Thaxter v. Canal National Bank

67 A.2d 21, 144 Me. 176, 1949 Me. LEXIS 27
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 13, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 67 A.2d 21 (Thaxter v. Canal National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thaxter v. Canal National Bank, 67 A.2d 21, 144 Me. 176, 1949 Me. LEXIS 27 (Me. 1949).

Opinion

Tompkins, J.,

sat at argument and participated in consultation but died prior to the preparation of the opinion.

Murchie, J.

In this Bill in Equity, which comes to the court on report, the plaintiffs seek determination of “the effect and construction” of the will of Mary J. E. Clapp, late of Portland, and four codicils thereto, admitted to probate in October, 1920., and referred to hereafter as the “Will,” to resolve two issues hereafter stated. The process discloses that the Will was construed by a single justice of the court, in earlier proceedings which have a direct bearing (although not a controlling one), on one of them, in a [178]*178decree entered May 10, 1922, referred to hereafter as the “Decree.”

The testatrix died a resident of Portland on September 9, 1920. The plaintiffs are successor trustees of a trust established under the Will, referred to hereafter as the “Trust,” and will be referred to hereafter as the “Plaintiffs,” to distinguish them from the trustees named in the Will, and earlier successor trustees, referred to hereafter as the “Trustees” and the “Successor Trustees,” respectively. The Trustees administered the Trust from its establishment until March 1924 and the Successor Trustees thereafter until January 1941. Since the latter date it has been administered by the Plaintiffs. The defendants are the trustee of an Indenture executed by the Trustees to secure bonds issued by them, pursuant to the Decree, referred to hereafter as the “Trustee” and the “Indenture,” respectively, as the representative of the holders of the bonds secured thereby, and all persons entitled to share currently in any distribution of the net income of the Trust, including minors represented by a guardian ad litem and one individual whose status is one of the issues to be resolved, and all contingent remaindermen, a guardian ad litem representing all those unascertained or not in being. Unless the text indicates otherwise, references to “Bonds” hereafter will be to the bonds outstanding at the time of reference. They are now outstanding in the principal amount of $295,000, out of an original issue of $300,000. The term “Beneficiaries” will designate, collectively, all persons entitled to the benefits of the Trust at any one time. In reference to the present process it will identify all the defendants except the Trustee.

The Trust was established to continue “during the period of the entire natural life of the last survivor” of eight persons named in the Will, referred to hereafter as the “Named Beneficiaries,” or such of them as were living at the death of the testatrix and entitled to share in the net income of it, and “during the additional period of twenty-one (21) years [179]*179and (sic) after the death of such last survivor.” That! it will continue more than 21 years from the date the evidence in the record was taken out is established by the fact that one of the Named Beneficiaries, so entitled, was then living. A particular purpose of the Trust was to provide for the erection of “a handsome, imposing and substantial block,” referred to hereafter as the “Block,” on the property which the father of the testatrix, and his father, had occupied as a residence, designated hereafter, as in the Will, the Decree and the Indenture, as the “Homestead Lot,” as a memorial to them. The testatrix declared that she had held the property unencumbered since the death of her father and directed that it should be retained in the Trust during the full term thereof; that no portion of it should be sold or otherwise disposed of “except by ordinary and customary leases;” and that the principal of the Trust, at its termination, necessarily including the Homestead Lot and its improvements, should be “transferred, conveyed and distributed” to those entitled to it “as tenants in common.” The Will carried the recommendation of the testatrix that the original construction of the Block should cost not less than $300,000, exclusive of the Homestead Lot and any materials taken from the structures standing thereon which might be used in connection therewith.

The Will made an elaborate and complete disposition of all the tangible personal property of the testatrix, provided legacies aggregating $65,000, $25,000 payable only if the beneficiaries named survived the testatrix, or were in her employ at the time of her death (payment being deferred until after the construction of the Block, unless a delay of more than five years from the death of the testatrix was thereby involved), set up annuities representing a maximum annual charge of $2,774, and let the entire residue fall into the Trust. The “entire net income” of the Trust, except as otherwise provided in the Will (in manners not pertinent to the present issues), was to be “paid over to or applied for the benefit of” descendants of the grandfather [180]*180the Block was to commemorate, and a grandmother, “annually, or oftener,” and it was stated specifically that the “net rents” of the Homestead Lot should be “taken as a part” thereof. The term “Net Rents” was not defined, but must have been intended to designate the annual excess of gross income over operating expenses and taxes, and will be so used hereafter. The descendants of the grandfather and grandmother among whom the Trust income was to be distributed, or for whose benefit it was to be applied, were the Named Beneficiaries and their descendants, not including any “divorced or * * * living apart from * * * wife or husband” at the time of the death of the testatrix, or the child or children of any such.

In the proceedings in which the Decree was entered the Trustees sought to have the Will construed with reference to their authority to borrow money for the construction of the Block and to issue evidences of indebtedness secured by a mortgage on real estate held in the Trust. In the allegations of their process they referred to a provision of the Will directing that a particular parcel of land, which was the only property subjected to the lien of the Indenture at the time of its execution, should not be sold to raise the construction funds, unless “absolutely necessary” in their judgment, and declared their judgment that such a sale was not desirable, partly because the particular parcel was leased advantageously and yielded a substantial part of the income of the Trust available for the Beneficiaries, and was not necessary, and their belief that it was advisable to borrow money for construction of the Block, upon the security of the property held in the Trust, or some portion of it. The Decree construed the Will as authorizing the Trustees to borrow and to mortgage, but stipulated explicitly that they should not mortgage the Homestead Lot and should not issue evidences of indebtedness enforceable against it. Definite recitals were that the Trustees “in the discharge of their duties” as such and “for the purpose of effecting the objects of said trust” were authorized by the Will “to [181]*181borrow money from time to time on the credit” of the Trust and “to borrow money and procure loans from time to time,” the borrowing recitals being followed, in each instance, by declaration of their authority, under the Will, to issue obligations “enforceable against the whole trust estate” except the Homestead Lot, and to mortgage the whole or any part of the real estate, with the same exception.

Pursuant to the Will, as construed by the Decree, the Trustees executed the Indenture and issued the Bonds on June 1, 1922, using a form for the latter substantially identical with one set out in the Decree.

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Related

Thaxter v. Fry
222 A.2d 686 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1966)
Newhouse v. Canal National Bank of Portland
124 F. Supp. 239 (D. Maine, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 A.2d 21, 144 Me. 176, 1949 Me. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thaxter-v-canal-national-bank-me-1949.