Sibson v. FIRST NATIONAL BANK & TR. CO.
This text of 160 A.2d 76 (Sibson v. FIRST NATIONAL BANK & TR. CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
GRACE M. SIBSON, PLAINTIFF,
v.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY OF PAULSBORO, TRUSTEE UNDER THE WILL OF WILLIAM A. SIBSON, DECEASED, WALTER W. SIBSON, AND HIS ISSUE NOT IN BEING, JOSEPHINE S. SCHIMPFT, AND HER ISSUE NOT IN BEING, KIRK SIBSON, KRAIL SIBSON AND JOAN ROOT, DEFENDANTS.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division.
*89 Mr. E. Milton Hannold (Messrs. Hannold & Hannold), for plaintiff.
Mr. Robert E. Gladden (Messrs. Ross and Gladden and William C. Flowers), for defendant trustee.
Mr. John P. Hauch, Jr. (Messrs. Archer, Greiner, Hunter & Read), for defendant remaindermen.
WICK, J.S.C.
The plaintiff has brought this action for the construction of a trust provision in the will of her deceased husband, William A. Sibson. The defendants are the trustee and remaindermen in being and not in being. The disputed provision reads as follows:
"FIFTH: In the event that my wife, Grace M. Sibson, survives me for thirty days, I give, devise and bequeath, absolutely and in fee, all of the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, of whatsoever kind and wheresoever situate, whether real, personal or mixed, to the First National Bank and Trust Company of Paulsboro, in the County of Gloucester, New Jersey, a national banking corporation, its successors and assigns, hereinafter designated `Trustee', IN TRUST NEVERTHELESS, for the following uses and purposes:
(A) To pay in quarter-annual installments the net income arising from the said residuary estate, hereinafter designated `principal', to my said wife for as long as she shall live, such payments to *90 commence as soon after my decease as may be reasonably convenient for my Trustee, and further to pay to my said wife, freed and discharged from all trusts and uses, as much of the principal as my Trustee in its sole discretion shall determine necessary for her support, health and maintenance."
Following this it is provided that if there is anything left upon the wife's death it is to go to the testator's brother and sister or, if they do not survive the wife, to their issue.
Mr. and Mrs. Sibson were married in 1931. Mr. Sibson died on August 17, 1955. There were no children born of the marriage, nor did either of them have any children of their own. Mrs. Sibson has not remarried. She is now 66 years of age and states that her health is very good.
Mrs. Sibson pays for necessary items such as clothing, household expenses and food from her checking accounts. Taking the first nine months of 1959 as an example, Mrs. Sibson's check stubs for living expenses amounted to $2,654.70, and she said that covered everything. Her check stubs for the year 1958 added up to $3,182.42; for the year 1957 to $4,205.76, and for 1956 to $2,766.48.
Mrs. Sibson is paid social security benefits of $83.30 a month. She receives $100 a month from her husband's former employer, Socony Mobil, which is not taxable income. Her individual dividends, as reported for federal income tax purposes in 1958, were $1,242.60, and in 1957 were $1,174.95, and in 1956 were $906.75. Her income received from the trust, the corpus of which now amounts to about $115,000, was reported at $3,540.60 for 1958, $3,439.76 for 1957, $3,965.79 for 1956, and $3,553.74 for the first nine months of 1959.
Mrs. Sibson's personal federal income tax paid in 1958 was $584.30, when she probably had the benefit of one more exemption by reason of having passed the age of 65 than she previously had in 1957 when her income tax was $686.78 and in 1956 when her income tax was $694.26.
On the above basis, a fair statement of Mrs. Sibson's current annual income would appear to be as follows:
*91
Social security 83.30/month $999.60
Socony Mobil Plan $100/month 1,200.00
Trust estimated average 3,750.00
Dividends estimated average 1,200.00
_________
Total income before tax $7,149.60
Federal income tax approximately 600.00
_________
Income after taxes $6,549.60
Mrs. Sibson had no investments in her name when her husband died. Shortly before Mr. Sibson died he gave her $2,000. She collected $2,500 from a life insurance policy on her husband. She has received, over a period of three years following her husband's death, $21,600 from a group life insurance policy covering her husband. She succeeded to the outright ownership of the house in Woodbury, New Jersey, in which she and her husband lived as well as incidental items of personal property. Aside from the house and a life estate in a property in Canada, she now has stocks and bonds which, valued at cost, total $34,529.19, bank accounts totaling $4,000 and a car purchased for $2,750, not including trade-in.
The trustee has paid out of corpus $600 in 1956 for painting and repairs to the house in Woodbury, and $475 in 1958 for a new roof. Mrs. Sibson has recently made demand for further payments from corpus for her support, but the trustee has refused on the basis that with the income from the trust and her other income, she is adequately provided for. The question now before the court is whether it is proper for the trustee to take into account either her separate income or any of her income, separate or trust. The defendants remaindermen take the position that the word "necessary," as used in the provision noted above, refers to the possible inadequacy of other sources of income, and that the provision for use of principal is something of an insurance against need and that its use is restricted to emergency *92 situations. They assert that between the trust income and property passing outside of the will, there is ample provision for her support; that testator knew this, and that the provision for use of corpus is thus properly characterized as an expression of his anxiety that his wife might some day in the unforeseen, unpredictable future suffer severe financial reverses or ill health requiring much more substantial resources than would be available from her own funds and the trust income. The plaintiff, on the other hand, emphasizes the testator's liberality in regard to her, as indicated by the fact that the gift over is expressed "to pay and distribute the remaining principal, if any," (italics mine), and takes the position that corpus is the only source devoted to support, with the word "necessary" being merely a somewhat redundant reference to the fact that all of her normal living expenses are to be paid from corpus.
Admittedly, the use of the word "necessary," without any explanation of its meaning, is unfortunate and creates a substantial ambiguity as to the intention of the testator in regard to the provision under consideration. Resort, then, must be made to the other parts of the will. The fact that the testator contemplated the very real possibility that there might be no corpus left for the remaindermen, the gift over being qualified by the words "if any," and that there is no contrary expression in the will of a concern that something be left for the remaindermen, indicates that the primary object of his bounty in the use of the corpus
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160 A.2d 76, 61 N.J. Super. 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sibson-v-first-national-bank-tr-co-njsuperctappdiv-1960.