Trust Agreement of Cyrus D. Jones Dated June 24, 1926

607 A.2d 265, 414 Pa. Super. 361, 1992 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1190
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 1992
DocketNos. 278-281
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 607 A.2d 265 (Trust Agreement of Cyrus D. Jones Dated June 24, 1926) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trust Agreement of Cyrus D. Jones Dated June 24, 1926, 607 A.2d 265, 414 Pa. Super. 361, 1992 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1190 (Pa. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

CAVANAUGH, Judge.

Appellants appeal a declaratory judgment from the Orphans’ Court division of the Chester County Court of Common Pleas. Appellants are the adopted descendants of Cyrus D. Jones and seek to receive distributions from a Trust Agreement executed by Cyrus D. Jones in 1926. In 1989, the trustees filed their First Account of the Trust with the Orphans’ Court and sent notice of the existence of the trust and the audit to settlor’s adopted descendants. The adopted descendants presented claims against the trust. The trustees and income beneficiaries of the trust petitioned the Orphans’ Court Division of the Chester County Court of Common Pleas for a declaratory judgment that the words “lawful issue of the blood,” as used in the 1926 Trust Agreement, exclude adopted descendants of Cyrus D. Jones.

The Orphans’ Court found no ambiguity in the phrase “lawful issue of the blood,” as used in Cyrus D. Jones’ 1926 Trust Agreement, and held that the phrase expressed with reasonable certainty the settlor’s intent to exclude adopted descendants from distributions of the trust. From this decree, appellants take the instant appeal. We reverse.

On appeal, appellants contend that the phrase “lawful issue of the blood” is ambiguous and that in the absence of settlor’s clearly expressed intent to exclude adopted descendants, this Court should apply the presumption, announced by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Estate of Tafel, to include adopted descendants in class gifts. Estate of Tafel, 449 Pa. 442, 296 A.2d 797 (1972) (plurality opinion). Appellants urge this Court to follow a line of cases decided after Tafel, which allow adopted descendants to receive distributions from class gifts under such designations as “issue,” Estate of Sykes, 477 Pa. 254, 383 A.2d 920 (1978); “issue born ... of children of mine” and “grandchildren,” Estate of Riley, 498 Pa. 395, 446 A.2d 903 (1982); and “children of the body” and “heirs of the body,” Estate of Ogden, 353 Pa.Super. 273, 509 A.2d 1271 (1986).

[365]*365Appellees contend, however, that settlor effectively manifested his intent to benefit only his biological descendants by use of the phrase “of the blood.” In support of this position, appellees analyze passages extracted from several cases, in which courts have used the terms “blood descendants” or “blood relatives” as a contrast to the term “adopted descendants.” From this stylistic analysis, appellees conclude blood is generally considered a distinguishing factor between biological and adopted descendants. Consequently, appellees urge us to decide that the Orphans’ Court properly limited trust distributions to biological descendants because settlor’s use of the phrase “of the blood” evidenced an intent to exclude his adopted descendants.

Although the cases cited by appellees use the terms “blood descendants” or “blood relatives,” we find that these cases do not necessarily conclude that use of the words “blood” or “blood descendants” or “blood relatives” shows a clear intent by testators to exclude adopted descendants. Instead, the cases interpreted whether testators intended to include or exclude adopted descendants from trust or will distribution by such phrases as “issue,” “children,” “heirs of the body,” and “children of the body.” More important than their passing use of words “blood descendants” or “blood relatives,” these cases deciphered testators’ intent regarding contested phrases by applying an established legal framework, including canons of construction. Moreover, in most of these cases, adopted descendants are found to be included among the class of beneficiaries entitled to trust distributions despite the fact that they were adopted into the class rather than born into the class. Accordingly, we now turn to the Jones Trust Agreement of 1926 and provisions of the document bearing on the parties’ recovery.

Cyrus D. Jones (settlor) died in 1929. On June 24, 1926, settlor created an irrevocable trust which provided for each of settlor’s four children by name in four separate but identical sections. When settlor created the 1926 trust, three of settlor’s sons, Harry, Arthur, and Frederick, ages 44, 49, and 39 respectively, were married but did not have [366]*366any children. (Inexplicably, the parties briefs are not in agreement on these ages.) Settlor’s daughter, Helen, however, had already given birth to three children when settlor executed the trust.

Under the Trust Agreement, each of settlor’s four children receive one quarter of the income from the trust for life. After each child’s death, the trustee is directed to pay the deceased child’s share of income in “equal shares per stirpes” to “the lawful issue of the blood of said [deceased child],...”

The Trust Agreement also provides that for all four of settlor’s children, if at any time after their death, the child does not have any living issue, the trustee is directed to pay the deceased child’s share of income “in equal shares” to the living siblings. Further, if the deceased child does not have any living issue and there are no living siblings, the trustee is directed to pay the deceased child’s share of income “in equal shares per stirpes” to the “lawful issue of the blood of said [deceased siblings]____”

The Trust Agreement also contains a provision which precludes distribution of income or principal to the “issue of any person per stirpes” if “such person at such time has living an ancestor, who is a lineal descendant of the blood of the GRANTOR and from whom such person is lineally descended.”

Finally, the Trust Agreement provides that the trust terminates upon the death of the last survivor of seven of settlor’s descendants, named in the document. The named descendants are settlor’s four children and three grandchildren.1 When the trust terminates, the trustees are directed to distribute the corpus or principal “in equal shares per stirpes” to the “lawful issue of the blood” of settlor’s four children. The trust provides for distribution in accordance with the intestacy law to the “heirs-at-law” and “next of kin” of the settlor should there be no living “lawful issue of [367]*367the blood” of settlor’s four children at the termination of the trust.

Two of settlor’s four children adopted children of their own after settlor’s death. Settlor’s son Arthur and his wife adopted two baby girls, under one years old, in 1932 and 1934, respectively. In 1934, settlor’s son Harry adopted the ten year old daughter of his wife. Prior to settlor’s death, settlor’s daughter Helen already had given birth to three children (who are named in the 1926 Trust Agreement) and did not adopt or give birth to more children after settlor’s death. Settlor’s son Frederick died childless.

All four of settlor’s children are now deceased. When settlor’s son Frederick died in 1940, the three remaining siblings, Arthur, Harry and Helen, received Frederick’s share of trust income. When Arthur died in 1950, the two remaining siblings, Harry and Helen, received Arthur’s share of trust income instead of Arthur’s two adopted daughters. In 1971, Harry died and his sister, Helen received his share of trust income instead of Harry’s adopted daughter.

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607 A.2d 265, 414 Pa. Super. 361, 1992 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trust-agreement-of-cyrus-d-jones-dated-june-24-1926-pasuperct-1992.