McGuinness v. Bates

Annotate this Case

345 Mass. 632 (1963)

189 N.E.2d 212

ERNEST R. McGUINNESS, executor, vs. ANNIE BATES & others.

Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Worcester.

January 8, 1963.

March 29, 1963.

Present: WILKINS, C.J., SPALDING, WHITTEMORE, SPIEGEL, & REARDON, JJ.

Victor E. Hillman, for the respondents Annie Bates & others, submitted a brief.

John F. Donohoe for the respondent Rev. Harold F. Conley.

REARDON, J.

This is an appeal by four of the legatees under the will of William A. Conley from a decree of the Probate Court for Worcester County. The decree was entered upon a petition for instructions on the distribution of 381 shares of the common stock of American Telephone and Telegraph Company, hereinafter called American. The judge made a report of material facts. The facts are these: The testator executed a will on November 26, 1957. At that time he owned 127 shares of American which was all the stock he had. In early 1959 American split its common stock on a three to one basis and then issued to the testator a certificate representing 254 shares thus making a total of 381 shares held by him until his death.

*633 In his will the testator, after stating in the preamble his desire "to direct how all my property shall be disposed of after my death," made disposition of a portion of his stock in American to ten legatees including the four appellants. The provisions of the will affecting the four appellants and the respondent Rev. Harold F. Conley read as follows: "Fifth. I give, devise, and bequeath to Hannah Kallio three (3) shares of A T & T stock. Sixth. I give, devise, and bequeath to Annie H. Bates twelve (12) shares of A T & T stock." "Eighth. I give, devise, and bequeath to Abel J. Bates six (6) shares of A T & T stock. Ninth. I give, devise, and bequeath to David Kallio six (6) shares of A T & T stock." "Thirteenth. The rest, residue and remainder of my estate whether real, personal or mixed, wheresoever situated I give, devise, and bequeath to my nephew, Rev. Harold F. Conley."

The total number of shares of American bequeathed in the above and other provisions of the will excluding clause Thirteenth was forty-five.

The judge ruled that the bequests of American stock were general legacies and that the additional shares, the product of the "so-called split," fell within the residue. The appellants contend that the legacies to them were specific and that they are entitled to two shares of American in addition to each share left to them respectively in the several clauses of the will. We do not agree. Ordinarily a gift of stock is general. Desoe v. Desoe, 304 Mass. 231, 234. A testator's intent to make a gift specific must prevail "if it can be ascertained from the language of the whole will read in the light of the circumstances known to the testator at the time of its execution, and no positive rule of law forbids." Desoe v. Desoe, supra, 234. Igoe v. Darby, 343 Mass. 145, is a recent example of the application of that concept, in a determination that gifts of stock made by the testatrix were specific. However, as has been argued by respondent appellee, the testatrix in the Igoe case bequeathed the exact number of shares owned by her at the time of the execution of her will and coupled with each bequest of stock a gift of personal property which was clearly specific. In view of *634 those circumstances, we ruled that each share so bequeathed (also American common stock) became entitled to the additions made available by the stock split. The facts obtaining in the Igoe case are distinguishable from those presented here.

In some situations the use of the word "my" in connection with bequests of stock actually owned by a testator at the time the will is executed might be sufficient to make the legacy specific. See Metcalf v. Framingham Parish, 128 Mass. 370, 373; Harvard Unitarian Soc. v. Tufts, 151 Mass. 76, 78; First Natl. Bank v. Charlton, 281 Mass. 72, 76. But such is not the case here where the testator used the word "my" only in the preamble of the will, and only in reference to the generic term "property." The number of shares he bequeathed represented merely a fraction of the total number he owned when he executed his will. He did not clearly specify except by quantity which shares he intended to bequeath. In sum, reading the will in the light of all the circumstances known to the testator at the time of its execution, the probate judge justifiably and properly concluded that he intended more probably than otherwise to make general rather than specific legacies of his American stock.

Decree affirmed.

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