Bill in equity to construe the following clause of the will of Mary J. Stewart.
“IV. All the rest and remainder of my estate of every kind real and personal I give and devise to said Gertrude, Martha and Cara, wives of my sons Charles, Edward and Rowland, and to my son Harry I). Stewart, equally share and share alike, and I wish that the indebtedness of Thos. J. Stewart & Co., shall be deducted from the shares and property so given and devised to the said wives of my sons Charles, Edward and Rowland, and that the property so as above given to said three wives of my three sons be for the educaPage 173lion of their children and the support of their families, respectively- — > and I enjoin upon them so to use and expend it.”
This clause was before the court for construction in Clifford v. Stewart, 95 Maine, 38, and it was there held “that the testatrix intended to create a trust upon the estate bequeathed to the wives to the extent of securing the education of her sons’ children and the support of their families.” The court however, at that time declined to declare what persons had any interest under this clause of the will and the extent, amount and nature of such interest. Since then Rowland has deceased leaving no children, and his wife, the defendant Cara A. McLain, has remarried. She never qualified as trustee, but her husband Rowland was appointed by the Probate Court to administer said trust, and since his decease the plaintiff Stone was appointed and qualified as trustee in his place. The trust fund in the hands of the trustee amounts to about eleven thousand dollars in personal property. No part of the fund has been paid out to or for any cestui que trust.
This court is asked to determine:
1. If said trust has been terminated, and if this court shall so decree, then to determine and decree to whom the property held by said trustee shall be paid and turned Over.
2. If the said trust has not been terminated then to determine and decree to whom he shall pay and turn over the trust property in his hands and how much thereof, principal and income and at what times.
At the date of the will, the three sons, Charles, Edward and Rowland, constituting the firm of Thomas J. Stewart & Sons, were indebted to the creditors of the firm in a sum exceeding its assets in addition to some ten thousand dollars owed by them to the testatrix. What she desired was the education of the children, the support of the families of the sons, to save the legacies from their creditors and that the residue of the estate should be divided equally and fairly among all her sons. To the son who was solvent she gave one fourth, and to the wives of the other three sons she gave each one fourth charged with a trust to the extent of securing the education of the
We find nothing In the will or in the surrounding circumstances to show that the testatrix used the word family in any other than its common, ordinary sense, of those who live under the same roof and form the fireside of the father or head of the family. At the date of the will the family of Rowland consisted of his wife and himself. After his death and the remarriage of his wife, his family as a family, ceased to exist. The trust was for the education of the children and for the support of the individuals composing the respective families named, so long as they remained members thereof. The testatrix in the case of the children could not have intended that they should not only have been educated and supported while members of the family but should also be supported from the trust fund during their entire lives, even after they had married, become the heads of their own families, living apart and no longer constituting a part of the families of her sons. Yet such would be the result in case the support provided was for the individuals who at one time composed the family without regard to whether they continued to remain members of it. In the case of Cara, the wife of Rowland, having become by her marriage a member of the family of Mr. McLain, she can no longer be held to be a member of Rowland’s family entitled to support out of the trust fund. In the closely analogous case of Bradlee v. Andrews, 137 Mass. 50, a trust was created for the support, maintenance and comfort of the testator’s son and three daughters and their families. It is there said : “ The word ‘ family ’ as used by the testator, would include his son and daughters, together with their respective children so long as they should live together and form a portion of the same household, or from their tender years be entitled to be treated as its members. It would also include the wife of the son, if she continued to reside with, or be entitled to support from, him.”
The purposes of the trust created upon the estate given to Cara having been accomplished, the trust itself is thereby terminated, and the only question remaining is to whom shall the trustee turn over the property. The answer depends upon whether the property was
Our conclusion is that it was the intention of the testatrix that the wives of her sons Charles, Edward and Rowland should take the entire beneficial interest in' the shares of the residuum given and devised to each of them severally, subject to the trust created upon it, and that the property held by the plaintiff as trustee should be paid and' turned over to Cara A. McLain.
Decree accordingly.