Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Doolan
| Court | Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts |
| Citation | Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Doolan, 307 Mass. 233, 29 N.E.2d 844 (Mass. 1940) |
| Decision Date | 02 November 1940 |
| Parties | BOSTON SAFE DEPOSIT AND TRUST COMPANY, trustee, v. EUDORA M. DOOLAN & others. |
May 7, 1940.
Present: FIELD, C.
J., LUMMUS, DOLAN COX, & RONAN, JJ.
Devise and Legacy To individuals or class, Per capita. Words "Between," "Equally divided," "Share and share alike."
Under a will establishing a trust to pay the income to certain relatives of the testator for their lives, the principal upon the death of the survivor of them "to be equally divided between" two named charities
"and any child or children of any of . . . [certain life beneficiaries] then living, share and share alike," such children then living were not to take merely a one-third share as a class but each was to take per capita with the others and with the charities.
PETITION, filed in the Probate Court for the county of Suffolk on August 3, 1939.
The case was heard by Dillon, J. H. W. Hardy, stated the case.
A. S. Allen, (O.
S. Allen with him,) for the respondents Doolan and another.
H. W. Brown, (E.
G. Fischer with him,) for Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
W. L. Van Kleeck, for Massachusetts Bible Society.
This is a suit in equity in which the petitioner, as it is trustee under the will of Cordelia H. Wheeler, seeks instructions as to the distribution of the trust estate held by it under the will of the testatrix. The case was heard by the judge upon an agreed statement of facts, and now comes before us on the appeal of the respondents Eudora M. Doolan and Jessie A. M Lee from the decree entered by the judge.
The testatrix, Cordelia H. Wheeler, died on January 7, 1918, leaving a will dated July 26, 1902, and a codicil thereto dated November 16, 1912. These instruments were duly proved and allowed. The testatrix's heirs at law as set forth in the petition for probate were a half sister, a nephew and five nieces. The sixth, seventh and eighth articles of the will provide as follows:
The life beneficiaries were a "sister," a nephew and four nieces of the testatrix. The last survivor of them, Ada Alexander, died on March 5, 1939, leaving no issue and the trust estate then became distributable. Estelle Pratt Fay died January 1, 1920, survived by one child, the respondent Doolan. Annlany P. Goodyear, Frank E. Alexander and Alice Gertrude Alexander left no issue. Jennie Pratt Day, though named in the petition for probate as a niece and heir at law of the testatrix, in fact had predeceased her (on October 8, 1905) leaving three children, of whom the respondent Lee is one. The two other children of Jennie Pratt Day predeceased the last survivor of the life beneficiaries, one leaving no issue, and the other leaving two children, the respondent Kenneth V. McFarland and Philip E. McFarland. These two great grandnephews of the testatrix did not appear in the proceedings and the petition was taken as confessed against them. The judge entered a decree that the trust estate was to be distributed "One third to Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, one third to Massachusetts Bible
Society, one sixth to Eudora M. Doolan, and one sixth to Jessie A. M. Lee." The respondents Doolan and Lee contend that the trust estate should be distributed one fourth to each of them and one fourth to each of the respondent societies.
It is the general rule that, where bequests are made to one or more named persons and to the children of another or others, the persons entitled will take per capita in the absence of anything to show a contrary intent. Hardy v. Roach, 190 Mass. 223 , 224. Leslie v. Wilder, 228 Mass. 343. This rule is generally recognized elsewhere. Estate of Fisk, 182 Cal. 238, 241-246. Neil v. Stuart, 102 Kans. 242, 244. Courtenay v. Courtenay, 138 Md. 204, 208. Garnier v. Garnier, 265 Penn. St. 175, 180. Perry v. Brown, 34 R. I. 203, 228. See also cases cited in 16 Am. L. R. 83; 31 Am. L. R. 805; 78 Am. L. R. 1407; 69 C. J. 296.
The word "children" describes and identifies the respondents Doolan and Lee as definitely as if they had been actually named. Weston v. Foster. 7 Met. 297, 300. Barton v. Bigelow, 4 Gray, 353, 355. Balcom v. Haynes, 14 Allen, 204, 205. Leslie v. Wilder, 228 Mass. 343 , 345.
In Leslie v. Wilder, 228 Mass. 343 , the testatrix provided that the income of the residue of her estate should be paid to her sister during her life and that upon her death the trust estate should be divided in equal shares between Willie Wilder, the children of Ella Roper Phillips, and the children of the late George S. Roper, share and share alike. The provisions of the will resemble very closely those in the present case. In the Leslie case six children of Ella Roper Phillips and three children of George S. Roper were living when the trust terminated, and the court held that a construction of the will that Willie Wilder was entitled to one third of the trust estate could not be adopted; that the legatees who were referred to as children, not as heirs, were to share and share alike, and that the naming of their respective parents was only for the purpose of identifying the persons who were to take. Accordingly a distribution was ordered to be made per capita, that is, in ten parts. See Hardy v. Roach, 190 Mass. 223; Lugar v. Harman,
1 Cox Ch. 250; Butler v. Stratton, 3 Bro. Ch. 367; Van Gallow v. Brandt, 168 Mich. 642.
The respondent societies contend that several circumstances take the case out of the general rule and distinguish it from the case of Leslie v. Wilder, 228 Mass. 343 . They submit that the following factors, namely (1) a different time of vesting between the gifts to the societies and those to the surviving children of the deceased nephew and nieces of the testatrix (2) the different degrees of relationship...
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