust fund is then held under this Clause THIRD shall not be transferred and paid over to such person, but in lieu thereof shall be added to such trust fund, the fund so added to follow, in each case, the disposition of the fund to which it is added, in all respects, both as to income and as to principal.”

Under these provisions, plaintiffs claim that (a) the discretion reposed in the trustees refers only to the times when, and the amount of, income to be applied for the support and education of each grandchild and does not empower the trustees to withhold the benefit of such income within any period of time from them entirely; and (b) in determining the amount of income to be devoted to the stated purposes, the trustees are not to consider or take into account, any other income available to plaintiffs from any other source from which their maintenance and education may be supplied. Both of these questions are matters of testamentary intention which must be discovered in the language used, considered in the light of the general scheme of the disposition of the testator’s estate revealed by the testament as a whole, weighed in the backdrop of the circumstances surrounding the author of the will at the time she executed it. Hoops v. Stephan, 131 Conn. 138, 143. While ample evidence delineates the present situation of the plaintiffs, there is none with respect to that of the testatrix when the will was drawn— hence nothing from that source which may be of aid in exposing any sense, other than that of their ordinary import, in which the pertinent words were used. Neither is there anything in the general scheme of the testament to which reference is made supra, that would vary the meaning of the passage under examination from that which it would otherwise have.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Conn. Super. Ct. 456, 15 Conn. Supp. 456, 1948 Conn. Super. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nina-g-auchincloss-v-city-bank-farmers-trust-co-connsuperct-1948.