Roberts v. Stevens

17 L.R.A. 266, 24 A. 873, 84 Me. 325, 1892 Me. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 10, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 17 L.R.A. 266 (Roberts v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Stevens, 17 L.R.A. 266, 24 A. 873, 84 Me. 325, 1892 Me. LEXIS 102 (Me. 1892).

Opinion

Virgin, J.

The complainants are judgment creditors of the defendant Stevens, and the executor of the will of Stevens’ father is the other defendant.

The remainder of the estate of the testator, after the payment of certain legacies, was given to his executor, to hold in trust during the lives of his three sons and of certain life annuitants.

After the payment of the life annuities from the income of the trust estate, the testator directed the remainder of such income to bo divided among his living sons, (of whom the defendant is one,) and the families of such of his sons as might have deceased and left one child or more, until the expiration of the trust. After the trust was terminated the remainder of his estate was to go to his grandchildren equally.

The bill, founded upon R. S., c. 77, § 6, cl. 10, seeks to reach and apply, in payment of the complainants’ judgment, Stevens’ income of the trust estate, as the same is received by the trustee, until their debt with interest and the costs of this suit shall be satisfied ; and in the meantime to enjoin the trustee from paying the life tenant.

The decision of two questions is involved : (1,) Does a proper construction of the will disclose the testator’s intention to secure to his son the life enjoyment of the income of a trust estate and its immunity from his son’s creditors ; and (2,) If it does, can that intention be made effectual.

The clause in the will principally relied upon by the defendant is as follows:

"And 1 hereby enjoin it upon all legatees, annuitants and ■other parties interested in the provisions of this will, not to make any arrangement or any agreement for a change in such provisions of the trust under this will, or to assign, or in any way, directly or indirectly, to transfer or make over any claim or rights they may have by virtue of this will, or to pay to any ■other person any legacy or annuity or any part thereof, than to such persons as are entitled to the same by virtue hereof, on the penalty of the forfeiture of the property or sum so assigned or paid, to go to that part of my estate which is applied to the [327]*327benefit of those persons interested under the residuary clauses of this will, other than such as shall make said payment or assignment.”

' The particular prevailing intention which permeates and pervades these verbose provisions seems to be that the testator’s property shall go not only in sums as he had thereinbefore directed, but to the identical persons named and to no others. To be sure, none of the provisions declares in totidem verbis that his son’s interest in the trust estate shall be without the reach of his creditors. Nor are such express words essential though many wills contain them. Generally, wills are tobe construed in accordance with the intention of the testator gathered from the whole instrument construed in the light of circumstances. Fox v. Senter, 83 Maine, 295 ; Postlethwaite's App. 68 Pa. St. 477.

In the analogous cases of vesting property in a married woman for her separate use and disposal, the whole current of authority holds that no particular form of words is necessary. The intention though not expi'essed in terms, may be inferred from the nature of the provisions annexed to the gift. "The court will examine the whole instrument and look rather to the intent manifested than to the language employed.” Lippincott v. Mitchell, 4 Otto, 770 ; Bland v. Davis, L. R. 17, Ch. D. 794, 797 ; Pom. Eq. § 1102, and notes for various expressions held sufficient in English and American cases. Hulme v. Tenant, and notes in 1 Lead. Cas. Eq. *394.

The same rule applies to equitable life estates in this country. Thus in Baker v. Brown, 146 Mass. 369, the court say that the provision securing the income of a trust against alienation, voluntary or involuntary is "sufficient if the intention is clearly gathered from the instrument when construed in the light of circumstances,” Avhich is repeated in Slatterly v. Wason, 151 Mass. 266. See also Maynard v. Cleaves, 149 Mass. 307. "If it appear from the will,” said Veazey, J., "that it was the intent of the testator that the beneficiary should haAre nothing she could dispose of, it AA’ill be as effectual to protect the trust as if there were an express claim against alienation.” Barnes v. Dow, 59 Vt. 530, 543. So where the trustee was to collect the rents and [328]*328profits and " pay the same into the testator’s son’s own hands and not into another’s whether claiming by his own authority or in any other capacity,” the income was held to be free from the claims of alienees or creditors. Smith v. Towers, 69 Md. 77.

In Grothe's App. 135 Pa. St. 586, 596, decided in 1890, where the balance of a certain share of the testator’s property, after deducting taxes, etc., was given to a trustee to pay the interest annually accruing thei’eon to one of his sons, named, and there was no clause protecting the income from attachment, the court, construing the will in the light of all the circumstances surrounding the testator, the son’s insolvency, etc., held that the income was exempt from the son’s creditors, "though such intent was not clearly expressed by the scrivener.”

What did the testator intend by the verbose provisions before quoted ? What did he intend to be subject to the penalty of forfeiture, and under what circumstances?

The injunction is imposed upon " all legatees and annuitants,” (1,) "not to make any arrangement or agreement for a change in the provisions of the trust,” or (2,) " to assign, or in any way, directly or indirectly, transfer or make over any claim or rights they may have by virtue of this will.” In other words, that no one entitled to a benefit under the trust or any other provision of the will, shall make any disposition of whatever he is thereby entitled to, otherwise than as the will directs. Or, as in Smith v. Towers, supra, each benefit shall be received in the beneficiary’s own hands and in no others. The evident design was that no beneficiary, upon whom the testator bestowed his bounty, should alienate it voluntarily or involuntarily ; for involuntary alienation is an indirect assignment, transfer or making over of property. A son who needs protection from his own improvidence, or incapacity for self protection, might very readily evade the restriction by creating a formal debt and allowing his quasi creditor to secure it by a bill of this character upon " any claim or right ” which the willing or overreached debtor might have by virtue of the will of his father, and thus "indirectly assign ” what was intended for his sole personal benefit.

Moreover, the injunction is not limited to "legatees and annuitants” but it includes "all other parties interested in the [329]*329provisions of this will.” Whom did the testator thereby mean? "All legatees” might well bo considered as including his sons among others ; for the gift of the income of a particular fund for life is a legacy. Wms. Exr’s, (6th Am. ed.) 1192, 3 & 4 and. note n. If there were any doubt that he meant thereby to include them, they were evidently included in "other parties interested,” etc.

Furthermore, the answer shows that the property given to the executor in tnist was stores in Bangor.

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Bluebook (online)
17 L.R.A. 266, 24 A. 873, 84 Me. 325, 1892 Me. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-stevens-me-1892.