Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company v. Otis

75 A.2d 210, 77 R.I. 296, 1950 R.I. LEXIS 89
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 21, 1950
DocketEq. No. 2030
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 75 A.2d 210 (Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company v. Otis) 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 Company v. Otis, 75 A.2d 210, 77 R.I. 296, 1950 R.I. LEXIS 89 (R.I. 1950).

Opinion

*297 Condon, J.

This is a bill in equity for the construction of the will of Joseph Cooke Smith, late of Providence, deceased. After the cause was ready for hearing for final decree in the superior court it was certified to this court for our determination in accordance with general laws 1938, chapter 545, §7.

The testator died in Switzerland on June 9, 1942 leaving his widow, Annie Melicent Smith, surviving him. He made provision for her in paragraph Fourth of his will in which he set up a trust of his residuary estate. The pertinent portion of such paragraph for our purposes here reads as follows: “I further authorize, direct and empower said trustee * * * to pay the balance of said income, dividends and profits to my wife, Annie Melicent Smith, so long as she shall live.” The same paragraph provided further that upon the death of his wife “said trustee shall stand seized and possessed of said residuary estate including any undisbursed income in trust.” By subparagraph B of such paragraph Fourth the testator directed the trustee thereafter to “pay over the balance of said residuary estate to St. Joseph’s Hospital, a corporation created by the General Assembly of the State of Rhode Island * *

While the testator’s estate was in course of administration in the probate court of Providence Annie Melicent Smith died in Switzerland on March 23, 1943 and Fred A. Otis was later appointed administrator of her estate in Rhode Island. From the date of the testator’s death to the date of his wife’s death the trustee had collected a substantial amount of income but due to the great difficulty in transmitting private funds to Europe during the recent World War which was then in progress it had been able to pay over to her only a small portion of such income leaving by far the greater part thereof unpaid in the hands of the *298 trustee. A question thereafter arose between the hospital and the administrator as to whom such undisbursed income should be paid.

The Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company as the trustee under the will brought the instant bill of complaint for the construction of the will to determine “whether under the provisions of the fourth paragraph of said will that portion of the net income from the Estate of Joseph Cooke Smith for the period between the death of the Testator on June 9, 1942 and the death of Annie Melicent Smith on March 23, 1943, which was not paid over to her or applied for her benefit during her life should now be paid to Fred A. Otis, as administrator of her estate in Rhode Island or should be paid to St. Joseph’s Hospital, the legatee entitled to receive the remainder of the residuary estate after the death of the said Annie Melicent Smith.” The only respondents named in the bill are the administrator and the hospital. They are the real adversaries here, as the complainant trustee in a cause of this kind is deemed to be neutral and, therefore, ordinarily has neither the right nor the duty to urge any particular view upon the court.

The administrator contends that the balance of income in the hands of the trustee at the death of Mrs. Smith vested in her even though it was not paid to her by the trustee. He further argues that the testator did not intend by the use of the words “undisbursed income” to divest her of such income in the event that the trustee had not paid it over to her in her lifetime, but that he intended by those words to refer only to income accruing during the period between her death and the distribution of the residuary estate to. the hospital. In support of his position he points out that the law does not favor an inference of intention to accumulate income, although he concedes that accumulation is allowed if it is the plain intention of the testator. However, he insists that the testamentary language under construction here neither expresses nor necessarily implies such an intention.

*299 The hospital contends that we have here a clear and definite direction of the testator that the trustee “shall stand seized and possessed of said residuary estate including any undisbursed income in trust.” It argues that such language means exactly what it says and that the words “any undisbursed income” in particular are clear, comprehensive and unambiguous. Such words, it further argues, submit to only one reasonable construction, namely, that they refer to all income received by the trustee and not paid out upon the death of Mrs. Smith.

The cardinal rule in the construction of wills is to find •the intention of the testator. Unless it violates some rule of law such intention governs and will be given effect. First of all we seek the testator’s intention in the language which he has employed to express it. Bliven v. Borden, 56 R. I. 283. If the language of any particular dispositive clause is plain and certain and does not conflict with any other clause of the will there is no need to look elsewhere in the will or beyond it for aid in construing such clause. Industrial Trust Co. v. Wilson, 61 R. I. 169. As we said in that case, it is the written expression of the testator taken in its natural sense and use that must control. The test is what did his words mean to him. It will be presumed that he intended them to convey their ordinary meaning unless it is clear from other language in the will that he has used them in a special, limited sense.

After carefully examining the instant will we find that the testator’s authorization of and direction to the trustee in paragraph Fourth to pay the income to Mrs. Smith “so long as she shall live” and thereafter to stand seized and possessed of the residuary estate “including any undisbursed income” for the benefit of and to pay over to St. Joseph’s Hospital is not in conflict with any other provision of the will. We further find that such dispositive language is plain and unambiguous. There is no indication in the will that the testator used the expression “any undisbursed income” in a special or limited sense. “Undisbursed,” as *300 far as we are aware, has but one ordinary, natural meaning, namely, “not paid out.” Finally the testamentary direction, if found favorable to the hospital, does not violate any rule of law in this state merely because it results in an accumulation of income.

The administrator relies on certain New York cases, among others, in which the court there construed favorably to the life tenant rather plain language directing the trustee to pay the remainderman income remaining in its hands at the death of the life tenant. These cases, in our opinion, are not persuasive because the law in New York, unlike the law here, forbids accumulation of income. The following excerpt from the opinion in Matter of Keogh, 112 App. Div. 414, one of such cases relied on by the administrator, well illustrates the effect which that rule of law had on the court’s construction of the testamentary language there under consideration: “Although the will provided for semi-annual payments of income, in the absence of anything to the contrary, it must be assumed that the testator intended the immediate vesting in the life beneficiary of all income upon its being paid in. (Smith v. Parsons, 146 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
75 A.2d 210, 77 R.I. 296, 1950 R.I. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhode-island-hospital-trust-company-v-otis-ri-1950.