Lawton v. Fitchburg Savings Bank
Lawton v. Fitchburg Savings Bank
Opinion of the Court
The question is whether the gifts to the testator’s daughter in the third clause of the will entitle them to come against the real estate, the personal estate being insufficient. The third clause, so far as material, reads, “ All the rest of my personal property, consisting of stocks, bonds, mortgages, cash in hand, and evidences of debt, I give and bequeath to my said executor on the following trusts, viz.” to his wife for life, “ and after her decease, first to pay over to my daughter Dorcas
The foregoing clause in terms deals with the residue of the testator’s personal property alone, and shows that it does so advisedly by enumerating what the property consists of. The gifts to the testator’s daughters are among the trusts declared concerning this property. They are made only by way of trust. They are not demonstrative legacies. No intention is shown that the daughters should have the amounts given them except as cestuis que trust of this fund. Therefore they can have no claim upon any other property, unless the gifts to them are enlarged by other parts of the will.
The fourth clause disposes of the residue, real as well as personal, and begins, “After satisfying the above provisions.” But these words are given full force without taking them to subject the real estate by implication to the trusts of the personalty. They refer to the fact that the real estate does not pass until the death of the wife, to whom it is given for life by the second clause,
Decree affirmed.
This clause also gave her certain personal property for life.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Asa S. Lawton, administrator v. Fitchburg Savings Bank & others
- Status
- Published