Stanley v. Stanley

142 A. 851, 108 Conn. 100, 1928 Conn. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 16, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 142 A. 851 (Stanley v. Stanley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanley v. Stanley, 142 A. 851, 108 Conn. 100, 1928 Conn. LEXIS 172 (Colo. 1928).

Opinions

Wheeler, C. J.

Our advice is asked as to whether “children” and “issue” as used in paragraphs three-five and sixteen of the will include those who died before the execution of the will. “Issue” are not referred to in paragraph three-five. The only one of the children of Walter H. Stanley who died before the execution of the will was Theodore Stanley.

It was conclusively determined in Clifford v. Cronin, 97 Conn. 434, 117 Atl. 489, that unless a contrary intent appeared in the will, a gift to a testator’s brothers and sisters would not be construed to include a brother who died before the execution of the will. It follows *105 that Theodore cannot be included among the “children of my brother, Walter H. Stanley,” as found in paragraph sixteen. Nor can the provisions of paragraph seventeen of the will give the children of Theodore any interest under this paragraph for the reason that Theodore was not alive at the execution of the will and hence could not have been included among the legatees and devisees therein named.

Paragraph sixteen of the will disposes of the residue of the estate by dividing it into two equal parts, and giving one part to Alix W. Stanley and the other equal part to trustees to hold and invest during the lives of Mary Peck Stanley and Isabel Stanley, and the survivor, and to pay over one quarter of the net income to each of them during the lifetime of each and to pay the balance of the income, to be divided equally between the children of her deceased brother Walter H. Stanley, and the issue of any deceased child per stirpes.

We are asked as to whether “issue” as used in this paragraph includes those who died before the execution of the will. There were no such “issue.” The terms of the inquiry do not express the question the parties desire to have answered, which, as we understand it, is: Does the word issue as used in the clause in paragraph sixteen, “among the children of said Walter H. Stanley, including the issue of any deceased child per stirpes,” include those who died before the execution of the will?

The only issue to whom this could apply are the issue of Theodore Stanley. There were issue of Theodore in being at the time the will was executed, hence the principle stated in Clifford v. Cronin, supra, which excludes Theodore from among the children of Walter H. Stanley, is not applicable.

The gift is to the children of her brother and the *106 issue of any deceased child, thus indicating the intent of the testatrix to have been to make the gift to the issue of a deceased child who would take as primary beneficiaries, a share equal to that of the children of Walter then living.

We are further asked: Does the widow of Theodore Stanley take anything under paragraph sixteen?

We answer, she does not. She cannot take under paragraph sixteen because her husband Theodore did not take, and she does not come within the class designated as “issue.”

We are next asked whether the widow of Albert would take under paragraph three-five and paragraph sixteen, the share her husband would have taken if living at the death of the testatrix?

It is undoubtedly our rule that a gift to a class, in the absence of a contrary intent, comprises those who were living at the decease of the testatrix. Since Albert was not living at her decease he could not take as a member of the class—“children of Walter H. Stanley.”

But the terms of paragraph seventeen apply to any legatee not living at the decease of the testatrix, and in that event the testatrix expressly bequeaths and devises the property he would have received whether he died testate or intestate. He died testate, leaving no issue, and leaving all of his estate to his wife, Annie F. Stanley, who would thus take, not in virtue of the terms of paragraph sixteen, but of those of paragraph seventeen, had not the other provisions of paragraph seventeen explicitly excluded from its benefits those taking under the trust fund created in paragraph sixteen. So that this exception would exclude the widow of Albert Stanley from participation in any share of this trust fund.

Since the exception of paragraph seventeen only *107 excludes from its benefits those taking under the trust fund, any other bequest or devise in this will to the children of Walter H. Stanley would include Albert among these children; therefore he would take under paragraph three-five as one of the children. His wife, as the sole beneficiary under his will, would take in virtue of the provisions of paragraph seventeen the share which would have been his if living.

One of the life beneficiaries under the trust created in paragraph sixteen, Mary Peck Stanley, having died, we are asked whether the one-quarter share of the income given to her for life falls into the “balance” of net income which is to be paid over to the children of Walter H. Stanley and the issue of any deceased child during the continuance of the trust. No provision is made giving the surviving life beneficiary the one-quarter income received by the deceased life beneficiary. The provision for the payment of the net balance of the income to the children of Walter H. Stanley necessarily includes not only the one half of the net income after the payment of one quarter to each of the life beneficiaries, but also such net balance as has accrued from the one quarter part which the deceased life beneficiary received. No other specific provision for its disposition is made in the will.

The next question propounded for our advice is: What disposition should be made of the income accruing during the settlement of the estate—whether it should be divided equally between Alix W. Stanley and the trustees for the beneficiaries, or one half of this income should be paid to the trustees for the beneficiaries, and the other half added to the residue and divided equally between Alix W. Stanley and the trustees, or if neither of these methods is correct, what is the proper method of division of this income?

*108 The testatrix intended to give and did give in paragraph sixteen, one half of the residue to Alix W. Stanley and one half to the trustees for the benefit of the beneficiaries.

There is no indication of an intention upon her part to give Alix W. Stanley a greater share of the residue than the one half. Equality in the disposition of the residue was her purpose.

A general legatee is entitled to no part of the income earned by the estate in the course of its settlement and no interest upon his legacy.

The bequest and devise to Alix W. Stanley of one half the residue absolutely was a general bequest and devise and did not draw to itself the income earned upon it during the settlement of the estate. Bradford v. Haynes, 20 Me. 105; Hays v. Jackson, 6 Mass. 149-154; Fairer v. Park, L.R. 3 Ch. Div. 309; 40 Cyc. 1877; 2 Williams on Executors, 1172, 1177.

All that Alix W. Stanley can receive under this residuary clause is one half of the residue.

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Bluebook (online)
142 A. 851, 108 Conn. 100, 1928 Conn. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-v-stanley-conn-1928.