Green v. Gilmore

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331 Mass. 283 (1954)

118 N.E.2d 755

SAMUEL H. GREEN, trustee, vs. WALLACE S. GILMORE & others.

Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Middlesex.

February 2, 1954.

April 2, 1954.

Present: QUA, C.J., LUMMUS, RONAN, WILKINS, & WILLIAMS, JJ.

*284 Samuel H. Green, stated the case.

Richard J. Hatchfield, for the respondent Wallace S. Gilmore.

Gordon J. O'Brien, for the respondent Olivine Gilmore.

LUMMUS, J.

The petitioner, as trustee under the will of Belle M. Gilmore, brought this petition for instructions as to the distribution of the trust fund. The testatrix, who died on April 13, 1938, gave the residue of her estate, after certain legacies and devises, to a trustee, to pay the net income to a life tenant who died on January 23, 1946, and at the death of the life tenant to pay half of the trust estate to a daughter Carrie A. Kimball and a quarter to a son Wallace S. Gilmore. The remaining quarter was to remain in trust until January 23, 1956, and then the trustee was to pay over the principal to Wallace S. Gilmore's son Edwin, and in the meantime was to pay to Edwin the net income. The will continued: "If said Edwin Gilmore shall decease before said trust is terminated said fund shall be paid over to the persons who are the heirs at law of said Edwin Gilmore at the time of his decease."

Within the period of the trust, on March 16, 1952, Edwin Gilmore died, survived by his widow Olivine, and his father and mother, but by no issue. On December 10, 1952, the Probate Court for Plymouth County, where Edwin lived, entered a decree that the net value of his estate was less than $5,000. By law the widow was entitled to all his estate up to $10,000. G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 190, § 1, as amended by St. 1945, c. 238, § 1. The first and principal question is whether under those circumstances the widow at the death of Edwin was his only heir at law within the meaning of the will. By the statute a surviving wife is an heir. *285 Newton-Waltham Bank & Trust Co. v. Miller, 325 Mass. 330, 333, and cases cited.

In Seavey v. O'Brien, 307 Mass. 33, property left by will was made payable in certain circumstances to the "heirs" of Edward F. O'Brien, who died leaving a widow and a niece but no issue. His estate was less in value than the amount to which by statute his widow was entitled. It was held that the widow took the entire property. In the present case the petition was taken for confessed against Edwin's father and mother, and on May 27, 1953, a decree was entered, awarding the fund with all accumulated income to Edwin's widow, Olivine. Wallace S. Gilmore, the father, appealed.

This case seems to us to be governed by Seavey v. O'Brien, unless one fact, now to be stated, distinguishes it. The inventory of the trust property shows that the value of the quarter of Belle's estate held in trust for Edwin was more than $15,000. The appellant contends that Edwin's father and mother are entitled to share in the trust fund.

The fund in question was never the property of Edwin. The law gave the heirs of Edwin no right in it. Any right that they have exists only by the provisions of Belle's will. The statutory limit upon the size of the interest taken by Edwin's widow applies only to property owned by Edwin and taken by descent from him. It has been determined that all such property now belongs to Olivine as his statutory heir. No other person is such heir. Belle's will gives such heir the entire quarter of Belle's estate held in trust, without regard to the size of the trust fund. We think there was no error in awarding that fund to Edwin's heir, his widow Olivine.

The trustee, in his petition, asks to be instructed whether income received during the life of Edwin and no distributed became part of the principal of the trust or is the property of Edwin. The appellant does not argue this question, and thereby waives any right to attack the decree so far as it disposes of accumulated income. Jefferson Union Co. v. American Radiator & Standard Sanitary Corp. 329 Mass. *286 692, 694. But were the question before us, we could find no error in the decree with respect to accumulated income. Under the will the trustee had "absolute discretion" as to paying income to Edwin, and might accumulate it. We think the accumulated income became part of the trust estate, and with the principal went to Edwin's widow, Olivine. Minot v. Tappan, 127 Mass. 333. Rackemann v. Wood, 203 Mass. 501, 506. Scott, Trusts (1939), § 128.3. The will treated "the principal of said trust fund and any accumulated income thereon" as an entity passing ultimately to "the heirs at law of said Edwin Gilmore at the time of his decease."

Decree affirmed.

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