Sterling v. Ives

62 A. 948, 78 Conn. 498, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 7, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 62 A. 948 (Sterling v. Ives) 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
Sterling v. Ives, 62 A. 948, 78 Conn. 498, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 79 (Colo. 1906).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

The general intent of the testator was to secure a division, first of the income, and ultimately of the principal, of his residuary estate—subject to specified reservations in favor of his widow and daughter and of certain charities—between his three children or their families in three equal shares.

After his widow, his children were the primary objects of his solicitude, and particularly with reference to their comfortable support and that of the families which each might have. To make this more sure he created, by the nineteenth *510 clause of his will, a spendthrift trust, and by the twentieth authorized, in case of his wife and children and their families, additions to income from the principal, should the trustees think it necessary. So far as his daughter was concerned, he also gave her a certain preference over her brothers, in this respect, by the directions in the first codicil.

The provisions thus made for the family of any particular beneficiary became inoperative on the death of that beneficiary. The family intended was that of which he was and remained the head. His death would dissolve and destroy it. St. John v. Dann, 66 Conn. 401, 404.

The death of Walter in 1893, leaving surviving issue, brought the fourteenth clause of the will into operation as respects the third of the estate designed for him and his representatives. Thereafter the income previously payable to him, or for his benefit, was to be paid in like manner to, or for the benefit of, his widow and such surviving issue until such issue should respectively come of age.

For this purpose and until such times, the trustees were to continue in possession of the estate. But the ultimate title to two thirds of the share, which for convenience we may term Walter’s, became vested at his death in his three surviving children, subject only to the provision for the death of any under age made in the fifteenth clause. The testator, after giving them two thirds of the income which their father had formerly enjoyed until one of them should become of full age, had provided in respect to the principal thus : “ As they respectively attain said age, I give, devise, and bequeath to them respectively, their heirs and assigns, in equal portions forever, so much of the principal of my estate as is herein devised and bequeathed for the use and benefit of such deceased son or daughter: provided, that such surviving issue are to take per stirpes only and not per capita, and the shares of such as shall have attained the age of twenty-one (21) years at the time of the decease of such son or daughter, their ancestor, to be paid to them respectively immediately upon the decease of such ancestor.”

*511 Under the settled canon of construction that the law favors vested estates, this gift to them as they respectively came of age, being accompanied by a gift, in the case of any who should be minors, of the income meanwhile from their father’s death, passed to each, on that event, a vested estate in his proportional share of two thirds of one third of the principal of the trust fund. Johnson v. Edmond, 65 Conn. 492, 499. Such third was obviously what the .testator meant by “ so much of the principal of my estate as is herein devised and bequeathed for the use and benefit of such deceased son.” - The postponement of the delivery of possession to any grandchild until he should be of age was intended primarily for his protection, and secondarily to keep the property in the testator’s family or send it to charitable uses in case of the legatee’s death when a minor.

As to the other third of Walter’s share, the fourteenth clause of the will, after providing that one third of the income payable to or for the benefit of Walter during his life, should after his death be paid, “ in like manner ” to his widow for life, adds these words : “ And upon her decease, leaving lawful issue of her deceased husband (my son) then living, said one-third part Q-) income and the principal to go for the benefit of such issue in the same manner as the other two third parts (|) thereof. And in case of no such issue surviving her, said income and principal to be held and disposed of by said trustees in the manner provided in the clause nest following.”

The phrase “ in the same manner,” as thus employed, designates the mode in which the recipients shall be benefited. It cannot be regarded as intended to describe who such recipients are, and thus as sending either income or principal to those in whose favor estates in two thirds of Walter’s share had already been created. The recipients intended are not left to be ascertained by inference, but are clearly designated. They are the issue of Walter who may be living at his widow’s decease, and, should none such then survive, both income and principal were to go as the fifteenth clause particularly directs.

*512 The phrase “ one-third Q-) part of the income herein directed to be paid to or for her deceased husband during his life,” must be interpreted with reference to the previous provisions for a severance of Walter’s third upon his death. If all his children had been then of age, and neither his wife nor the testator’s widow had been living, it is plain that such a severance would have been required, for each child would have been immediately entitled to his share of the principal. Had the testator’s widow been then in life, it would have been necessary and proper first to set apart, with the approval of the Court of Probate, a fund sufficient to produce an income which would satisfy all the provisions of the will in her favor, and to take a third of this fund for the time being out of what would otherwise be Walter’s share. In like manner, Walter’s widow can now be sufficiently pro-' tected by thus setting apart a third of that share to be held by the trustees for her benefit during her life ; and the general intent of the will justifies and requires the adoption of that course.

Whether there are in the will any provisions which are invalid under the former statute of perpetuities we have no occasion to inquire, since no advice has been asked by the trustees with inspect to that question, nor an}' claim in regard to it made by any of the parties in interest either in this court or in the court below. In view of these conditions, we intimate no opinion as to the validity of any provision affecting the interest of a grandchild who may die under age.

From and after the death of Walter, neither the income nor the principal of his share could be reduced, under any authority given by the twentieth clause of the will, by appropriations in favor of Sophia and her family, or Philo and his family. So long as he remained in life, he or his family might have been benefited by appropriations from the trust fund at the expense of his father’s other children and their families, and they at his expense and that of his family. There was thus a mutuality of burden. Each child bore his part of it, and to each it might be a source of benefit. *513 Walter’s death cut off any further possibility of such benefits either to him or to his family.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 A. 948, 78 Conn. 498, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-v-ives-conn-1906.