Sullivan v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co.

185 A. 148, 56 R.I. 253, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 26, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 A. 148 (Sullivan v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co.) 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
Sullivan v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co., 185 A. 148, 56 R.I. 253, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 99 (R.I. 1936).

Opinion

*254 Moss, J.

This cause was begun by a bill in equity for the construction of a deed by which, in 1915, the Sullivan Investment Company, a Rhode Island corporation, purported to convey certain real estate in this state to James E. Sullivan “trustee,” and his heirs and assigns forever. In the superior court, guardians ad litem for minor respondents and a representative of the possible interests of persons not ascertained or not in being were appointed; a decree pro confesso was entered against four respondents; the pleadings were closed and some evidence was introduced. Then the cause, being ready for hearing for final decree, was certified to this court for determination, as provided in general laws 1923, chapter 339, sec. 35.

At the date of the deed in question James E. Sullivan was a widower and continued so until his death in 1920, *255 Raving meantime made no conveyance of this real estate. By his will all his property passed in equal shares to his •three sons, Robert J. B., Edmund J. and James B. The first named died in 1929, leaving by will all his property to his widow, the complainant. It is not in dispute that the property belonged to the grantor at the date of the deed; nor is it in dispute that if the deed conveyed a fee simple absolute to James E. Sullivan, as claimed by the com'plaiimnt, it now belongs in equal undivided shares to her and her brothers-in-law, the above named Edmund J. Sullivan and James B. Sullivan. They and all other persons who would have any interests in the property under any other arguable view of the effect of the deed have been made parties to the cause and are represented therein.

The deed in question is in the usual form for a warranty deed conveying real estate in fee simple absolute, except in two respects, which have caused the complainant to seek to have it construed by this court. In' the first place the word "trustee” is interlined after the name "James E. Sullivan” in the recital of the consideration paid. In the second place, just after the description of the real estate conveyed, is the following sentence: "The terms under which the grantee herein holds said property as trustee being the same terms and conditions under which he holds the real estate devised to him by the will of the late Alice M. Sullivan, which will is on file in the office of the Probate Clerk of the Town of Narragansett.”

Alice M. Sullivan was the wife of James E. Súllivan. She died in 1909 leaving a will, duly probated, of which the pertinent provisions are as follows:

"To my beloved husband, James E. Sullivan, for his own use and benefit, I bequeath and devise all the real estate of which I may be seized at the time of my decease, for and during the term of his natural life; and from and after his decease to the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company in trust as follows:
*256 “To pay over the net income of said real estate to my children then living, in equal shares, and, to the issue of any deceased child the share of such child, and in the event of the decease of any of my said children leaving no issue, then to pay the share of said deceased child to my surviving child or children, and upon the death of all of my said children to hold said real estate for a period of twenty-one years from the decease of the last surviving child, when the said real estate is to be divided between the heirs of my children, said heirs taking by right of representation and not per capita.
“I authorize and empower my said husband to sell said real estate or any part thereof, and in his discretion to invest the proceeds of any sale or sales made by him, holding said proceeds, or the property in which he may invest the same, as part of my real estate, the income thereof to be and to become the sole property of my said husband during his lifetime. . . .
“In the event of the death of all my children leaving no issue and after the death of my husband, James E. Sullivan, I devise said real estate to the heirs of my late father, Joseph Banigan.”

In construing this deed in the light of these testamentary provisions, several additional facts, shown by the evidence, should be kept in mind. At the time of the death of the testatrix, the property in question was not owned by her, but by the Sullivan Investment Company, a family corporation, to which it had been conveyed by James E. Sullivan in 1900. The affairs of this corporation were liquidated voluntarily in 1922 and all its property distributed equally among the three sons of James E. Sullivan, who were then and from a date prior to 1915 had been the holders, in equal parts, of all its capital stock and had *257 constituted its officers. Its charter was forfeited in 1929, and has not been revived and its records have disappeared.

Until his death James E. Sullivan dominated and managed all the affairs of the corporation and his sons signed the deed as its officers because he told them to do so. There is no evidence as to whether or not he actually gave any consideration for the conveyance of the property to him by the deed in question; or if he did, as to what was the. source of such consideration. It may possibly have been the proceeds of the sale by him of real estate devised to him by his wife. If so, there would be an obvious reason why he should not have this property conveyed to him as absolute owner, but should wish it to be so conveyed to him that it would be subject to all the same terms and conditions and final disposition as the real estate held by him by devise from his wife.

That of course is mere conjecture; but it is perfectly clear, from the language above quoted from the deed, that he did not intend that it should convey the property to him as full equitable as well as legal owner of it, nor did he intend that it should convey to him only a life estate, with power of sale and reinvestment, since it was obvious that it would convey to him a legal fee. On the contrary he clearly intended that it should convey the property to him and his heirs and assigns subject to something in the nature of a trust, the terms and conditions of which would be found in the devise of real estate to him in his wife’s will; and he must have known that this devise provided, by way of a trust, for their children and their children’s issue, after his death.

The vital question in the case is, then, whether the intended terms and conditions, under which the property was to be held, become sufficiently clear and definite, when the pertinent language of the deed is read and compared with that in the will, that they can be enforced. If they do, they must be enforced. If they do not, the intended trust fails. In the latter event, it would make no difference, in *258 the result, whether we hold that in such a case the grantee takes the property in fee, free and clear of any trust, or that there is a resulting trust in favor of the grantor in the deed. For, after the death of James E. Sullivan and the demise of the corporation, all the rights of both in the property became merged in his three sons, to the rights of one of whom the complainant has succeeded. If James E.

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Bluebook (online)
185 A. 148, 56 R.I. 253, 1936 R.I. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-rhode-island-hospital-trust-co-ri-1936.