Polsky v. Continental National Bank of Lincoln, Nebraska

240 F.2d 732
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 25, 1957
DocketNos. 15543, 15550
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 240 F.2d 732 (Polsky v. Continental National Bank of Lincoln, Nebraska) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Polsky v. Continental National Bank of Lincoln, Nebraska, 240 F.2d 732 (8th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

The will of Morris Polsky, deceased, devised Lots 8 and 14, Block 42, Original Plat of the City of Lincoln, Nebraska, to a trustee, and gave the income of the trust to the testator’s wife Rachel, his son Bernard, and his daughter Ruth, during its term, if they continued to survive.

The trust was to have existence for a minimum term of 25 years, from the making of the will. If, however, the wife lived longer, the trust was to continue until her death. And in the event that the son (who was in ill health) should survive beyond this, the trust further was not to terminate, until he reached the age of 55 years.

The will was dated July 19, 1928. The testator died in 1929, with Rachel, Bernard and Ruth all surviving him. Bernard’s health continued to decline, and he died in 1931, 22 years of age and unmarried. Rachel, who was the testator’s second wife and the mother of Bernard but not of Ruth, lived until 1936. Ruth, who was the child of the testator’s first marriage, remained surviving through the 25-year trust-term.

Upon the expiration of 25 years from the date of the making of the will, in 1953, Ruth instituted this suit,1 to have it decreed that the trust had terminated, and to have it declared that the corpus thereof was now vested in her. Her complaint alleged that she had become vested, at the time the trust so terminated, with an undivided one-half interest in its corpus, as remainderman, by a devise of the will; and that, because of the non-survival at that time of the contingent remaindermen to whom the other undivided one-half had been devised over on the trust’s termination, such undivided one-half of the corpus had been caused to revert, and hence to pass by devolution to her, as her father’s then only heir at law.

Rachel had left a will, containing a residuary clause, which had been duly probated on her death in 1936, and the [734]*734surviving executrix and the beneficiaries thereunder2 made appearance in the present suit, opposingly to Ruth, in respect to the undivided one-half interest which Ruth claimed had reverted and become intestate property of her father when the trust terminated. They sought to have the court hold that this part of the trust corpus had, under the provisions of Morris Polsky’s will, vested in equitable remainder in Rachel, at the time that Bernard’s death occurred, and had thus, both legally and under the authority of Morris Polsky’s will, become subject to testamentary disposition by her, and that Ruth was accordingly without any basis of right or claim thereto.

A third reach against this undivided one-half interest was made by Helen Bernstein, niece of Rachel, who asked the court to declare that this part of the trust corpus was, as contended by Rachel’s executrix and beneficiaries, vested in equitable remainder in Rachel from the time of Bernard’s death, but that, contrary to the claim of Rachel’s executrix and beneficiaries, the equitable fee of Rachel was, under the intention of Morris Polsky’s will, not subject to a right of testamentary disposition by her, unless she survived until July 19, 1953, which she had not. Helen claimed that the one-half interest thus constituted intestate property of Rachel, which passed by descent to Rachel’s only two heirs at law, of which Helen was one.

As will have been noted, the controversy here involved relates solely to one of the undivided-half interests in the trust corpus. The trial court upheld the contentions of the executrix and testamentary beneficiaries of Rachel; and Ruth Polsky and Helen Bernstein have each taken an appeal. We think that the court’s resolution of the matter is under Nebraska law entitled to be affirmed.

The will of Morris Polsky was one of numerous paragraphs and provisions. The present controversy centers on the meaning of paragraph 13 of the will, on the basis of the language used therein and such implications of intention in respect thereto as can be said to be manifested by any of the other provisions of the instrument and by a reading of the will in its whole.

Paragraph 13, after setting out a description of the trust property and making provision for various contingencies in the distribution of the income therefrom, went on to provide: “It is my desire and I so will that the properties in this paragraph described be not sold or encumbered during the life of my said wife, Rachel C. Polsky. After the death of my said wife, Rachel C. Polsky, my said children, Ruth Polsky and Bernard S. Polsky, shall not sell, encumber or in any way dispose of his or her interest in said property in this paragraph described until my son, Bernard S. Polsky, shall have reached the age of fifty-five (55) years. When my son, Bernard S. Polsky, shall have reached the age of fifty-five (55) years said trust as to the property in this paragraph described shall cease and determine, provided my wife, Rachel C. Polsky, shall not be living at the time my son, Bernard S. Pol-sky, reaches the age of fifty-five (55) years. If my said wife, Rachel C. Pol-sky, survives me and be living at the time my said son, Bernard S. Polsky, reaches the age of fifty-five (55) years, then said trust shall not cease, nor shall said property be divided until the death of my wife Rachel Polsky, but upon the death of my said wife, Rachel C. Polsky, and upon my son, Bernard S. Polsky, having reached the age of fifty-five (55) years, then said trust shall cease and determine, and in such event my said [735]*735son, Bernard S. Polsky, shall take in fee an undivided five-eighths (¡j-á) interest in and to the property in paragraph 13 herein described and my said daughter, Ruth Polsky, in that event shall take and hold in fee simple an undivided three-fifths (%) [sic] interest in and to the property in this paragraph 13 herein described. Provided, however, that twenty-five years shall have elapsed from the date of making this will. Should my said son, Bernard S. Polsky, die prior to reaching the age of fifty-five (55) years without issue, then the property in paragraph 13 herein described shall vest in fee in my said wife, Rachel C. Polsky, and my daughter, Ruth Polsky, share and share alike, provided twenty-five (25) years shall have elapsed from, the date of making this will and provided further that said property shall not be sold, encv.mbered or disposed of during the life of my said wife, Rachel C. Polsky. However, should my wife, Rachel C. Polsky, take a fee interest in and to the property in paragraph 13 herein described and as herein set out, she shall have the right to dispose by will of her fee interest in and to the property in paragraph 13 described.” (Emphasis ours.)

The part to which we have given emphasis is that which is immediately involved.

Appellant Ruth Polsky argues that paragraphs 14, 16 and 23 of the will, though they never became operative, point, when read in conjunction with paragraph 13, to an intention by the testator generally, that no interest in the trust corpus was to become vested in any beneficiary, until 25 years had elapsed from the making of the will.

Paragraph 14 provided: “Should said Bernard S. Polsky die before reaching the age of fifty-five years leaving issue, then such issue shall receive the income from the property in paragraph 13 herein described, share and share alike, so coming to the said Bernard S.

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240 F.2d 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polsky-v-continental-national-bank-of-lincoln-nebraska-ca8-1957.