DocketNumber: File 144138
Citation Numbers: 348 A.2d 681, 32 Conn. Super. Ct. 227, 32 Conn. Supp. 227, 1975 Conn. Super. LEXIS 180
Judges: Rubinow
Filed Date: 10/30/1975
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On July 2, 1956, the plaintiff's decedent, Marion Page Warner, transferred to Allan H. Page certain premises on Ansonia Road in Woodbridge. The deed recited that it was being made "for the purpose of having the said above described premises immediately reconveyed to myself and to Arthur P. Warner and Margaret W. Rice" in survivorship. On the same day, Allan H. Page retransferred the premises in survivorship to Marion Warner and her children, Arthur P. Warner and Margaret W. Rice. Marion Warner died on August 2, 1974. On May 19, 1975, the Probate Court for the district of New Haven entered a decree that the "real estate transferred to [Arthur P. Warner and Margaret W. Rice] July 2, 1956, is wholly taxable as a transfer under the provisions of Section
The evidence establishes that when Marion Warner and her husband were both alive, she and he had jointly occupied the premises and that she continued to occupy it after his death. After the conveyances of July 2, 1956, and until her death, she continued to have complete dominion over the premises, paid the taxes on it, occupied it, and maintained it as her own, without any recognition by her of any rights or duties of her children concerning it, and she possessed and enjoyed the premises to the exclusion of any possession or enjoyment of it on the part of either of her co-owners of record.
The executor claims that following the conveyances Marion Warner and her children had, in the language of the first sentence of General Statutes §
Section
Although the transfer initiated by Marion Warner had the effect of creating a present tenancy in survivorship with her children,2 the creation of that tenancy was coupled with an intention on her part that the "enjoyment or possession" of the interests vesting in her children was to be deferred until after her death. That intention was, of course, not evidenced by any declarations in the deed, but that is immaterial because the critical element is the intention of the transferor, not what is formally recited in the grant. An obvious example of a variance between the formal language in the grant and the intention of the transferor is an unqualified transfer of a fee interest coupled, however, with an oral agreement between the parties that the transferor is to have an exclusive life use of the transferred property. In the present case, although there was no such collateral agreement expressed, the intention of not only the transferor but also the *Page 231 transferees was clearly that the latter were not to have either possession or enjoyment of the premises until at or after the death of their mother.
Accordingly, the decree of the Probate Court for the district of New Haven should be affirmed.
The appeal is dismissed.