Opinion
No. 33255.
June 6, 1938.
1. TRUSTS.
Where a beneficiary is under a liability to trustee as such, beneficiary's interest in trust estate is subject to a charge for the amount of his liability.
2. WILLS.
A testamentary trustee directed to take possession of all of testator's property and to give all of the net income therefrom to his wife annually during her lifetime was properly directed to charge against wife's income from trust estate the amount of a note probated against testator's estate but actually owing by wife.
3. WILLS.
Where a beneficiary of a testamentary trust is indebted to testator, beneficiary's interest in trust estate is subject to a charge for the amount of his indebtedness, unless testator manifested an intention to discharge the debt or an intention that beneficiary should be entitled to enjoy his interest even though he should fail to pay indebtedness.
4. WILLS.
A provision of a testamentary trust directing trustee to give to testator's widow annually during her lifetime all of the net income from his property did not prohibit the charge of an indebtedness due testator by widow to that income, since widow would not be deprived of the benefit of the income by applying income to payment of debt.
5. WILLS.
The profit arising from the sale of stock comprising the main portion of the corpus of a testamentary trust estate was not "income" payable to life beneficiary, since profits arising from the sale or exchange of the principal of trust property or any enhancements in the value of the principal are allocable to principal and not income.
6. TRUSTS.
Money or other property received by a trustee as the proceeds of a sale or exchange of the principal of trust property is "principal" and not "income" payable to beneficiary.
7. TRUSTS.
Where a trustee sells trust property, whatever he receives for it becomes a part of the corpus of the trust estate, and it is immaterial what its actual value is.
8. WILLS.
Where a testator devises stock in trust directing that income be paid to beneficiary for life and on beneficiary's death that stock be delivered to and become the property of another, dividends paid after testator's death out of money earned by corporation after his death are "income" payable to life beneficiary, but dividends paid after testator's death wholly out of earnings which accumulated in the form of a surplus before testator's death are part of the corpus of the trust estate and are not "income" payable to the life beneficiary.
9. WILLS.
A testamentary trustee directed to pay income from stock to testator's widow for life should have been permitted to charge dividends paid out of a surplus which had accumulated before testator's death to dividends thereafter collected by him and to withhold from widow the difference thereby appearing.
10. WILLS.
Where a wife assigned stock to her husband about the time he made his will directing that all of his property be held in trust and that income therefrom be paid to his wife for life, and it did not appear that wife received any compensation for stock, wife was not entitled to recover value of stock from trustee after husband's death or to set its value off against judgment rendered against her for an indebtedness due husband's estate, in absence of showing that husband owed wife for stock.
APPEAL from the chancery court of Leflore county; HON. R.E. JACKSON, Chancellor.
Pollard Hamner and Chas. A. Pollard, all of Greenwood, for appellants, Mrs. C.W. Brown, et al., as remaindermen.
The valuations placed on personalty by the appraisers is not conclusive. The real value of the articles appraised may be shown by competent evidence at any time during the administration, and this value may be more or less than the appraised value.
Davis v. Blumenberg, 107 Miss. 432, 65 So. 503; Hayes v. National Surety Co., 169 Miss. 676, 153 So. 515.
The court erred in awarding all dividends and distributions that were made on the Minter City Gin Company stock to the life tenant, Mrs. A.E. Sperry, as net income of the trust.
Simpson v. Millsaps, 80 Miss. 239; Restatement, Law of Trust, sec. 236.
The court below further erred in holding that the difference between the par value of $15,200.00 of the gin stock and the sale price of $18,781.81, which is $3,581.81, was net income and therefore belonged to the life tenant; rather than that the whole of the $18,781.81 remained a part of the corpus of the trust estate.
Simpson v. Millsaps, 80 Miss. 239; 65 C.J., page 859, sec. 736, and page 860, sec. 737.
The court erred in ordering any sum whatever to be paid by B.B. Provine, administrator de bonis non and trustee of the active trust herein, to Mrs. A.E. Sperry, the life tenant, because the evidence shows that she had already been paid a sum equal to or in excess of any net earnings on the Minter City Gin Company stock after the date of the death of G.A. Sperry.
65 C.J. 854, sec. 732; Restatement, Law of Trust, pages 783 and 784, sec. 254.
The court erred in not decreeing that the total value of the 152 shares of the capital stock in the Minter City Gin Company, being the par value plus the surplus on hand at the death of G.A. Sperry, was corpus of the estate and belonged to the trustee as such.
Simpson v. Millsaps, 80 Miss. 239.
H. Talbot Odom, of Greenwood, for appellant, B.B. Provine, Administrator de bonis non.
The liability of appellee was for a greater sum than decreed by the chancellor.
Garner v. Sperry, 173 Miss. 11, 161 So. 703.
The entire proceeds of the sale of the stock owned by the estate in the Minter City Gin Company represented corpus of the estate.
Davis v. Blumenberg, 107 Miss. 432, 65 So. 503; Hayes v. National Surety Co., 169 Miss. 676, 153 So. 515.
The appellee was not entitled to receive any part of the funds in the hands of the administrator de bonis non, she having already received more than the net earnings of the estate.
The indebtedness of appellee to the estate of G.A. Sperry was subject to be offset against the net income provided for appellee in the will of the deceased.
Merchants National Bank Trust Co. v. Port Gibson Oil Works, 165 Miss. 314, 141 So. 283; Clegg v. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, 153 So. 812; Montroy v. Phillips, 134 Miss. 345, 98 So. 775.
A.H. Bell and R.C. McBee, both of Greenwood, for appellee.
We believe that the intent of the testator in creating the trust as set forth in the will controls in this case.
No trust is created unless the settlor manifests an intention to impose enforceable duties.
1 Restatement, Law of Trusts, page 76, sec. 25, and page 77.
The intention of the settlor was to create a trust, a trust for the benefit of his wife, for the benefit of his sisters and their children. He did not intend that a judgment be entered against his wife for any sum, much less the almost fictitious book entry, which was shown by the bookkeeper to be incorrect.
The authority of Restatement of Law on Trust, Vol. 1, page 779, sec. 251, states the rule to be that the intention of the testator controls. The appellants will undoubtedly rely on that authority, yet if the intention of the testator is otherwise, the income will not be withheld to pay the judgment, if the judgment is allowed to remain. We certainly believe the testator "manifested an intention that the beneficiary should be entitled to enjoy his interest even though he should fail to pay his indebtedness."
1 Restatement, Law on Trusts, page 779, sec. 251; In re Flint's Will, 193 N.Y. Supp. 319; 1 Perry on Trusts, sec. 386a; Nichols v. Eaton, 91 U.S. 716, 23 L.Ed. 254.
A donor may make such disposition of his property and provision for the application of the revenues therefrom for the support of his beneficiaries and bestow upon the trustee such discretion as to render the estate, or the interest of the beneficiary therein not liable to be subjected to the payment of the beneficiary's indebtedness. A donor has the right to devise his property for such purposes that neither the beneficiary nor his creditors can divert the property from the appointed purpose.
1 Perry on Trusts, sec. 386a; 38 Cyc. 238; Mitchell v. Choctaw Bank, 65 So. 278.
If the court takes the position that it was the intention of the settlor to have his widow receive annually the net income from the corpus of the estate, then it cannot be reached by her creditors, even though the debt be reduced to judgment. The settlor by definite words states that his wife is to receive all of the net income annually. There is no misconstruction of this statement, no middle ground. She either gets it or she does not get it. If she gets it, the trust is performed; if she does not get it, the trust fails.
Provisions in a will for the benefit of the testator's widow should be construed liberally in her favor. It has been held that the fact that a testator owed his wife protection and support raises a presumption that he intended to make ample provision for her in his will, and an intention to leave his widow without means of support will be attributed to a testator only when clearly expressed. However, the rule of a liberal construction in favor of the wife will not control when it is contrary to the testator's intention as expressed in the will. It has also been held that a will should be construed liberally in favor of the surviving husband of the testatrix.
Dealy v. Keats, 128 So. 268; Patterson v. Patterson, 116 So. 734; 69 C.J. page 102, sec. 1151, and page 63, sec. 1120.
We sincerely believe that the application of the rules of construction to trusts and wills will bring no result in this case other than that the testator intended that his wife should receive annually the net income of the estate. It would be an impossibility for the trustee to pay the obligation by the income of the estate and at the same time "give annually" to the widow the net income. Both cannot happen. The trust said "give." It should control.
Argued orally by R.V. Pollard, for appellant, and by A.H. Bell, for appellee.
On January 9, 1933, the will of G.A. Sperry, deceased, was probated, reading as follows:
"I hereby give and bequeath to my good wife, Aliph Elnora, all of the property, real, personal and mixed, of which I shall die seized and possessed, to be held in trust for and during her natural life by my executor for her benefit upon the following terms and conditions, that is to say: my executor shall take possession of all of said property, real, personal and mixed, of which I shall die seized and possessed and give to her annually during her lifetime all of the net income from said property, and at her death, all property then on hand and in the control and possession of my said executor is hereby bequeathed to my four sisters, Mrs. C.W. Brown, Minter City, Mississippi, Mrs. G.C. Pruitt, Minter City, Mississippi, Mrs. Tom Buntin, Jackson, Tennessee, and Mrs. Neal Anderson, Jackson, Tennessee, and to the children living at that time of my deceased sister, Mrs. G.W. Johnson, formerly of Lake Wilson, Minnesota, said four sisters to each have a one-fifth interest and the children then living of my said deceased sister to have a one-fifth interest.
"I hereby appoint my good friend, W.D. Garner, in whom I have every confidence, my executor without bond."
Garner qualified as executor and thereafter filed a bill of complaint in the court below against Mrs. Sperry, seeking thereby to recover from Mrs. Sperry $3360.00 paid by him as executor on a note probated against Sperry's estate, which he said was in fact owed not by Sperry but by his widow, Mrs. A.E. Sperry, and the amount of a balance appearing due to G.A. Sperry by Mrs. A.E. Sperry on Mrs. Sperry's books of account, kept in a business owned and operated by her but conducted by G.A. Sperry as her general agent.
On an appeal from a decree dismissing this bill, reported as Garner v. Sperry, 173 Miss. 11, 161 So. 703, that decree was reversed, the court holding that a recovery should be permitted on the note and for the amount of credit to Sperry appearing on Mrs. Sperry's books of account "less any items shown by competent evidence to have been improperly credited thereon and less items properly chargeable thereto but not appearing thereon among which the money paid on Sperry's debt to Minor [the note hereinbefore mentioned], assumed by the appellee, should not be included."
On the return of the case to the court below it was again tried on the same evidence introduced on the first trial, with some additional evidence. The pleadings now presented by the record will not be set out in full, but the questions presented thereby and decided will hereinafter appear. There is a direct appeal by Provine and the remaindermen, and a cross-appeal by Mrs. Sperry.
Garner died; B.B. Provine was appointed administrator de bonis non of Sperry's estate and proceeded with the suit hereinbefore referred to begun by Garner. In addition to Mrs. Sperry and Provine the remaindermen under Sperry's will are parties hereto. (1) The court below awarded Provine a recovery for the $3360.00 paid by Garner on the note probated against Sperry's estate, in accordance with the opinion rendered herein on the former appeal, and (2) for $4445.95 being, according to the decree, the true amount due, on the evidence, by Mrs. Sperry to G.A. Sperry on his open account appearing on Mrs. Sperry's books. Provine was authorized by the decree to charge both of these items against any income in or coming into his hands which under Sperry's will should be paid to Mrs. Sperry.
The first of these items is, of course, correct, and on the evidence we are unable to say that the court below erred in fixing the amount due by Mrs. Sperry on G.A. Sperry's open account appearing on her books. No error was committed in authorizing Provine to charge these two items against Mrs. Sperry's income from the trust estate. The will does not create a spendthrift trust, nor in any way attempt to remove the income of the trust estate from liability for the debts of the life beneficiary thereof. "If a beneficiary is under a liability to the trustee as such, his interest in the trust estate is subject to a charge for the amount of his liability." 1 Restatement Trusts, sec. 251. The $3360.00 item is undoubtedly within this rule. Whether the $4445.95 item is also within this rule depends on whether the testator's will indicates an intention to exclude it therefrom. "Where a testator leaves his property to his executor in trust and a beneficiary of the trust is indebted to the testator, the interest of the beneficiary in the trust estate is subject to a charge for the amount of his indebtedness, unless the testator manifested an intention to discharge the debt, or manifested an intention that the beneficiary should be entitled to enjoy his interest even though he should fail to pay his indebtedness." 1 Restatement, Trusts, sec. 251, comment b.
Counsel for the appellee say that the testator here manifested such an intention, for the reason that he devised and bequeathed all his property to Mrs. Sperry, and although he directed it to be held in trust during her lifetime he also directed the trustee to "give her annually during her lifetime all of the net income from said property." By the use of the word "all" they say the testator meant to prohibit the charge of any indebtedness due him by Mrs. Sperry to this income, that if the debt so due by her is charged against the income the testator's intention that she should receive all the income would be thwarted. The fallacy in this argument is this: When the income is applied to the payment of a debt due by the beneficiary to the trustee the beneficiary is not thereby deprived of the benefit of the income any more than would be the case if the income was paid to the beneficiary and then applied by him to the payment of the debt in discharge of his obligations so to do. If the will had provided not that all the income should be paid the beneficiary without any restrictions thereon, but that sufficient thereof should be paid her for her support and maintenance, a different question would arise, as to which we express no opinion.
The main portion of the corpus of this trust estate is one hundred and fifty-two shares of stock in the Minter City Gin Company, of the par value of $15,200.00. This stock was sold by Provine after it came into his hands, by permission of the court, for $18,781.81, and the difference between this amount and the par value of the stock — $3581.81 — was held to be income and directed to be paid to Mrs. Sperry as such. In so holding the court was in error. With exceptions not here present "money or other property received by the trustee as the proceeds of a sale or exchange of the principal of trust property is principal," and also with exceptions not here present "profits arising from the sale or exchange of the principal of trust property or any enhancements in the value of the principal of trust property are allocable to principal, not income." 1 Restatement, Trusts, sec. 233, comment b. First National Bank of Canton v. Mulholland, 123 Miss. 13, 85 So. 111, 13 A.L.R. 1000. This rule applies to corporate stock. Note to the above case in 13 A.L.R. 1009. But it is said by counsel for the appellee that the value of this stock was fixed in the administration proceedings by the report of the appraisers of Sperry's estate at the par value thereof. This is true, but that fact has no bearing here. We are not dealing with the rights and liabilities of Provine as an administrator only but with his rights and duties as trustee of the property under the terms of the will. But aside from that, when a trustee sells trust property it is immaterial what its actual value is; whatever he receives for it becomes a part of the corpus of the estate.
All the dividends declared and collected on this corporate stock after Sperry's death were awarded to Mrs. Sperry as income from Sperry's estate. While Garner, the original executor-trustee, was administering the trust the gin company declared several annual dividends. During the years for which they were declared the corporation earned nothing, but on the contrary suffered losses; these dividends, however, were paid out of a surplus that had accumulated prior to Sperry's death. Provine claimed that these dividends should have been applied by Garner not to income but to the corpus of the estate, and sought permission to charge the amount thereof against the dividends collected by him (Provine). The court below did not permit him so to do.
Where a testator devises corporate stock in trust, the income therefrom to be paid to one for life, and on his death the stock to be delivered to and become the property of another, dividends paid on this stock after the testator's death out of money earned by the corporation after his death are income payable to the life tenant, but dividends paid thereon, as here, after the testator's death wholly out of earnings of the corporation prior to the testator's death which had accumulated in the form of a surplus, are part of the corpus of the trust estate and not income payable to the life tenant. This rule necessarily results from the holding of this court in Simpson v. Millsaps, 80 Miss. 239, 31 So. 912, and is in accord with the Pennsylvania rule there adopted. Earp's Appeal, 28 Pa. 368; In re Stokes' Estate, 240 Pa. 277, 87 A. 971. Cf. 1 Restatement, Trusts, sec. 236. This being true it will not be necessary for us to consider the many confusing authorities bearing hereon. We are not confronted here with an ordinary dividend declared at a short interval after the testator's death, paid out of earnings of the corporation before and after his death, and we express no opinion thereon.
Counsel for the appellee say that the payment of these dividends out of the corporation's surplus did not, as the sale of the stock thereafter made discloses, impair the value of the stock, but that is beside the mark. We are not concerned here with the impairment of value but only with whether this surplus was a part of the corpus of the estate. Provine should have been permitted to charge these dividends paid out of the corporation's surplus to the dividends thereafter collected by him and to withhold from the appellee the difference thereby appearing.
One other question remains. These shares of stock up to several months before Sperry's death and about the time his will was made belonged to Mrs. Sperry. At that time she assigned the shares to Sperry, and it does not appear from the evidence that she received any compensation therefor. This being true, the appellee claims that she should recover from the administrator trustee the value of this stock, or at least should be allowed to set its value off against the judgment here rendered against her. The court below did not so hold, and on the evidence was not authorized so to do, for it is silent as to whether or not Sperry owed his wife therefor.
The decree of the court below will be affirmed in so far as it renders judgment against the appellee and authorizes Provine to set this judgment off against dividends collected by him on this corporate stock, and to that extent will remain in full force and effect. In all other respects it will be reversed and the cause will be remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
So ordered.