Whitney v. Whitney

6 Conn. Super. Ct. 399, 6 Conn. Supp. 399, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 153
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1938
DocketFile #55576
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 399 (Whitney v. Whitney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitney v. Whitney, 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 399, 6 Conn. Supp. 399, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 153 (Colo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

CORNELL, J.

This is a suit for the construction of the last will and testament of Clarence E. Whitney, late of Hart' ford, deceased, whose estate is in course of settlement in the Probate Court for the District of Hartford. The plaintiffs are the executrices named in the will, viz., Nellie Hurlburt Whitney and Dorothy Whitney Stevens, the former of whom is the testator’s surviving wife and the latter, one of his daugh' ters. The named defendants are the deceased’s two sons, viz., Winthrop and Lawrence Amos Whitney, and a daughter, viz., Laura Whitney Hawkinson, in addition to whom Nellie Hurl' burt Whitney and Dorothy Whitney Stevens are included in their personal, as distinguished from their representative, ca' pacities. These comprise all of the persons who have, or might claim to have, any interest under the testator’s will or in, or to, his estate.

The operative provisions of the will, which was drafted by the testator, personally, and executed on January 1, 1930, read as follows:

“1. I desire my executors to first pay all my just debts and the proper charges against my estate.
“2. All the rest and residue of my property, real and per' sonal, I desire incorporated under the Laws of the State of Connecticut, under any suitable name to be determined by my Executors, the Corporation to be so formed that there will be a reasonable number of shares of stock of one grade only, the total number to be determined by my Executors, and all the shares thereof to be of no par value.
*402 “3. I give, devise and bequeath to my wife, Nellie Hurlburt Whitney, thirty-five (35%) per cent of the total. I give, devise and bequeath to my son, Winthrop H. Whitney, five (5%) per cent of the total. I gjive and bequeath to my daughter, Dorothy Whitney Stevens, twenty (20 %) per cent of the total. I give, devise and bequeath to my daughter, Laura Whitney Hawkinson, twenty (20%) per cent of the total. I give, devise and bequeath to my son, Lawrence Amos Whitney, twenty (20%) per cent of the total.”

The estate is inventoried at $950,000, of which the largest single item is stock in The Whitney Manufacturing Company valued at $512,460, the remainder being in the main divided between stocks and bonds in other corporations, real estate and personal effects.

The questions propounded are these:

(a) Do the provisions of said paragraph 2 of said will impose a mandatory duty upon the executrices to form a corporation with the number and character of shares indicated in said paragraph?

(b) If such a mandatory duty is not imposed upon the executrices, does said paragraph of said will impose such a mandatory duty on any one else?

(c) If such a mandatory duty is imposed, what shall be declared to be the objects and purposes of such corporation and who shall be its directors and officers?

(d) If such a mandatory duty is imposed, for how long a period shall, the corporation be continued?

(e) If such a mandatory duty is imposed, can the corporation be dissolved immediately after it is formed?

(f) If such mandatory duty is imposed, shall the residue be distributed among the legatees according to the percentages specified in paragraph 3 of said will?

(g) If no such mandatory duty is imposed and the residue cannot be distributed among the legatees according to the percentages specified in paragraph 3 of said will, how shall said estate be distributed?

(h) If such a mandatory duty is imposed can the corporation be formed at once with only a nominal capital for the purpose of making possible a distribution of income of the *403 estate pending a transfer to the corporation of the entire residue?

Of these interrogatories, (a) and (b) submit queries, the answers to which must exert much influence on the advice to be given concerning the others. To paraphrase, these are (1) whether the executrices are required to cause a corporation to be organized to which shall be transferred all of Mr. Whitney’s estate which shall remain after the payment of ante mortem debts and “proper charges”, and, if they are not, then (2) are the named beneficiaries under a duty to do so? These, in turn, have aspects that are twofold, viz., one which relates to the sense in which certain language is used in the will, and, in event that this is determined not to connote a mandatory direction, then whether under the provisions of the will as a whole, the duty exists. Obviously, both of these have concern with the author’s testamentary intention; the second, in addition, however, includes the question of whether such a direction, if ascertained to exist, is valid.

The defendants claim that there is no imperative duty imposed either upon the executrices or the beneficiaries to cause such a corporation to be organized. The hearing discloses, that the plaintiffs, executrices, are, at least, sympathetic with this contention, from which it is evident that all persons named in the will as beneficiaries, having any interest in the estate or charged with the duty of administering it, are either active proponents of, or nonresistant to that proposition. This circumstance can be permitted to have no persuasive effect upon the conclusions reached here. Brinsmade vs. Beach, 98 Conn. 322, 330; Burnham vs. Burnham, 101 id. 529, 533. The question is not what those concerned in the estate agree should have been, or should now be, done with the estate, but, only, what disposition the testator intended to make of it. Burnham vs. Burnham, supra; New Britain Trust Co. vs. Stoddard, 120 Conn. 123, 126. The obligation devolves upon the Court to give effect to the testamentary intention alone, if valid, as the instrument reveals it, or as it may be ascertained, therefrom, when considered in the light of the circumstances surrounding the testator, when he executed the will. Catto vs. Plant, 106 Conn. 236, 240; Gross vs. Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co., 100 id. 332, 335; Bartlett vs. Sears, 81 id. 34, 48. In pursuit of this quest even an invalid provision may be considered and, perforce, must be, if it constitutes the entire will. State Bank Trust Co. vs. Nolan, 103 Conn. 308, 330.

*404 Much of the argument advanced depends upon the use of the phrase “I desire” in the second paragraph of the will, with reference to the incorporation of the residue of the estate. It is contended that this is expressive of a mere wish, hope or preference in contradistinction to an imperative direction. In passing, it may be observed, that the same language is em' ployed in connection with the subject of the payment of the testator’s “just debts and proper charges against” his estate. A provision of this latter character has significance of a nature hardly capable of more precatory susceptibilities. Starr vs. Watrous, 116 Conn. 448; Higinbotham vs. Manchester, 113 id. 62, 72. While this observation is not decisive of the meaning in which the same language is used in paragraph 2 of the will, neither is it to be ignored. Beardsley vs. Johnson, 105 Conn. 98.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Conn. Super. Ct. 399, 6 Conn. Supp. 399, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-whitney-connsuperct-1938.