Court Opinion

ID: 6430118
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:07:27.35611+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:09.434657
License: Public Domain

Knowlton, C. J.
This is a bill for instructions, and the only question presented by it is what is the meaning of the provision for the beneficiaries in a clause of the will of Artemas *345"W. Stearns late of Lawrence, deceased, which is as follows: “ First, I direct that my homestead with its appurtenances and furniture and necessary provisions be held for the use of my wife and other members of my family, namely, Mary W. Truell, Irene E. Fieles and Mary I. Fieles, so long as any one of them shall be living and shall desire to occupy the same.” The connection in which the word “provisions” is used makes it plain that the testator did not think of it as the plural of provision, in its meaning of an act of providing, so that it should be construed as referring to acts making provision for the wants of the family. It is used in connection with other words which all signify kinds of property, and it seems plain that this was intended as a general designation of a certain kind of property. It is said in Commonwealth v. Reid, 175 Mass. 325, 329, that “ the word ‘ provisions ’ means food, victuals, fare, provender.” See Commonwealth v. Caldwell, 190 Mass. 355. The difficult question in the case is whether the clause means that the members of the family are to have the homestead and the furniture and the provisions on hand at the time of the testator’s death, to use as they were until worn out or consumed, except as they should be kept in repair at their own expense, or whether the direction to the trustees that these several articles be held for the use of the testator’s wife and other members of his family was equivalent to a direction that they should be maintained by the trustees for this use. These are essentials and appointments which constitute the material features of a home. The thought of continuing a home for the testator’s family seems to have suggested the words.
The fact that there is no express provision for an expenditure of money for this purpose favors the contention of the Attorney General. On the other hand, there is much to support the opposite contention. The words “necessary provisions ” indicate that the provisions referred to were not such as might happen to be on hand at the time of the testator’s death, but such as might be needed for the support of the family afterward. If the word “held” be taken alone and construed narrowly, it seems to refer only to property which the testator left at his decease. But the words “ held for the use of” in connection with the term “necessary provisions” *346accompanying the words .“ homestead and furniture,” which naturally suggest a large degree of permanence, carry with them the idea of continued ^ action and maintenance by the trustees.
When we consider the close relations of the members of this family to one another, and the long and faithful service of the others to the testator’s invalid wife, and their dependence upon the testator’s bounty for their support after his death, we discover strong indications of an intention on his part to have the house and furniture maintained for their benefit, with the necessary provisions. The fact that the income left to them was not enough to maintain them in the manner in which they had lived, and the further fact, under conditions existing since the death of Mary W. Truell and the testator’s wife, that Mrs. Fieles’s share of the income would not enable her to maintain the home and support herself comfortably if all the expenses were borne by her, emphasize the suggestion that these articles of property, to be “held for the use of” the family, are to be maintained for their use. In this respect the case has some analogies to Denfield, petitioner, 156 Mass. 265.
It is the duty of the trustees to keep the homestead and its appurtenances in repair, and to maintain the furniture by repair or renewal, so as to keep it in as good condition as it was in at the time of the testator’s death, and to furnish necessary provisions to supply food for the use of the two remaining members of the family. They are not called upon to do more than to maintain and supply the articles of property mentioned in this clause of the will. The individual expenses of the two surviving members of the family are not to be paid by the estate, nor are the other expenses of housekeeping and of maintaining a home to be so paid.
We infer that the income will be more than enough to make these necessary payments, and that there is no occasion to consider whether such payments could be made from the principal fund.

So ordered,.