Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Arnold

133 A.2d 729, 86 R.I. 38, 65 A.L.R. 2d 1400, 1957 R.I. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 2, 1957
DocketEq. No. 2581
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 133 A.2d 729 (Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Arnold) 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
Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. v. Arnold, 133 A.2d 729, 86 R.I. 38, 65 A.L.R. 2d 1400, 1957 R.I. LEXIS 66 (R.I. 1957).

Opinion

*39 Andrews, J.

This is a bill in equity for construction and instruction brought by the trustee of three inter vivos deeds of trust. The pertinent facts were stipulated and the case was certified to this court for our determination under general laws 1938, chapter 545, §7.

The deeds of trust were executed in 1907 and 1908, two by Ruth S. Arnold alone, and one by Ruth and her stepson William H. Arnold. The deeds provide for successive life estates in the income for' three generations of the Arnolds beginning with the settlors. The distribution of the corpus *40 was put off until after the death of the last life tenant, which event has now occurred.

The language of each of the deeds is identical with respect to the termination of the trust and the distribution of the corpus, and it is with such distribution that we are now concerned. The following language appears in one of the deeds: “If, however, either or both the said Amey or Frances shall be living at the time of the decease of the said Harriet S. Arnold, then said trust shall continue until the death of the survivor, and upon the death of said survivor said trust property and estate shall be conveyed one-half (%) to the heirs at law of the said Amey Arnold, in accordance with the statutes then in force in the State of New York, in the case of persons dying intestate, and one-half (%) to the heirs at law of the said Frances Arnold, in accordance with the statutes then in force in the State of New York in the case of persons dying intestate.”

In 1907 Ruth was eighty-three years old and she lived until the age of one hundred and three. Amey and Frances were stepgrandchildren of Ruth and in 1907 they were about thirty years old and unmarried. Amey, without ever having been married, died September 16, 1944, at which time her heirs-at-law were her sister Frances and their brother William B. Arnold. Frances was married, but died February 20, 1956 without issue, and her sole heir was William O. Arnold, a son of William B. Arnold. It is admitted that the half of the corpus of the three trusts going to the heirs-at-law of Frances will pass to him. The brother, William B. Arnold, died testate after Amey’s death and before the death of their sister Frances, thus leaving as Amey’s sole heir at the time of the latter’s death their nephew William 0. Arnold, the son of William B. Arnold.

The trustee and the estate of William B. Arnold, brother of Amey and Frances, claim that Amey’s heirs should be determined as of the date of her death thus making said estate entitled to one half of Amey’s half, while William 0. *41 Arnold, her nephew, claims that Amey’s heirs should be determined as of the date of the death of his aunt Frances thus making him the sole heir of Amey as well as of Frances. This is the construction question.

The instruction question is: “Should the expenses of this proceeding be charged against the general assets of the respective trust estates or solely against the one half thereof to be distributed to the ‘heirs at law’ of the said Amey Arnold?”

The trustee, the estate of William B. Arnold, and William 0. Arnold, the nephew, have filed rather exhaustive briefs and we have made a somewhat extended search of the authorities, although we have concluded that our cases together with the language of the deeds of trust are sufficient for the determination of this case. We shall discuss the arguments of the trustee and the estate collectively, although one may have put more emphasis on a particular argument than has the other.

It has long been recognized in this jurisdiction, as well as generally elsewhere, that the problem of construction is to determine the intention of the testator or, as here, of the settlors. Starrett v. Botsford, 64 R. I. 1, 6; Industrial Trust Co. v. Budlong, 70 R. I. 432, 441. It is equally well settled in this state as well as elsewhere, 57 Am. Jur., Wills, §1279, p. 846, that the phrase “heirs-at-law” or words of like import are to be construed as describing the heirs-at-law of the ancestor at the time of his death, unless, yielding to the dominant rule of intention just stated, it clearly appears from the language of the instrument that a later time was intended.

In Starrett v. Botsford, supra, this court, quoting from Kenyon, Petitioner, 17 R. I. 149, stated at page 6: “ ‘* * * when the testator uses familiar legal words, he must be presumed to have used them in their ordinary meaning, until the contrary clearly appears.’ ” The court further stated: “Nowhere in his will does the testator indicate that he used *42 the words ‘heirs’ in any peculiar sense different from the generally accepted sense of that term. Under such circumstances, we are not at liberty to assume that he must have used the word in a different and special sense merely because by such an assumption we would arrive at what may seem to be a more practical result than is reached, if we permit the testamentary language to speak for itself. * * * An heir is. one on whom the local law of descent casts the inheritance on the ancestor’s death; and, where a testator uses that word in his will, it is presumed, in the absence of a clearly indicated contrary intent in the will, that he used it in that sense. Goodgeon v. Stuart, 50 R. I. 6. And it has also been said 'by this court that: ‘Under the well established rules of construction the word “heirs” is held to'refer to the living person or persons holding that relation at the time of the testator’s death in the absence of an intention to the contrary clearly evidenced in the will itself.’ ”

The cases decided by this court prior to the Starrett case were reviewed in the majority and dissenting opinions in that case, and it appears from them that in some cases the language of the will was found sufficient to compel the construction that the testator intended that his heirs or the heirs of some other person or persons mentioned in the will should be determined at a date subsequent to the death of the ancestor. The difference in opinion between the members of the court in that case was as to the actual application of the rule rather than as to the rule itself and that position was made clear in the majority opinion where •the court stated at page 12: “Both lines of cases may stand, as they illustrate not a divergence on the law, which should govern the construction of language in a will such as’ in the instant will, but rather merely different applications of accepted rules to variations in the mode of particular testamentary expressions. On the one side the testamentary language afforded the court grounds for finding a clear. intent of the testator to use the word -‘heirs’ in a special sense *43 rather than in its ordinary legal sense, and on the other side furnished the court no such grounds.”

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133 A.2d 729, 86 R.I. 38, 65 A.L.R. 2d 1400, 1957 R.I. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhode-island-hospital-trust-co-v-arnold-ri-1957.