Peyton v. Wehrhane

6 A.2d 313, 125 Conn. 420, 1939 Conn. LEXIS 179
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 5, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 6 A.2d 313 (Peyton v. Wehrhane) 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
Peyton v. Wehrhane, 6 A.2d 313, 125 Conn. 420, 1939 Conn. LEXIS 179 (Colo. 1939).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

This action seeks a construction of 1 the will of William C. Peyton. The plaintiff is his only son and the defendants are his widow and five men named in the will as executors and trustees. We shall hereafter refer to the latter as the defendants. The deceased left an estate inventoried at almost $800,000, about three-fourths of which consisted of stock in two Delaware corporations, this stock representing his interest in the Standard Stoker Company, a corporation engaged in the manufacture of automatic stokers designed chiefly for use on railroad locomotives. The development of this business had been the chief concern of the deceased’s business life for many years and he had brought it to a high state of efficiency and profit. He and his wife owned a controlling majority of the stock in the two Delaware corporations through which the business of the Stoker Company was directed and managed. The will was executed October 29, 1934, when the deceased had his domicil in the state of New York. He died domiciled in Connecticut, and his will was admitted to probate in the Court of Probate for the district of Greenwich. The five defendants had been directly connected with the business of the Stoker Company for some years before the death of the deceased. The will was drafted by one of them, an attorney, in conjunction with his associates in the law firm of which he is a member. The deceased had conferred with him in connection with his testamentary plan over a period of about four years and during this time three drafts of wills were considered by the deceased before he executed the one now in question. No letters outlining the disposition *424 of the income of the trust property during the life of the widow or the disposition of the principal and income after her death, which, in the will, the testator stated he intended to write, have been found. Attached to the will when it was filed for probate was a statement signed by the widow in which she gave approval to the disposition of the estate as therein provided, waived any claim or interest in it inconsistent with the provisions of the will, consented to provisions made for securing the continued direction and control of the Stoker Company, and agreed to transfer to a corporation which the will directed to be organized the stock she held representing her interest in the Stoker Company, and to receive in exchange therefor stock in the new corporation without voting power.

Without for the moment discussing the provisions of the will in detail it suffices to point out that the testator gave the residue of his estate to the defendants as trustees to hold, invest and reinvest during the life of his wife and to pay to her the income, and at her death directed the trustees to transfer the principal to themselves as individuals, stating an intention to prepare or cause to be prepared a letter outlining certain dispositions of the principal and income which would meet with his approval, but expressly disavowing any intent thereby to limit or restrain the absolute estate, ownership and freedom of disposition of the property by the defendants. The plaintiff claimed that after the termination of the life use given to the widow of the testator the defendants took the property upon a trust or trusts which failed because not sufficiently defined or in the alternative that the attempted gift to them as individuals was invalid, that therefore the property became intestate, vesting in the plaintiff and his mother, and that the five defend *425 ants had no beneficial interest in it. The defendants, on the other hand, claimed that the property was given to them after the termination of the life use, to hold by absolute title, that any expression by the testator as to his desires in the matter made in the letters he intended to write would not be legally binding but merely precatory in its nature, and that the gift to them was valid. The trial court sustained the claims of the defendants and the plaintiff has appealed.

The testator had the right, of course, to give his property to a person or persons in such a way as to vest in them a complete beneficial interest, but with the hope and expectation that they would in fact use or dispose of it in accordance with his desires expressed to them in the will or otherwise. Gilman v. Gilman, 99 Conn. 598, 122 Atl. 386; Clay v. Wood, 153 N. Y. 134, 47 N. E. 274. Whether this is the result of the provisions of his will, or, on the other hand, the gift to the defendants did not vest in them a beneficial interest but they took the property subject to a trust or trusts inadequately declared and hence ineffective, is to be determined by the intent of the testator as it appears from the language of the will. Mitchell v. Reeves, 123 Conn. 549, 556, 196 Atl. 785. The controlling effect of such an intent applies with reference to the question whether expressions of hope, expectation, desire, and the like, on the part of a testator create a trust or are merely precatory in their nature; “ ‘in order to create a trust, it must appear that the words were intended by the testator to be imperative; and when property is given absolutely and without restriction, a trust is not lightly to be imposed, upon mere words of recommendation or confidence.’ ” Loomis Institute v. Healy, 98 Conn. 102, 114, 120 Atl. 291; Hughes v. Fitzgerald, 78 Conn. 4, 7, 60 Atl. 694. *426 There is also a rule of construction particularly applicable in the case before us, as will later appear. An absolute gift will be cut down by subsequent provisions indicating that a more limited estate was intended only “when the lesser estate is expressed in positive terms and in language which is unambiguous and incapable of any but one meaning.” Hull v. Hull, 101 Conn. 481, 486, 126 Atl. 699; Scanlin v. Peterson, 105 Conn. 308, 313, 135 Atl. 394. This rule applies where the question is whether subsequent words indicating a desire on the part of the testator that property first given absolutely shall be used or disposed of in a certain way are intended to create a legal obligation or are merely precatory in their effect. Loomis Institute v. Healy, supra; Clay v. Wood, s up ra,

The will before us is peculiar in the phraseology of its various provisions and while counsel in their able briefs have cited numerous cases from other jurisdictions the provisions of the wills involved for the most part differ so far from those in the one before us that the decisions afford little help, and a discussion of them would serve no purpose. Of all the cases cited, the two most nearly resembling the situation before us are Matter of Megrue, 135 Misc. (N. Y.) 16, 237 N. Y. S. 523, a decision of a surrogate, affirmed without opinion 229 N. Y. App. Div. 711, 254 N. Y. 638, 173 N. E. 900, and Matter of Murray, 124 App. Div. (N. Y.) 548. In the former the testatrix bequeathed the residue of her personal and household effects to “my executors hereinafter named, to be distributed or disposed of by them in such manner as they in their sole discretion shall deem best.

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Bluebook (online)
6 A.2d 313, 125 Conn. 420, 1939 Conn. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peyton-v-wehrhane-conn-1939.