Tarrant v. Backus

27 A. 46, 63 Conn. 277, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 6, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 27 A. 46 (Tarrant v. Backus) 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
Tarrant v. Backus, 27 A. 46, 63 Conn. 277, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 44 (Colo. 1893).

Opinion

FeNN, J.

In this action the plaintiff seeks the advice of this court relative to the construction and validity of certain clauses and provisions in the last will of Joseph Backus, late of Norwich, who died in 1861, leaving surviving him six children, three daughters and three sons. By the fourth section of his will the testator gave to each of his daughters one sixth of his residuary estate, and then provided as follows : — “ The remaining three sixths part I give, devise and bequeath to my friend, John L. Devotion, of said Norwich, and to my son in law, Gilbert Osgood, and to their heirs forever, so as to vest in them and their successors in said trust the full and absolute legal and equitable estate, to be by them however so held in trust only for the use and benefit equally of my three sons and their heirs, namely, Charles Alexander Backus, George Tyler Backus and John Edward Backus; and from time to time said trustees may pay out from the net income of said trust estate so much as they may think best for the comfortable support and wishes of my said three sons, but to neither of them at any time more than a third part of said income thus received; and said trustees may, if they deem it best, from time to time and at any time, pay out and deliver over to either of my said three sons any portion of said principal trust estate, so that however neither of them shall receive more than in the whole one third part thereof, the proportion of income thereafter to one who may thus receive of the principal estate to be pi’oportionately diminished ; and if either of said three children shall decease before me, or before he has received under the provisions aforesaid one third part of the principal and interest of said trust estate, then so much of said trust estate shall be and belong to the legal representatives of said deceased and their heirs, as shall, with what said deceased one shall have received, amount to one third part of said trust estate, and its net in *280 come ; and upon the decease of all said three sons said trustees shall pay and deliver over so much of said trust estate, if any, as shall then be and remain in their hands, to any or all the legal representatives of my said three sons as shall, according to the provisions aforesaid, be entitled to the same; the intent hereby being that said trust estate and its net income shall be so distributed that each son and his legal representatives after him shall together receive one third part thereof.

“ And inasmuch as my intent in creating said trust estate is that my said sons may always have a current and continuous support, therefore I have vested the whole of said estate, principal and interest and income, in said trustees and their successors, to hold or distribute the same at their discretion in conformity with the provisions aforesaid, so that my said sons shall not be capable of alienating the same, nor of anticipating the income, nor possess any vested interest which may be by them convejmd; therefore any instrument by them designed to convey or dispose of or assign any interest in said estate or its income shall be without efficiency and void while in trust as aforesaid, and said trustees and their successors shall at all times have power to sell and convey any or all of said trust estate during the continuance of the trust, and re-invest the avails in other personal estate, to be by them held, used, and finally disposed of, as the estate so sold would have been if not sold.”

Charles A. Backus, one of the sons named in the above section of the will, has died, leaving a widow and four children, having in his lifetime received payments of principal, but to an amount much less than one third of the principal of said trust estate. The first question is in reference to the validity of the provision that, in the event of the death of a child before receiving one third part of the principal and income of the trust fund, “ then so much of said trust estate shall be.and belong to the legal representatives of said deceased and their heirs as shall, with what said deceased one shall have received, amount to one third part of said trust estate and its net income.”

*281 Whether by the term “ legal representatives,” as used in the fourth section, the testator meant “ those who would take under the statute of distributions,” as -was held to be the case in Farnam v. Farnam, 53 Conn., 261, or, as is ordinarily held, the executors and administrators of the deceased children, it must equally follow that if a remainder over is limited to them as purchasers in the will, the same is void, as in manifest contravention of our statute of perpetuities. Leake v. Watson, 60 Conn., 498; Beers v. Narramore, 61 id., 13 ; Landers v. Dell, id., 189.

If, however, it is held that the sons of the testator took a vested interest, legal or equitable, in fee, using the word “vested” in the sense of transmissible, in the estate, the statute of perpetuities has no application, since in that case there is no remainder or executory devise. Ought we to so hold? In Farnam v. Farnam, 53 Conn., 278, this court said: — “ That courts will incline, in doubtful cases, to construe a devise or legacy as vested rather than contingent, is a familiar and well-settled rule. In some instances courts seem to have gone so far as to say that they will, if possible, construe it as vested. It is enough for our present purpose to say that we ought to give this will that construction if its language will fairly admit of it.” Adopting this declaration, let us scrutinize the language used in the will, to discover, as best we may, that controlling element, the expressed intent of the testator.

A careful examination of the section in question, and indeed of the whole instrument, will disclose a manifest purpose on the part of the testator — first, to make a full disposition of his estate and to avoid intestacy as to any portion of it, an intention which the law would indeed infer if possible in any case. Warner v. Willard, 54 Conn., 470; Peckham v. Lego, 57 id., 559. Second, in the disposition of the residuum to deal equally with each of his six children, showing no partiality or preference to any. He gave to each of his three daughters, all of whom were married, and in whose judgment, or in that of their husbands, one of whom he names as a trustee, he appears to have reposed full confidence, one *282 sixth part of such residuum, absolutely and without restraint.

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Bluebook (online)
27 A. 46, 63 Conn. 277, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarrant-v-backus-conn-1893.