Wright v. Blinn

225 Mass. 146
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 225 Mass. 146 (Wright v. Blinn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Blinn, 225 Mass. 146 (Mass. 1916).

Opinion

By the court.

The will of John Kimball contained the provision for the benefit of his sister Ellen which is printed above.

The petitioner alleges that he furnished board, lodging, medicine and nursing for the sister of the testator for several years, the fair price for which he seeks to recover from the trustee. The case was referred to a master who reported in substance that the trustee never made any contract with the petitioner but steadfastly refused to do so; that the trustee paid directly to the beneficiary a sum in excess of the income of the trust fund, and, after narrating at some length the conduct of the trustee, that the trustee acted in good faith and not in an arbitrary or capricious manner.

The first exception to the master’s report is that it was obligatory upon the master to find that the trustee acted capriciously and arbitrarily in not paying for the support of the beneficiary from the death of the testator until the appointment of the trustee. Manifestly this is only one element bearing on the question and is not decisive. It is quite overborne by other circumstances stated in the report.

The second exception is the general one that the master’s finding [148]*148of fact is erroneous. The familiar rule is that where, as here, the evidence is not reported, no question of law or fact is presented by such an exception. So long as the trustee acted in good faith and not arbitrarily or capriciously, his discretion as to payment from the principal of the fund cannot be reviewed. Brown v. Lumbert, 221 Mass. 419. Corkery v. Dorsey, 223 Mass. 97. The decree of the Probate Court may be reversed

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Bluebook (online)
225 Mass. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-blinn-mass-1916.