Union & New Haven Trust Co. v. Taylor

50 A.2d 168, 133 Conn. 221, 1946 Conn. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 8, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 A.2d 168 (Union & New Haven Trust Co. v. Taylor) 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
Union & New Haven Trust Co. v. Taylor, 50 A.2d 168, 133 Conn. 221, 1946 Conn. LEXIS 158 (Colo. 1946).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

The questions involved in this reservation concern the validity of certain provisions of the will of Paul H. Taylor in which he purported to exercise powers of appointment under the will of his father and that of his mother and under a trust inter vivos established by his father.

*224 The will of the father created two separate trusts and provided as to each of them that a portion of the income was to be paid to Paul during his life; that at his death “the principal of said trust fund previously held for his benefit shall be paid over” by the trustees “to the Heirs-at-law (exclusive of his wife) of my said son Paul in such amounts and in such manner as my said son shall by his last will and testament duly executed in writing name, designate and appoint to take the same”; and that if the son failed to exercise the power of appointment the trustees were at his death to “pay over and deliver the principal of said fund to his heirs-at-law (exclusive of his said wife), or should my said son not survive me, to those persons who would have been his heirs-at-law (exclusive of his said wife) had he died at the same time as my death, absolutely and free of trust.” Paul’s mother in her will created a trust, the income of which was to be paid to him during his life and at his death the trustee was directed to pay over and deliver “the principal” of the fund “to his issue and widow or such of them as may survive him and as he may select, in such manner and in such amounts as my said son shall by his last will and testament duly executed in writing, name, designate and appoint to take the same”; but, in case the son failed to survive her or to exercise the power, one-third of “said fund” was to continue in trust and the net income was to be paid to his widow; and the balance of the fund, including at the death of the wife the principal of the one-third held in trust for her, was to “vest in his heirs at law (exclusive of his said wife), or, should he die before me, in those persons who would have been his heirs *225 at law (exclusive of Ms said wife) had his death occurred at the same time as my own.”

In his will, Paul, stating that he was exercising the power of appointment given him in his father’s will, directed that the fund established by his father should be divided into as many equal shares as he left children who survived him or who had died leaving issue and that the net income of one share should be paid to each child during his life; that at the death of such child the fund held for him or her should be distributed and paid over “outright and free from the trust to such beneficiaries as such child by will may appoint and designate”; and that in the absence of such appointment the fund should be distributed to the heirs-at-law of such child. Paul also in his will, purporting to exercise the power of appointment given him by his mother, directed that the trust fund created by her should be continued to be held by the trustee and the income paid to his widow during her life; that if she did not survive him, or at her death if she did, the fund should be divided into as many equal shares as he had cMldren then surviving or children who had died but left issue; that the income of one of these funds was to be paid to such child during his life; that at the death of each child the “entire principal” of the fund of which he or she had enjoyed the income should be distributed by the trustee “outright and free from the trust to such beneficiaries as such child may appoint and designate”; and that “if there be no such appointment” the trustees were to distribute the fund to the heirs-at-law of the child or, as provided later in the same paragraph, to “the issue of said child per stirpes.”

The question presented by these provisions of *226 Paul’s will is this: Where the father directed that “the principal” of the funds should at the death of Paul be paid over and delivered to his heirs-at-law (exclusive of his widow) in such amounts and manner as he might appoint, and where the mother provided that the principal of the trust created by her will should at Paul’s death be paid over and delivered to his issue and widow, or such of them as might survive him and as he might select, in such manner and amounts as he should appoint by will, could Paul validly provide in his will that the persons in the classes designated by his father and mother within which he was authorized to make an appointment should receive none of the principal of the funds but should have only the income for life, and that the principal should be distributed only at their deaths, and then to such beneficiaries as the child might designate or, in want of appointment, to the child’s heirs-at-law or issue?

To state the question goes far toward answering it. In the first place, we cannot escape the conclusion that both father and mother intended that at the son’s death there should be a distribution of the principal among the persons designated in their wills; but the result of the purported exercise of the power by Paul would be that the principal would never be paid to any of the persons so designated and that they would at most receive income during their lives. Such a result would run directly counter to the intent of the parents. In the second place, the father clearly intended that the heirs-at-law of the son “exclusive of his wife,” and the mother clearly intended that some or all of the issue and the widow of the son, should be the ultimate beneficiaries of the property; but Paul in his will provid *227 ed that at the death of his children they might appoint those to whom the principal should be paid, and he placed no restriction upon the persons who might receive it, permitting the appointment to be to “such beneficiaries” as the child by will might designate. This might well bring abont the result that the principal of the funds would ultimately go to persons entirely outside the classes among the members of which both father and mother intended the principal to be distributed.

Counsel who contend that Paul’s exercise of the powers of appointment was valid argue that in two respects the terms of the will support their contention. One is the provision in the wills of both father and mother that the son might provide for the distribution of the principal among those designated not only in such amounts but also “in such manner” as he might direct. It is not easy to determine just what is meant by the quoted words. They would include, no doubt, a provision that the property in which the fund was invested be sold and the distribution be made in cash or that certain investments be distributed to one beneficiary and others to another, or it may be that they might justify a reasonable deferment of the distribution in whole or in part. “The word ‘manner’ ordinarily refers to the mode or way in which a thing is to be done and does not include the result to be accomplished.” Curry v. Civil Service Commission of Bridgeport, 125 Conn. 344, 345 note, 5 A.2d 846; Brown v. O’Connell, 36 Conn. 432, 447.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A.2d 168, 133 Conn. 221, 1946 Conn. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-new-haven-trust-co-v-taylor-conn-1946.