Powers v. Home for Aged Women

179 A. 610, 55 R.I. 187, 1935 R.I. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 25, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 179 A. 610 (Powers v. Home for Aged Women) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powers v. Home for Aged Women, 179 A. 610, 55 R.I. 187, 1935 R.I. LEXIS 14 (R.I. 1935).

Opinion

*188 Moss, J.

This is a suit in equity which was brought by the trustee of the trusts under the fourth clause of the will of Laura C. Powers, late of the city of Providence, deceased, and by others interested under that clause. In it the construction of that clause is sought among other things and therefore the suit was certified to this court for its determination in accordance with the provisions of section 35 of chapter 339 of the general laws, 1923, as being ready for hearing for final decree.

By the clause in question, (ignoring in this statement a provision for a contingency which did not happen), the testatrix devised a certain piece of real estate to the trustee in trust to manage the trust estate and accumulate the net income thereof until such net income with its accumulated income should be equal to $10,000, and directed that then this sum should be divided equally "between the Old Ladies’ Home of said Providence, the Bethany Home of said Providence, the Teachers’ Annuity Fund of said Providence, and the Young Women’s Christian Association of said Providence,” and that the trust estate should then vest in and be divided and distributed among her husband (if then living) and her heirs at law then living, share and share alike, but per stirpes and not per capita.

The evidence shows that the testatrix died August 4, 1923, the will was duly probated, the trustee took possession of this real estate, and from its net income had on June 1, 1934, accumulated the sum of $10,000. It shows further that at that time the husband of the testatrix had died and that her sole heirs at law were her six children, the complainants William C. Powers, James C. Powers, Roland C. Powers, Herman W. Powers, Leslie C. Powers, and Ruth H. P. Cushman, all of whom were then living. On this evidence the legal- title to the trust real estate was on June 1, 1934, vested in these six heirs at law as tenants in common.

The evidence and the admissions of the parties show that in the fourth clause of her will the testatrix by the words *189 “the Old Ladies’ Home of said Providence, the Bethany-Home of said Providence,” and “the Young Women’s Christian Association of said Providence,” meant three Rhode Island charitable corporations which are respondents, namely, Home for Aged Women, Bethany Home of Rhode Island, and Young Women’s 'Christian Association of Providence, R. I., each of which under the fourth clause of the will was entitled on June 1, 1934, to receive from the complainant trustee one-fourth of the accumulated fund of $10,000. The only question which has been argued before us is what disposition should be made by the complainant trustee of the other one-fourth, which by the language of that clause was directed to go to “The Teachers’ Annuity Fund of said Providence”; whether, by reason of events which have happened since the death of the testatrix and the probating of her will, it should go to the respondent Industrial Trust Company, as present trustee of the residue of the estate, or be divided equally among the three charitable corporations above named, or be otherwise disposed of.

The evidence and admissions of the parties show that the testatrix, by the words “the Teachers’ Annuity Fund of said Providence” intended the “Public School Teachers’ Retirement Fund, ” a fund which the school committee of the city of Providence, by virtue of the provisions of chapter 485 of the public laws of 1897 was authorized to establish and which it had established and continued to administer through a board of trustees until about March 18, 1925. By this statute the fund was to be made up of all moneys received from gifts, by will or otherwise, for such fund, and by certain sums to be regularly deducted and retained from the salaries of the public school teachers of Providence, and was to be used to provide retirement payments in the nature of life annuities, on a certain scale, to such of these teachers as should retire from service from' time to time. Under the statute the fund was not incorporated but was held by the city of Providence and administered by a board of trustees.

*190 By chapter 489 of the public laws of 1923, which took effect when approved by the city’s voters at the general election in November, 1924, a corporation, the “Employees’ Retirement System of the city of Providence, ” was created and began operation as of January 5, 1925, and four funds were provided for. Two of these were to be derived from sums to be deducted from the salaries of the public school teachers and from the salaries and wages of most of the other employees of the city, and were to be used for the payment of retirement “annuities” to the teachers and other employees, disability benefits and the like. The other two funds, called the “pension accumulation fund” and the “pension reserve fund,” were to be derived from certain contributions to be made regularly by the city, and were to be used for the payment of retirement “pensions” etc. to the teachers and other employees.

In particular it was provided in substance that, if the above Public School Teachers’ Retirement Fund should be found insufficient to keep up the payments which retired Providence public school teachers were entitléd to receive from that fund, “all cash and securities standing to the credit of such fund” should be transferred to the pension accumulation fund of the retirement system; that then the teachers contributing to the earlier fund should be relieved from further contributions thereto and that its beneficiaries then on the roll of annuitants should thereafter receive the same retirement annuities from the new pension accumulation fund.

About March 18, 1925, nearly a year and a half after the death of the testatrix and about four months after the later statute had been made effective by the vote of the people of Providence, it was found that the earlier fund, which up to that time had been kept up and operated under the earlier statute, was insufficient to continue the payments which the retired teachers who were the beneficiaries thereunder were entitled to'receive therefrom; and then, in accordance with the later statute, the cash and securities then in that fund *191 were transferred into the later pension accumulation fund, from which the above payments to those teachers, and payments to future retired Providence public school teachers and other future retired employees of the city, entitled to pensions under the later statute, would be payable and have since been paid.

The other persons and corporations that would or might be interested in the disposition of the sum of $2,500 involved in this case, if the provision for the payment of it as set forth in the fourth clause of the will were held to be wholly inoperative, were joined as parties complainant or respondent; and the Employees’ Retirement System of the City of Providence and also the city of Providence itself were parties respondent. By order of the superior court, notice of the pendency of the proceeding was given to its treasurer, together with notice that he, the city, its school committee and any representative of the city and committee might answer and be heard in the proceeding in respect to the right and interest (if any) which might be claimed in behalf of the Public School Teachers’ Retirement Fund.

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Related

Israel v. National Board of Young Men's Christian Ass'n
369 A.2d 646 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1977)
Powers v. Home for Aged Women
192 A. 770 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1937)
Brown v. Brancato
184 A. 89 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 A. 610, 55 R.I. 187, 1935 R.I. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powers-v-home-for-aged-women-ri-1935.