Vrooman v. Virgil

88 A. 372, 81 N.J. Eq. 301, 11 Buchanan 301, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 21, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 88 A. 372 (Vrooman v. Virgil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vrooman v. Virgil, 88 A. 372, 81 N.J. Eq. 301, 11 Buchanan 301, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89 (N.J. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Stevejísost, V. C.

The case presents for construction the following clauses from the will of John R. Elton, deceased, which will was executed September 25th, 1888, and admitted to probate in Cumberland county, New Jersey, March 13th, 1901:

“Second. I give devise and bequeath to my niece Lizzie E. Wliitan the use of two thousand dollars during her natural life said money to be kept safely invested for her use and the interest semi-annually to be paid her [303]*303by my executors hereafter named and at her decease the said sum u> be paid to her children. But should there be no child or children her surviving then the said sum is to revert, to and become a part of the body of my original estate.
“TJm-d. I desire invested for the use and support of my wife, Mary P. Elton, and daughter, Laura E. Virgil, all the rest and residue of my estate of whatever kind or nature whether real or personal. But should the said use not be sufficient for their comfortable maintenance and support they are hereby and herein authorized to use so much of said personal estate as may be necessary therefor or to sell and give good conveyances in the law for any of my real estate and- appropriate the proceeds thereof to such maintenances use and support.
“Fourth. At the death of my wife I give devise and bequeath the use of all my estate remaining to my daughter, Laura E. Virgil, during her natural life at her death to be paid to her child or children but in case she leave no child or children her surviving then said sum is to revert to and become a part of the body of my original estate.
“Fifth. If my daughter Laura E. Virgil leave no child at her death I will devise and bequeath one thousand dollars to the American Tract Society five hundred to the home missionary Society five hundred to the foreign missionary society and the remainder to be divided equally between my nephews and nieces.
“Sixth. I hereby nominate constitute and appoint Daniel L. Pierce Daniel L. Ereeman of Canaan, Ct. the executors of this my last will and testament and authorize them to appoint two trustees at any time they may think best to take charge of the property or if either one should die the one living is authorized to make' the appointment as he thinks best.”

The testator’s wife, Mary P. Elton, above referred to, predeceased him. His daughter, the above-named Laura E. Virgil, his sole heir-at-law, one of the defendants in this suit, is now sixtj'-nine years of age and has no child. Mrs. Virgil had a child who died at some time, not stated, either before or after the testator made his will, in which he provided for the contingency of his daughter’s leaving no child at her death. ' 1

’ The average gross income of the entire estate for several years had been $2,265. One thousand nine hundred and fifty-five dollars of this income is derived from personal estate, and one farm situated in the west which produces $262. Some of the real estate is unproductive and is a burden. The exact net income is not stated, but it may be presumed to he somewhere in the neighborhood of $2,000. The exact circumstances under which Mrs. Virgil is living are not set forth, hut .it seems that her expenses, owing to illness, &c., during the year preceding the filing of the bill, were over $2,700, which the bill alleges made a “deficit of [304]*304about $400 between her income and the expenses.” It would seem therefore that the net income available for Mrs. Virgil’s support -is at least about $2,000. It is not necessary to fix more accurately the net income which Mrs. Virgil receives.

There seem to be two questions which the complainant as trustee is entitled to have answered by this court for Ms guidance, in respect of things to he done or to be left undone at the present time.

1. The proceedings which have been so far taken in the execution of the foregoing will, including. the appointment of the complainant as “trastee in the place of Daniel L. Ereeman to execute” the trust created by the paragraphs above quoted' from the will of John R. Elton, deceased, have assumed correctly, in my judgment, that the language of the will when properly interpreted creates a trust, the extent of which is not distinctly defined in any one part of the will. My conclusion is that if this will is taken as a whole, the entire estate of the testator, both real and personal, was placed in trust, and it is of little importance whether the fee of the real estate is technically vested in the executors or trustees or passed to the testator’s heirs subject to be divested and transferred to purchasers by the exercise of a power of sale which (he trustees undoubtedly hold. I do not consider it necessary to elaborate any theory on this subject which I may hold because the result is- precisely the same whichever of the two theories may be.adopted.

The will is evidently the work of an unskillful draftsman, who was technically not well qualified to perform such a task, but I think that the intention to put the whole estate in trust, direct the method in which The trustees are to dispose of the income during the lifetime of the testator’s Mece, widow and daughter, and then distribute the principal among a considerable class of beneficiaries, is plainly declared. The intention also, I think, is manifest to have the trustee exercise the power to sell the real estate of the testator for the purposes of keeping the estate properly invested and for the purpose of making distribution of the ■ principal at the end of the trust.

At the start, $2,000 is expressly given to the executors in trust to keep the same safely invested and pay the interest thereon [305]*305semi-annually to a niece of the testator. ISText, we have the express provision that “all the rest and residue” of the testator’s estate “of whatever kind or nature, whether real or personal,” be invested for the use and support of the testator’s wife and daughter. The provision in connection with this direction that in case tire “said use,” i. e., the income, he not sufficient for the comfortable maintenance and support of these beneficiaries

“they are hereby and herein authorized to use so much of said personal estate as may be necessary therefor, or to sell and give good conveyances in the law for any of my real estate and appropriate the proceeds thereof to such maintenance, use and support”

when read in connection with the entire will, in my judgment, cannot be interpreted as empowering this widow and daughter who are receiving an income from the trust estate to exercise any power of sale of real estate in their own names and on their own behalf. The phrase “they are hereby authorized to use so much of said personal estate as may be necessary,” plainly means that they are authorized to draw upon the trustee for portions of the personal estate in the possession of the trustees. The further provision which immediately follows authorizing the wife and daughter “to sell and give good conveyances” of any of the testator’s real -estate and appropriate, the proceeds in like manner, must he construed to mean that they are authorized to require the trustees in case the contemplated necessity arises to make sale of real estate.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A. 372, 81 N.J. Eq. 301, 11 Buchanan 301, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vrooman-v-virgil-njch-1913.