Poor v. Hodge

41 N.E.2d 21, 311 Mass. 312, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 701
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 1, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 41 N.E.2d 21 (Poor v. Hodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poor v. Hodge, 41 N.E.2d 21, 311 Mass. 312, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 701 (Mass. 1942).

Opinion

Cox, J.

This is a report under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 215, § 13, by a judge of probate who allowed several accounts of the trustees and surviving trustee under the will of Franklin N. Poor that came before him for decision on a case stated.

The testator made his will on March 31, 1903. The accountants, who were named therein as trustees, were appointed on December 26, 1906. The residue of the testator’s estate was given to the trustees upon two trusts, but the accounts in question concern only one of these trusts consisting of one half of the residue, which was set up in clause Fifth, Section A, of the will. This trust is for the benefit of the testator’s daughter, Nina Maria Poor Hodge, during her life, and thereafter for the benefit of her children who are living at her decease and the issue of any deceased child by right of representation, upon terms that need not be stated. The life beneficiary is living, as are her unmarried daughter and a married son who has a minor daughter. A guardian ad litem was appointed in the matter of the settlement of the accounts in question, and he filed a report. No contention is made that the trustees at any time acted in bad faith, or that they had made investments, or held investments coming from the testator, not permitted to trustees, unless any investments made or held were improper because they were not “interest bearring securities” within the meaning of these words as used [314]*314in the will; and, in view of the provisions of the will that the trustees are answerable for wilful default only, it is not contended that the accounts are contestable on the ground that investments, if found to have been “interest bearing securities” at the time they were made by the trustees or came into their hands, have been held too long. The trustees’ inventory shows, as assets turned over to them by the executrix, four blocks of stock; two preferred and two common, three mortgage notes, several notes described by the testator in his will as worthless, some old coin, two savings bank deposits, a deposit in a trust company and one $1,000 bond of the Commonwealth. The first twelve accounts of the trustees, covering the period from December 26, 1906, to December 31, 1918, were allowed on May 28, 1920, by decrees, reciting in usual form that all persons interested had consented to their allowance in writing. These accounts were assented to by the life beneficiary, her daughter and son. No guardian ad litem was appointed or consented to their allowance. The twelfth account of the trustees showed that they held various corporate stocks as trust funds, as do all subsequent accounts.

The main question to be decided is whether certain investments that are shown in the trustees’ “inventories” and accbunts, other than bonds and notes, are “interest bearing securities” within the meaning of these words as used in the will.

Clause Fifth, Section A of the will provides, among other things, that the trustees are to hold one half of the residue of the testator’s estate, “keeping the same invested in good, safe, interest bearing securities so as to produce an income.” This same language appears in clause Fifth, Section B, with reference to the other trust. The will, however, by clause First, after naming the trustees, but not the executrix or executor, contains the following language: “I give to my said Trustees, or the survivor of them, and to their successors in these Trusts full power and authority to sell by private sale or public auction and convey any of the Trust property and estate, real or personal, held by them in Trust [315]*315under this will, and to invest the proceeds in such other real and personal estate as may seem to them prudent, and such investments to change from personal to real, and real to personal, as the convenient and prudent management of the Trusts may require . . . Clause Seventh of the will appoints one of the testator’s daughters, also named as trustee, as executrix, and, in case of her decease, the other trustee named in clause First is named as executor. This clause also contains the following provisions: “My said Executrix or said Executor are hereby given authority in their discretion to determine what monies, received or expended in any way or manner, are to be treated as capital, and what not, and in distributing or transferring any devise or bequest, or any fund or portion of the Trust estates finally to any party entitled hereunder, they may do so by transferring such stock or other securities ... as they shall deem in kind and amount will make justly the portion intended.”

The fundamental rule for the construction of wills has repeatedly been stated. The purpose is to ascertain the intention of the testator from the whole will, attributing due weight to all its language, considered in the light of the circumstances known to him at the time of its execution, and to give effect to that intent unless some positive rule of law forbids. Fitts v. Powell, 307 Mass. 449, 454, and cases cited. “It is a familiar rule, in the construction of wills, that the intention of the testator is to govern, although it may be opposed to some of the words of the will; and that the general intention is to control any particular intention, especially when the particular intention relates to the manner by which the general intention is to be effectuated.” Malcolm v. Malcolm, 3 Cush. 472, 477. In Pratt v. Rice, 7 Cush. 209, it was held that a devise of an undivided part of the testator’s property must yield to a subsequent provision in the will authorizing the executors, at their discretion, to sell and convey a part or the whole of the estate. There it was said that the entire will is to be read in deciding upon the effect of a particular devise. “If any preference is to be made in reference to the order in which the [316]*316clause is inserted in the will, the last is rather entitled to it than the first. But the will is to be taken as a whole, and the later provisions therein are to be taken as modifying those preceding, whenever such appears to have been the intention of the testator.” (Page 212.) See Shattuck v. Balcom, 170 Mass. 245, 251. It seems that the general power conferred upon the trustees by clause First of the will is not an independent statement of the testator’s intention, having no relation whatever to the language- contained in clause Fifth, Section A, relative to keeping the trust funds invested in interest bearing securities. See Pope v. Pope, 209 Mass. 432, 441; Sears v. Childs, 309 Mass. 337, 346, 347. If it be assumed that the two provisions are repugnant, the language of the court in Taylor v. Albree, 309 Mass. 248, is applicable, where it is said, at page 258: “Reliance is placed by some of the parties upon the rule that of two repugnant provisions the one appearing later in the will is to be deemed to express the final purpose of the testator . . . but the rule itself is a highly conventional one to which resort should be had only where a scrutiny of the whole will fails to reveal the testator’s intent with reasonable certainty.” Brummett v. Hewes, ante, 142, 147.

In the search for the answer to the question presented, we consider the “light of the circumstances” known to the testator at the time of the execution of the will. Fitts v. Powell, 307 Mass. 449, 454.

The testator was for forty years the treasurer of the Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad Company, and the deceased trustee Ware was the president.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.E.2d 21, 311 Mass. 312, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poor-v-hodge-mass-1942.