Waesche v. Rizzuto

168 A.2d 871, 224 Md. 573, 1961 Md. LEXIS 531
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 28, 1961
Docket[No. 129, September Term, 1960.]
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 168 A.2d 871 (Waesche v. Rizzuto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waesche v. Rizzuto, 168 A.2d 871, 224 Md. 573, 1961 Md. LEXIS 531 (Md. 1961).

Opinion

Michaeeson, J.,

by special assignment, delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a decree of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, passed in a cause in which the complainant, Florence Rizzuto, sued the appellants, Russell R. Waesche, Jr., and Harry Lee Waesche, Trustees named in the Last Will and Testament of Russell R. Waesche, Sr., to have the court construe and enforce the testamentary trust alleged to have been created. By its decree, the lower court assumed jurisdiction of the trust, directed the trustees to render a complete accounting of all funds received by them as trustees under the will, and ordered them to pay certain monies to the appellee, Florence Rizzuto, as a cestui que trust.

The facts in this case are somewhat complicated but, in substance, are as follows: Admiral Russell R. Waesche, Sr., at one time Commandant of the U. S. Coast Guard, died in Montgomery County, Maryland, on October 17, 1946. His Last Will and Testament, executed on May 29, 1946, was *578 duly admitted to probate in the Orphans’ Court for Montgomery County. The two older sons of the testator, Russell R. Waesche, Jr., and Harry Lee Waesche, were named executors and co-trustees. At the time of his death, the testator left surviving him his widow, Agnes Rizzuto Waesche, and four sons, the above named two sons, a third son, James M., these three being children of a former marriage, and a fourth son, William Alexander Waesche, a child of the marriage to Agnes Rizzuto Waesche. The appellee, Florence Rizzuto, was a sister of Agnes Rizzuto Waesche, and she had lived in the Waesche home for approximately fifteen years prior to the death of Agnes R. Waesche on November 3, 1947. During the time that Florence lived in the Waesche home, she was regarded as a member of the household and was treated accordingly.

When the estate of Admiral Waesche was settled, the trustees received a net distribution of $21,564.66 as a part of the trust fund.

At the time of the death of Russell R. Waesche, Sr., in 1946, his widow, Agnes, was not in good health, and she became almost helpless during the last year of her life. She executed a will on February 25, 1947, and died on November 3, 1947, a little more than a year after her husband’s death. Her will was also admitted to probate in the Orphans’ Court for Montgomery County, Maryland. The testatrix named Russell R. Waesche, Jr. (who was one of the executors and trustees under her husband’s will) and Florence Rizzuto, her sister, as executors and trustees in her will, and she designated Harry Lee Waesche and her sister, Florence, as co-guardians of the minor son, William, who was thirteen years of age at the time of his mother’s death. After the death of his mother, William lived in the home of Harry Lee Waesche, except during the time he was away at school or serving in the Army. He became twenty-one years of age on August 8, 1954.

The provisions of the will of Agnes R. Waesche were similar in many respects to those of her husband’s will. She left the residue of her estate in trust for three purposes: (1) to provide for the proper support, comfort and education of her *579 minor son, William, (2) to provide for, or aid in, the support and comfort of her sister, Florence Rizzuto, and (3) to provide for a monthly payment of $15.00 towards the support of her mother. The trust which Agnes R. Waesche established was to terminate upon the completion of her son’s education or upon his reaching the age of majority and becoming self supporting. Upon the completion of the trusts established by the testatrix, the trustees were directed to pay any remaining balance to her son, William, outright. (See third item of her will.)

After Admiral Waesche’s death in 1946, Florence Rizzuto continued to live with her sister in the house which became the property of Agnes R. Waesche as the survivor of her husband. Florence helped to take care of her sister and helped to run the household until Agnes died in November, 1947. During this period of time the trustees of the Admiral’s estate made a number of payments or advances out of his estate to Florence Rizzuto- to defray the cost of managing the home and paying for the living expenses of Agnes R. Waesche and Florence. The total of these expenditures was approximately $9,400. This money was not improperly spent or wasted.

The inventoried personal estate of Agnes R. Waesche consisted of $5,138.50, and the sale of her home after her death produced the net sum of $18,497.26. The executors of her estate, Russell R. Waesche and Florence Rizzuto, in May, 1948, repaid unto the trustees under the Admiral’s will the sum of $8,404.79, a major part of the above mentioned payments or advances totalling approximately $9,400.00.

Admiral Waesche, at the time of his death, had an insurance policy of National Service Life Insurance in the amount of $10,000. His two older sons, Russell, Jr., and Harry Lee, were named principal beneficiaries in this policy on May 29, 1946, each to receive the sum of $5,000. The two younger sons were designated as contingent beneficiaries. Prior to May 29, 1946, the Admiral’s wife, Agnes, was named as principal beneficiary and the four sons were named as contingent beneficiaries. It should be noted that this change of beneficiaries *580 was made on the same date as the execution of the Admiral’s Last Will and Testament.

Each of the two sons, Russell, Jr., and Harry Lee, received in all $5,000 from the insurance, and each beneficiary deposited the money in separate individual bank accounts. Harry Lee later invested his $5,000 in stocks, and he said that his brother, Russell, agreed to do the same with the $5,000 which he received. Harry Lee testified that his reason for putting the insurance into a separate bank account was that, in conversation with his brothers, it was determined that this money was not a part of the residue and remainder of his father’s estate, but that “it would be used under the intent of dad’s wishes”, that, although the stocks he purchased are registered in his and his wife’s names jointly, this fact has never altered his intention that “this money was to be used to further dad’s will”; that he didn’t consider it as his sole property; that if he had so considered it, he would have spent it long ago.

After her sister’s death, Florence Rizzuto went to live, early in 1948, with another sister and their mother in New Jersey. The trustees of the estate of Agnes Waesche paid to her or on her behalf from February, 1948, to September 30, 1954, the sum of $10,230.26. Of this amount approximately $8,700 was paid to her, and the balance for dental and medical expenses and on account of a business course. These payments started at $150.00 per month, were later reduced to $125.00 and then to $100.00 per month. She received $100.00 from the trustees of the estate of the Admiral on November 1, 1954, a premium for Blue Cross insurance in the amount of $8.90 was paid, and a check for another $100.00 was sent by the trustee, Russell R. Waesche, Jr., on November 29, 1954. No further payments were made to her.

The trustee, Russell R. Waesche, Jr., in correspondence with counsel for Florence Rizzuto, stated that no further payments were made to her because: “the only question with which I am concerned is her present ability to support herself or to assist in her support.

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Bluebook (online)
168 A.2d 871, 224 Md. 573, 1961 Md. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waesche-v-rizzuto-md-1961.