Pond v. Porter

104 A.2d 228, 141 Conn. 56, 1954 Conn. LEXIS 157
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 2, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 104 A.2d 228 (Pond v. Porter) 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
Pond v. Porter, 104 A.2d 228, 141 Conn. 56, 1954 Conn. LEXIS 157 (Colo. 1954).

Opinion

Inglis, C. J.

This action was brought originally in 1925 by writ and complaint praying an order for the sale of real property, located in Hartford, in which the plaintiff, Charles F. Pond, had a life estate under a codicil to the will of his grandmother, Harriet F. Pond. The court ordered the sale and directed that the proceeds thereof be paid to The Hartford-Connectieut Trust Company to be held by *60 it in trust to pay the net income to the plaintiff during his life and upon his death to pay “the principal of said trust fund to the . . . persons . . . who may then be lawfully entitled thereto under the will of Harriet N. Pond, deceased, or who may be otherwise lawfully entitled thereto, free from the trust hereby created ...; the said trust fund being deemed to be the precise equivalent of the premises sold herein, and its beneficial ownership identical with that of said premises, if the same had not been sold.”

Charles F. Pond died on December 9, 1949. The trustee filed its final account and prayed the court both for the approval of it and also for the ascertainment of the persons entitled to receive the principal of the trust fund. The court rendered judgment approving the trustee’s account and directing the payment of one half of the principal of the fund to the executor of the will of Charles P. Pond and the other half to a child and two grandchildren of Clara P. Pond Porter. Prom that judgment several of the parties have appealed.

Harriet N. Pond died a resident of New York on April 24,1892. She left a will and two codicils which were admitted to probate in the Surrogate’s Court in the county and state of New York and thereafter in the Probate Court for the district of Hartford in this state. Three children, Charles Murray Pond, Anson Phelps Pond and Clara P. Pond Porter, survived. Charles Murray Pond died testate without issue on August 30, 1894. Anson Phelps Pond died intestate January 21, 1920, leaving his son, Charles P. Pond, the plaintiff, as his sole heir at law. Charles P. Pond at his death on December 9, 1949, left a widow but no issue. Clara P. Pond Porter died testate on October 8, 1927. She left two chil *61 dren, Harriet Porter Glover and Prank Brinley Porter ; the latter has died, leaving two children, Prank B. Porter, Jr., and James L. Porter.

In the codicil which devised the life estate in the Hartford property to Charles P. Pond, the testatrix, Harriet N. Pond, provided that if he “shall survive me, and shall die without issue him surviving, [the property] shall pass under the provisions of my . . . will, subject however to the life estate herein devised to him.” Recourse, therefore,, must be had to the terms of Harriet N. Pond’s will to determine who is now entitled to the fund in the hands of the trustee. The clauses of the will which control are the tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth. 1 The judgment ordering *62 the payment of the fund to those persons who are now the representatives of Clara Pond Porter and *63 Anson Plielps Pond was grounded upon the court’s conclusion that these clauses of Harriet N. Pond’s *64 will vested an absolute estate in one half of the residuum in Clara Pond Porter and an absolute estate in the other half of the residuum in Anson Phelps Pond. The principal question on this appeal is whether that conclusion is correct.

It is apparent from a reading of the tenth clause of the will that the testamentary scheme of the testatrix was that her residuary estate, including the remainder interest in the Hartford property, should be divided into two parts, one of which she devised and bequeathed for the benefit of her daughter, Clara Pond Porter, and the other for the benefit of her son Anson Phelps Pond. We will seek to determine her intention with respect to each of these halves separately, the primary question as to each of them being whether an absolute estate was given to the beneficiary named.

We first refer to the share set aside for the benefit of Clara Pond Porter, who in the will is called Clara P. Pond. In the tenth clause, the wording is: “ . . . I give, devise and bequeath as follows: One-half ... to my daughter Clara P. Pond. . . .” There are, at that point, no further words of limitation. The will does not there say “for life,” nor does it say “and her heirs and assigns” or “absolutely.” Shortly thereafter, however, it is provided: “If my daughter Clara P. Pond shall survive me, I give, devise and bequeath such one-half from and after her death to and among her issue, if any. . . .” In the thirteenth clause, the testatrix directs that this one-half share be held in trust for Clara Pond Porter’s benefit and, quoting from this clause, “accordingly I give, devise *65 and bequeath, the same for and during the life of my said daughter Clara F. Pond to the said The New York Life Insurance and Trust Company in trust . . . to collect and receive the interest, income, issues and profits thereof, and to apply the same to the use of my said daughter.” From the fact that this share was placed in trust for the life of Clara Pond Porter with directions to the trustee to pay over to her only the income during her life it is clear that the testatrix meant exactly what she said in the tenth clause: “ . . . I give, devise and bequeath such one-half from and after her death to and among her issue, if any . . . .” In short, her intention was that Clara Pond Porter should take only a life estate.

In so construing this portion of the will, we are not violating the canon of construction that a clear bequest of an absolute estate is not to be cut down to a lesser estate by subsequent provisions unless those subsequent provisions are at least equally clear. See Stanton v. Stanton, 140 Conn. 504, 511, 101 A.2d 789. A bequest of an estate which when first made may appear to create an absolute estate may be cut down “by subsequent provisions of the instrument clearly showing that it was the testator’s intention to give [a] lesser estate.” Meriden Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. Squire, 92 Conn. 440, 446, 103 A. 269. It is true that the omission of words customarily used to describe an absolute estate from the bequest to Clara Pond Porter, as that bequest is first made in the tenth clause, does not necessarily indicate an intention that the bequest be only of a life use. Duncan v. Higgins, 129 Conn. 136, 145, 26 A.2d 849. The omission is, however, a factor to be taken into consideration, and the later provisions of the will referred to above so clearly demonstrate that that was the intention of *66 the testatrix that there can be no doubt about it.

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Bluebook (online)
104 A.2d 228, 141 Conn. 56, 1954 Conn. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pond-v-porter-conn-1954.