Wooster v. Union & New Haven Trust Co.

43 A.2d 734, 132 Conn. 309, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 18, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 A.2d 734 (Wooster v. Union & New Haven Trust Co.) 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
Wooster v. Union & New Haven Trust Co., 43 A.2d 734, 132 Conn. 309, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 201 (Colo. 1945).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

William H. H. Wooster, late of Seymour, had several children, including three unmarried daughters. The plaintiff, one of these daughters, is seeking a declaratory judgment as to the extent of a power of appointment given to her in a trust instrument which he executed and in which the named defendant was appointed trustee, and as to' the disposition which should be made of certain real estate which he also deeded to the trustee. Under the instrument, dated December 26, 1916, Mr. Wooster delivered personal property of considerable value to the trust company to be held by it in trust primarily for the benefit of his wife and his three unmarried daughters, the plaintiff, Mabel and Louise. Both Mr. Wooster and his wife died and, under the terms of the instrument, the three daughters became entitled to receive the income of the trust in equal shares. By the provisions of the trust instrument, at the death of any of the daughters, her share of the income was to be paid to such persons as she might appoint in the manner designated in the agreement or, lacking an effective appointment, to the issue of the deceased or, lacking such issue, to the surviving daughters, their appointees or their issue; the trust was to terminate at the death of the last surviving daughter, if no issue of any one of them were then living; but, if there were such issue, it was to continue for a further period of twenty-one years, unless the last survivor of such issue died before the expiration of that time, in which event the trust would terminate at his death; whenever it terminated, the trustee was to pay or transfer the principal of the *312 fund to such persons as the daughters might appoint or, in default of appointment, to their issue, if any, in compliance with certain directions contained in the agreement.

Louise died in 1930 without having exercised the power of appointment given her, and leaving no issue. Mabel died in 1943, and in her will, in purported exercise of the power of appointment given in the agreement, she provided that, should the plaintiff survive her, another sister, Clara, or, should the latter predecease the testatrix, her issue, should receive one-half' the income of the trust which the testatrix would have been entitled to receive had she lived, and she directed that, at its termination, “one-half of the principal fund and its accumulations with respect to which I shall, at the time of my.death, have the right” to an appointment should be paid to Clara or her issue. The principal questions propounded in the reservation concern the extent of the power of appointment which the plaintiff has with respect to the principal of the trust fund. The provisions of the trust instrument directly involved in determining these questions are printed in the footnote. 1

*313 The plaintiff herself anticipates a question as to the propriety of our now giving the judgment she seeks. The only persons who could be adversely affected but who, or the representatives of whose estates, are not parties to the action are future issue of the plaintiff whose birth, from any practical standpoint, is highly improbable. On the other hand, the plaintiff is entitled to know the scope of the power of appointment given her in order to guide her in her future conduct; and it is stipulated that a present determination of the questions will resolve substantial doubts as to the taxability of portions of the principal of the fund under the federal inheritance tax laws. Under the circumstances, we have decided to answer the questions *314 concerning the scope of the plaintiff’s power of appointment. Sigal v. Wise, 114 Conn. 297, 302, 158, Atl. 891; Hill v. Wright, 128 Conn. 12, 19, 20 Atl. (2d) 388; New Britain Trust Co. v. Stanley, 128 Conn. 386, 392, 23 Atl. (2d) 142. The other question asked in the reservation arises out of a deed of land in Seymour, on which was the family homestead, made by Mr. Wooster to the trustee. His wife and, after her death, the three unmarried daughters were given a right of occupancy during their lives and the life of the survivor. The deed contained a provision that, after the death of the wife, the trustee, upon the written request “of a majority of my said three daughters then living,” should sell the property and make the proceeds a part of the trust fund created under the instrument described above. We are asked whether the plaintiff, as sole survivor of the three daughters, has the right, by written request, to require the sale of the property. As there is no intimation in the record that she proposes or desires to seek such a sale, no need to answer this question appears, and our decision might well be purely academic. We must, therefore, decline to consider it.

The trust instrument, in article fourth (d), provides for payments of income in a manner which Mr. Wooster might well have believed reasonably adequate . to bring about a complete disposition of it. Each daughter is given a power of appointment as regards all the income which she “would have been entitled to receive if living”; as the parties before us agree, that power would include the right to dispose not only of the third part to which she was primarily entitled but also of such part as might come to her when one or both of her sisters died without having exercised the power given them, and without issue. Article sixth, in its provisions for the disposal of the principal at the *315 termination of the trust, gives to each daughter a power of appointment only as to one-third of the fund; and it then goes on to provide that, should any daughter fail to exercise the power of appointment given her, the trustee should pay one-third of the principal to her issue living at her death or, if she left none, to the issue of the other daughters then living, in equal shares per stirpes. If none of three daughters has issue and if the rights to dispose of the principal are governed by this article alone, the chance of intestacy as to at least a part of the principal is greatly increased; for, should any one of them fail to exercise her right to appoint the person or persons to receive the whole or any part of one-third of the principal, as in fact Louise did as to all her share and Mabel did as to half her share, that third or so much thereof as was not included in the portion as to which the power to appoint was exercised would necessarily be undisposed of. That the unmarried daughters might die without issue was a contingency evidently very much in the mind of Mr. Wooster. The terms of the instrument indicate that he intended to make a disposition of the fund which would in any reasonable contingency be complete. Indeed, it would be highly unlikely that he would want any part of the fund to fall back into his estate at the termination of the trust, which might occur only at the end of twenty-one years after the death of the last survivor of the three daughters.

If, with these considerations in mind, we turn to article seventh, we find that there Mr. Wooster’s mind was definitely centered upon the powers to appoint which he had given the daughters, and upon them alone. He not only restates the grant of powers he has previously given, but he very emphatically defines their scope.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 A.2d 734, 132 Conn. 309, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooster-v-union-new-haven-trust-co-conn-1945.