Towle v. Doe

Peabody, J.

This cause comes before the law court on report. It is an equity suit brought for the purpose of obtaining a legal construction of certain provisions of the will of Josiah Towle, late of Bangor, Maine, deceased.

The case shows that the testator made and executed his will on *430the seventeenth day of August, A. D. 1866, and a codicil thereto on the ninth day of March, A. D. 1876. The provisions of the codicil are immaterial in the case. The portions of the will which the parties desire construed being part of the residuary clause, are as follows:

“To my wife, Lucinda L. Towle, I give and bequeath all the remainder of my property of every description, both real, personal and mixed, to have and to hold, occupy and enjoy and receive all income, rents and profits and interest during her life and at her decease I give and bequeath all the aforesaid property devised to her during her lifetime and which shall remain at her decease to my four children, viz: William M. Towle and his heirs one-fourth part to be invested by my executor in U. S. bonds or State bonds and the interest deducting expense paid over to said William M. Towle and hjs children so long as they live and then the principal divided to his or their heirs.”

The remaining parts of the residuary clause relate to the bequests to the other three children of the testator and do not affect the question submitted except as indicating the intention of the testator.

The testator died January 26, 1883, and his widow, Lucinda L. Towle, died April 8, 1886. His son William M. Towle died January 23, 1896, leaving a widow, now living; and his granddaughter, Alice H. Doe, the surviving child of William M. Towle, has died since the filing of the bill in equity, leaving a husband and children Avho are noAV living. .

The validity of the will and codicil is not questioned, and their terms clearly indicate that the testator thereby intended to dispose of his entire estate. The Avill is not artificially draAvn, as is evident both from the words used and the structure of its testamentary provisions.

In the portion of the Avill quoted, the words used in the first section of the claiise imply an absolute bequest to his son, William M. ToAvle, but they are folloAved by Avords showing that the testator intended that the legal estate in this fourth part of the residuum should vest in a trustee, to be disposed of in accordance with the terms of the trust.

In determining the general intent of the testator, the Avords defin*431ing the bequest to William M. Towle and his heirs cannot be dissociated from those which immediately follow; and the language of the whole clause shoAvs that the bequest was not intended by the testator to be a remainder in fee to William M. Towle but an executory bequest to be held by the executor in trust for the lives of William M. Towle and his children and at the decease of the survivor of them to vest in their heirs. The doubt which has arisen as to the legal effect of this bequest is Avhether it is in conflict Avith the rule against perpetuities.

The common laAV rule is recognized by the courts of this State, as formulated in Cadell v. Palmer, 7 Bli. 202, quoted in 2d Woerner on American Law of Adm., § 427:

“The utmost period in Avhich an executory bequest can take effect is a life or lives in being and twenty-one years thereafter, together Avith the period of gestation already existing.”

The same rule applies to trusts as is applied to legal estates. 1 Perry on Trusts, § 382.

The actual events iioav show that the will in effect limited the trust to William M. Towle and his daughter Alice H. Poe, as beneficiaries for life, and had it done so in terms the bequest would not have been Amid for remoteness because this daughter was his only child at the death of the testator, at the termination of the intervening life and at his own death. But the test of the validity of the gift must be applied to the language of the Avill itself. And the possibility that the executory limitation might be void for remoteness is clear from the fact that a child or children of the testator’s son William M. Towle, might be born after the death of the testator, the continuance of whose lives might postpone the vesting of the estate beyond the time limited by law. 1 Jar. on Wills, 266; 2 Woerner Am. Law Adm., § 427; Webber v. Jones, 94 Maine, 429; Gray on Per. § 214.

From the facts in the case and the language of the Avill several theories arise as to the construction of the portion quoted in the third clause of the bill. 1. 'That the entire bequest is void because the fatal defect of violating an inflexible rule of law applies to the Avhole.

This construction Avould do great violence to the manifest intention of the testator to give his four children and their immediate *432families the benefit of equal shares in his estate at the death of his wife.

The general terms of the provision are: “At her decease I give and bequeath all the aforesaid property which I have devised to her during her lifetime and which shall remain at her decease to my four children”.

' He then in specific terms defines the several bequests of one-fourth to each. To two of his sons he gives the shares in apt words to them and their heirs. To the daughter and her heirs he gives one-fourth part, and in words immediately following modifies the bequest by directing its investment by his executor and creating a trust not free from complications similar to those in the provision under consideration.

If a construction may be given to the will which does not contravene the rule and does not wholly disappoint the intention of the testator, it should be adopted. 3 Jar. on Wills, 5th Am. ed. 709.

2. Another theory of construction is that the bequest in trust is limited to beneficiaries in esse at the date of the death of the testator, namely, William M. Towle and his child, Alice H. Doe, and vested at the death of the survivor, ’Alice H. Doe, in her heirs.

This construction is claimed on the ground that the word “children ” used by the testator in his will may mean children living at the time of his decease, but we think that this can only apply to cases where this meaning is evident from the context. It cannot be forced against the plain language of the will so as to apply only to those of the same class who might legally take the equitable estate. Gray on Per. ch. X; Barnum v. Barnum, 26 Md. 119, 90 Am. Dec. 88; Leake v. Robinson, 2 Mer. 363, 388; Dorr v. Lovering, 147 Mass. 530.

3. Another construction sought is that the bequest was in trust during the ’ life of William M. Towle and that only the limitation over to his children for life and to his or their heirs in fee was void for remoteness.’ This construction caD only rest upon the assumption that the beneficiaries mentioned in the trust would take the interest in succession. But the legal estate is not given to them for life but to a trustee. The trust is an entirety for the benefit of a *433parent and his children and is prima facie concurrent. It would seem that the equitable interest belonged to "William M. Towle and his children as a class and consequently to the survivor. This is also indicated by the words his or their heirs.” Schouler on Wills, §§ 530, 557; Gray on Per. §§ 322, 323.

The equitable remainder could not vest until the death of these beneficiaries. Spear v. Fogg, 87 Maine, 132; Hunt v. Hall, 37 Maine, 363.

4. We think that the legal construction of the bequest in question depends upon whether it is a remainder to William M. Towle in fee, or whether the words in the first part of the provision, which imply this, are so inseparably connected with the modifying clause attempting to create a trust as to render the whole provision void for remoteness.

The creation of a trust which cannot vest the object of the trust within the time limited by law will be nugatory. 1 Perry on Trusts, 383; Blagrave v. Hancock, 16 Sim. 371; Dodd v. Wake, 8 Sim. 615; Sears v. Russell, 8 Gray, 86; Brattle Square Church v. Grant, 3 Gray, 142, 63 Am. Dec. 725; Pulitzer v. Livingston, 89 Maine, 359; Brooks v. Belfast, 90 Maine, 318. See Slade v. Patten, 68 Maine, 380.

The trust fund is not separable and might vest too remotely in the heirs of a child of William M. Towle born after the death of the testator.

If two constructions may be put upon a provision in a will, one of which will violate an inflexible rule of law and the other not, the construction which will not offend the rule is to be adopted by the court. 1 Perry on Trusts, 381; Martelli v. Holloway, L. R. 5 H. L. 532.

It will be observed that the testator uses the words “and his heirs” technically in reference to other devises in this will, and he is presumed to employ them in their legal sense unless the context clearly indicates the contrary. 3 Jar. on Wills, 707.

It must be held that William M. Towle took a remainder in fee. This is the legitimate effect of the language used in the first section of the provision under consideration, and even the intent of the tes*434tator to restrict it by a trust must yield to the rule against perpetuities. 1 Jar. on Wills, 293, 295, 296; Gray on Per., §§ 233, 235, 240; Deford v. Deford, 36 Md. 168; Sears v. Putnam, 102 Mass. 5. The trust is therefore invalid.

We answer the prayer of the complainant, in behalf of all parties interested, that the. proportion of the estate in which William M. Towle was interested, and which came at the death of Lucinda L. Towle into the hands of the complainant as executor, vested absolutely in William M. Towle and belongs to his estate.

The expenses of this suit should be paid out of the property involved in this decision.

Decree accordingly.