Executors, parties to the action but who have not appealed,
cannot be heard against a decree construing the will and
determining the validity of trusts on an appeal taken by other
parties.
The common law having been made applicable by statute in Hawaii,
and there being no other statute regulating the subject, trusts
must be valid as at common law, and the utmost extent of a
testamentary trust is limited by ascertained lives in being at the
time of its creation, selected by the testator but not necessarily
having an interest in the property, and for twenty-one years after
the death of the last survivor which must be ascertainable by
reasonable evidence.
The testator's intent is to be sought and carried out if not
illegal, and although the persons whose lives are to limit a trust
may not actually be so designated in the will, it is sufficient if
a class or number of lives are referred to so as to plainly
indicate that they were selected for that purpose.
A testamentary trust to continue as long as possible " under the
statute " is not void, because in Hawaii there is no statute, and
the common
Page 211 U. S. 322
law is applicable; the testator's intent being evident that the
trust was to continue as long as legally possible.
The fact that the class limiting the duration of a common law
trust is large -- in this case over forty -- does not render it
void if it is otherwise legal.
A trust created for as long a period under the statute as
possible
held legal at common law and to be limited by the
lives of annuitants mentioned in the will and evidently intended,
although not so specified, by the testator as being the lives
selected for the duration of the trust and twenty-one years after
the death of the last survivor.
Where there are a number of annuitants constituting a class
selected to determine the duration of a common law trust, the fact
that there is a corporation among them will not render the trust
illegal, as creating a perpetuity; the annuity to the corporation
will cease on the expiration of the trust twenty-one years after
the death of the last surviving individual annuitant.
In this case, surplus income, after paying specified annuities,
should be accumulated until the termination of the trust and then
distributed as part of the estate to those entitled thereto under
the will.
Whether or not a trustee named in a will can act as such does
not affect the validity of the will; in case he cannot act, the
court can appoint a trustee to carry out the provisions of the
trust.
18 Haw. 52 affirmed.
The parties to this proceeding agreed upon a case, without
action, containing the facts upon which a controversy had arisen
between them, and submitted the same to the Supreme Court of the
Territory of Hawaii, conformably to the laws of that territory.
The court heard the case and made a decree therein, from which
those named above as plaintiffs in the submission have appealed to
this Court, but the defendants executors have not appealed.
From the agreed statement of facts contained in the submission
it appears that one George Galbraith, who died at Honolulu on the
fifth of November, 1904, while domiciled in the Territory of
Hawaii, left a will, which has been duly admitted to probate in
Hawaii, disposing of an estate of about $121,000 in personal
property and $128,000 in real estate in Hawaii, and a small amount
of real estate in Ireland.
Page 211 U. S. 323
The will gave some pecuniary legacies to a number of people,
relatives and friends, and then provided that --
"The balance, residue, or remainder of my estate is to be placed
in trust for as long a period as is legally possible, the
termination or ending of said trust to take place when the law
requires it under the statute."
"I hereby nominate and appoint the Hawaiian Trust Company,
Limited, of Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, as trustee of the
aforesaid balance, residue, or remainder of my estate, and they are
to devote sufficient of the annual income derived from the same
toward paying the following annuities, which are to be free and
clear of all taxes, unto the following persons mentioned, namely
[here follow the names of the annuitants and the amounts which they
are to receive yearly]."
"All of the foregoing for life, and then to their heirs, save
and excepted the last three persons; namely, Josie Fink, Emma
Douglass, and Matilda Bailey, who are to receive only their
annuities, and at their death, all their interests to cease."
"On the final ending and distribution of the trust, the trust
fund to be divided equally amongst those persons entitled at that
time to the aforementioned annuities."
On the same day, the testator made a codicil, in which he made
some changes of the annuities, substituting for the annuity given
to the seven children of Hugh Galbraith, of $2,520 annually, an
annuity to the same children of $2,100 yearly for life, and then to
their heirs.
The testator also bequeathed by the codicil an annuity to the
Kona Orphanage of Kona of $100 yearly, "under the same conditions
as the other annuitants mentioned, save and accepted, Hugh
Galbraith, Josie Fink, Emma Douglass, and Matilda Bailey."
Upon the above facts, several questions arose and were submitted
to the court below, among them one which relates to the validity of
the trust and another to the disposition of the surplus income
remaining after the payments to the annuitants mentioned in the
will.
Page 211 U. S. 327
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In the view we take of the case, there are but two questions
necessary to be noticed, and they involve the validity of the trust
and the disposition of the surplus income. The appellants,
Page 211 U. S. 328
who are the heirs of testator, insist first that the provision
in the will for final distribution, ordering the trust fund to be
divided equally among those persons entitled at that time to the
annuities mentioned, is invalid, because there is no direction in
the will as to when it is to take place, and therefore effect
cannot be given to it; that the only direction in the will as to
the duration of the trust is contained in the words
"the residue . . . to be placed in trust for as long a period as
is legally possible, the termination or ending of said trust to
take place when the law requires it under the statute."
Unless there is contained in those words a direction as to the
duration of the trust, or, in other words, a direction as to the
period at which that part of the trust which consists of the
payment of annuities is to cease, and that part which consists of
the distribution of the capital is to take place, then, it is
contended, the duration of the trust has not been sufficiently
declared by the testator, and the trust is one which the court
cannot carry out; second, that if the above words do constitute a
direction as to the duration of the trust, yet still the testator
has not selected the lives in being which are to be taken as a
limitation of the trust; third, that, even if the testator had
selected the lives, consisting of all the annuitants mentioned,
they are more than forty in number, and the trust is void because
it would then tend to a perpetuity, as the extinction of more than
forty lives is more than can be made out by reasonable evidence or
without difficulty, it being quite impracticable to ascertain when
the last of more than forty lives would be extinguished.
The counsel for the executors of the testator, appellees herein,
was permitted in this Court to file a brief and was heard orally on
the argument before us, although no appeal from the decree had been
taken by the executors, this Court stating, however, that it would
thereafter decide whether counsel for executors had any right to be
heard to contend against the decree of the court below.
Counsel in fact did argue against some parts of the decree,
Page 211 U. S. 329
contending that the trust was valid insofar as it provided for
the payment of the annuities specified, but that the provision for
final distribution was void, and that the annuities succeeding to
and other than the life annuities were perpetual, and that there
was an intestacy as to that not required to satisfy all the
annuities.
We are of opinion that counsel for the executors had no right to
appear and be heard against the decree, no appeal having been taken
from it by his clients.
The trustee contends that the whole trust is valid, and that the
surplus income over the amount necessary for the payment of the
annuities mentioned must be accumulated up to the time of the
general distribution under the trust, as provided for in the will,
and that such surplus shall then be distributed as part of the
trust fund to the persons then entitled to that fund.
Our first inquiry is, was this trust valid as a whole? It is
conceded by all that the common law is applicable, and that there
is no statute in Hawaii governing the subject except the statute
making the common law applicable there, and that the utmost extent
of a trust at common law is limited by lives in being at its
creation and for twenty-one years thereafter; that the lives must
be selected by the testator in his will; that they must be
ascertained lives --
i.e., lives that can be
distinguished, and the fact of the death of the last survivor must
be capable of being made out by reasonable evidence (
Thellusson
v. Woodford, 4 Ves. 227, 11 Ves. 134, 146;
In re
Moore [1901], 1 Ch. 936), and the selected lives need not be
those having an interest in the property.
Moore's case is
an example of a void limitation on the ground of uncertainty. The
limitation was measured by twenty-one years from the death of the
last survivor of all persons living at the death of the
testatrix.
A perusal of the will shows that the testator did not, in so
many words, name the persons whose lives the trustee contends he
selected for the limitation of the trust.
Page 211 U. S. 330
However, if the scheme of the will, discoverable from its
provisions, be such that a plain implication arises from those
provisions that a certain class or number of lives mentioned, or
referred to, in the will, were selected by the testator for a
limitation of the trust, such implied selection is sufficient. It
is the intention of the testator that is to be sought, and such
intention is not always found to have been directly, and in so many
words, expressed in the will. An intention which is implied from
language actually used and from facts actually appearing in the
will is to be carried out, provided it does not violate the law. An
intention so implied is as good as an intention more plainly and in
direct terms expressed. The question is therefore whether the
testator, by an implication arising from the language used in the
will and the facts therein appearing, selected those lives by which
the trust is to be limited.
Looking at the will, it is seen that a trust is created for
three purposes: the first, to pay certain annuitants out of the
income of the fund; the second, to hold the fund until the time for
distribution arrives, and the third, to distribute it to those
people who may then be entitled to it, as provided by the terms of
the will.
The whole trust, the testator has provided, shall continue as
long as is legally possible, and it is not to be confined to any
particular subdivision of the trust. The direction to hold and
distribute is as imperative as the direction to pay annuitants
until distribution is made. When the testator created the trust in
the language already quoted, he must have intended it should be
measured by some lives then in being, and for not more than
twenty-one years thereafter, because that is the longest time a
trust of that kind is legally possible, and he provided it should
last as long as that. There are no other lives that can reasonably
be said to have been within the intention of the testator when he
was making this provision. It is said that, being ignorant of the
legal length of time a trust could last, he therefore provided that
it should
Page 211 U. S. 331
last as long as legally possible, and thus he could not have had
an intention to select any particular life or lives in limiting the
length of the trust.
There is force in the argument, but we are disposed to think
that the position taken by the trustee is the correct one, and,
indeed, is the only one compatible with the intention of the
testator, to be gathered from the will. That intention could not
have been to create annuities to last forever, as is contended,
because it is plain from the provisions of the will that the
testator intended to have the gift over of the whole estate created
by the will divided at some future time among those who would be
entitled to it at the time of such distribution. A perpetual
annuity would prevent some part of the gift over from taking
effect. There is not only the provision for continuing the trust as
long as is legally possible, but there is also a provision, as part
of the trust, for holding the fund and distributing it according to
the terms of the will. Distribution therefore is certainly part of
the scheme of the will, and distribution of all of the fund created
by the trust -- not a part of it. This distribution could not take
place if the payment of the annuities provided for in the will were
to continue forever.
As he was making provision for the annuitants mentioned in the
will and for the payment to the heirs of such of those annuitants
as died, it seems plain that the trust for the payment of the
annuities should continue no longer than up to the time provided in
the will for the distribution of the whole estate, and that
distribution we think the testator intended to be twenty-one years
after the death of the last survivor of the annuitants named in the
will, for that period was as long as the trust could last under the
terms of the will.
Upon all these considerations, the inference, we think, is very
strong that the lives selected were the lives of the annuitants. A
reading of the will fails to suggest any other set of lives that
the testator could reasonably be supposed to have intended. The
inference that he intended these lives is almost conclusive. That
he intended to dispose of his whole estate,
Page 211 U. S. 332
and not to die intestate as to any part of it, is plain from the
language of the will. Either these lives must be regarded as
intended by the testator or there is an intestacy as to a
considerable part of the estate. The testator certainly did not
mean that, and there is, in addition, a strong presumption against
it. Counsel for the heirs do not argue that testator did not intend
to make testamentary disposition of his whole estate, but that the
disposition which they contend he did make was invalid. The answer
to the question of what disposition he did make is easier to be
given when aided by the presumption that he intended a valid,
rather than invalid, disposition, there being from the language of
the will one construction of his intention that would make the will
valid, although there might be another possible, and at the same
time unlikely, construction that would render it invalid. This
selection prevents the trust from being bad for uncertainty or
remoteness.
The whole of the language of the will must be considered, and
while it says the trust is to continue as long as it is legally
possible, it must also be remembered that a distribution of the
whole estate is to be made, and therefore the continuation of the
trust must also be limited by the direction to distribute -- or, in
other words, the trust is to continue as long as is legally
possible and as shall be consistent with making the distribution as
directed by the will. This distribution must be made at a time
which is not too remote -- that is, a time within which the trust
would be valid -- for the testator provided that the trust should
only last that long. Payments of the most of the annuities are to
be continued to the heirs of the annuitants, but we think these
payments are to stop with the death of the last survivor of the
annuitants named in the list and twenty-one years thereafter. The
distribution of the entire corpus of the fund remaining with the
trustee is then to be made as provided for in the will.
The use of the words "under the statute" in the will, providing
for the termination of the trust when the law requires
Page 211 U. S. 333
it under the statute, is not material. It must be assumed that
the testator was not positive as to the time provided by law for
the duration of a trust, or whether it was limited by any
particular statute. It is enough to know that his desire was to
have the trust continue as long as was legally possible, and
consistent with distribution as directed, and that the estate was
to be then distributed, and hence the trust to pay the annuities
was to cease when it would no longer be consistent with the
provision for distribution. As the testator has mentioned
annuitants to whom payments are to be made, it is most reasonable
to infer from that fact that their lives and the life of the
survivor of them were the lives he had in view, and therefore they
are to be regarded as selected by him. The fact that, in the
meantime, when an annuitant died, payment was to be made to his
heirs does not affect the limitation to the survivor of the
annuitants. His death then terminates the class, and twenty-one
years from that time, distribution is to be made.
As the question whether a valid trust has been created depends
upon the construction to be given to the language of this
particular will, reported cases in regard to the language used in
other wills (unless similar to this in their facts) are not of
great benefit in the solution of the question as to the intention
of the testator in the will before us. The case of
Pournall v.
Graham, 33 Beav. 242 (Gray, Rule against Perpetuities, §
219), seems, however, to be as nearly in point as any to be found.
There, the question was as to what lives were to be taken as
measuring the limitation of the trust, as none had been directly
selected in so many words by the testator; but it was thought, upon
looking over the entire will, that the testator intended a certain
class of lives mentioned in it as the limitation of the trust, and
the court accordingly so decided. Counsel for the heirs have
criticized the application of that case, but we think
unsuccessfully.
Some light is also to be found in a certain class of English
cases, known as the Heirloom cases, where bequests of personal
Page 211 U. S. 334
property were made to go as heirlooms along with certain real
property, "as far as the rules of law and equity will permit."
These cases are to be found in Gray on Rule against Perpetuities,
notes to §§ 363-367. They are cited for the purpose of
showing that a limitation in a gift "as far as the rules of law and
equity will permit" is not bad for uncertainty, and that the period
of limitation to be taken is to be determined from a consideration
of the whole will. They strengthen the proposition that it is not
necessary to find in the will, in so many words, the selection of
lives, but that such selection is good if, from a consideration of
the whole will, that selection can be ascertained.
Counsel for the heirs contend that there is as much reason for
including the Kona Orphanage among the lives of the annuitants as a
limitation of the trust as there is to say that the limitation
includes only the individual annuitants. The orphanage is a
corporation or joint stock company, and could not be included in or
constitute a life in being within the rule of which we are
speaking. To include it would render the trust void, and the
testator intended a valid trust.
We see no reason for holding that the number of annuitants,
which, it is said, exceeds forty, is too large for a valid
limitation of the trust. There are cases cited from the English
reports showing that even a larger number than that has been held
not to exceed a valid limitation, and in
Humberston v.
Humberston, 1 P.Wms. 332, which is cited in
Thellusson v.
Woodford, 11 Ves. 112, 135, it would seem there were about
fifty life estates.
We therefore sustain the validity of the trust in this case, and
the question remaining is as to the disposition of the surplus
income arising during the payment of the annuities. The will shows
that the testator supposed there would be such surplus. Should it
be accumulated or paid to the heirs of testator? We think the
surplus, after paying annuities, must accumulate as part of the
trust estate until the time arrives for the distribution of that
estate, and that such accumulation
Page 211 U. S. 335
must then be distributed as a part thereof to those who will
then have the right to take the estate as provided for in the will.
The accumulation is to be treated as a surplus arising from both
real and personal estate, and the person or persons entitled to
receive the main fund are to take the surplus as if it arose
entirely from personalty. Some of the cases upon this subject are
gathered in the brief of counsel for the trustee, and it is not
necessary to cite them here. Holding the trust to be valid, it is
not now necessary to determine to whom the distribution is to be
made when the time for distribution shall arrive.
The trust company is entitled to take the property and execute
the trust. We do not understand that this is now controverted by
counsel for any of the parties. In any event, it does not affect
the validity of the trust. If the trustee named could not act, the
court would appoint a trustee to carry out the provisions of the
trust.
Vidal v.
Philadelphia, 2 How. 127,
43 U. S. 191;
In re McGraw, 111 N.Y. 66, 104.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Hawaii is
Affirmed.