Judges: Lehman, Cabdozo, Kellogg
Filed Date: 1/10/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
Brace M. Gallien left a will disposing of an estate of the value of from $150,000 to $200,000. He was survived by his wife and by a son of unsound mind. The son had been cared for by one Mabel Crans, who is described as a foster daughter, but who was never adopted. She survived the testator only four days. By the will, which was written on a printed form, the whole estate, after payment of debts, is given to a trustee in trust "from the income thereof to pay monthly to our foster daughter, Mabel Crans, so long as she may live, the sum of fifty dollars ($50) per month for her personal use. The balance of the income of my estate is to be paid to my wife Ida L. Gallien as she may desire it. If my said wife, should be survived by our son Brace Goodwin Gallien, then the said balance of income or so much thereof as may be necessary is to be expended for his proper support and maintenance." Immediately *Page 199 after this gift there is one of interests in remainder: "When the above payments shall cease by reason of the deaths of the beneficiaries mentioned, I direct my said trustee to pay the following bequests in the order mentioned dividing the residue of my estate into six equal parts." One-sixth is given to a brother; one-sixth to another brother; one-sixth in trust for a sister; the residue to a church and to Wesleyan University. The surrogate held that the trusts for the wife, the son and the foster daughter suspend the power of alienation and the absolute ownership for more than two lives in being at the death of the testator and that the entire will is void. In his view, the whole estate must have been kept within the trust if Mabel Crans had survived the other beneficiaries, though the income to be paid to her would be only $50 a month ($600 a year) out of a yearly income of $10,000 or more. The preservation of an idle trust might be incongruous with reason. Even so, the incongruity was unavoidable in view of the language of the will. The Appellate Division affirmed by a divided court.
"When the above payments shall cease by reason of the deaths of the beneficiaries mentioned," what is undisposed of shall be divided. The question is whether division is to be made when the payments severally cease and the deaths severally occur, or is to be postponed until all the deaths shall have occurred and all the payments shall have ceased. We reach the first of these results if we hold that the word "when" at the beginning of of the sentence may fairly be interpreted as equivalent to "as." Equivalent they often are (Murray, Oxford Dictionary, s.v. As, subd. III, 16; s.v. When, subd. II, c). The will in that view is to be construed as if it read: "As the above payments shall cease (or shall severally cease) by reason of the deaths of the beneficiaries mentioned," what is undisposed of shall be divided. Such a reading has support in the evidences of intention furnished by the will itself as well as in settled principles *Page 200
of testamentary construction. One of the best known of those principles is that if two or more constructions are reasonably possible, the one that will sustain the validity of the will is to be preferred, generally speaking, to the one that will defeat it (Roe v. Vingut,
We hold, accordingly, that "when" in the sentence defining the time of distribution is equivalent to "as." If the will were so phrased, it would be the duty of the trustee, upon the death of wife and son with the foster daughter living, to retain within the trust an amount adequate to make provision for the monthly payments of fifty dollars, and to make division of the residue. A severance of the trust to that extent would then be an implied command (Matter of Horner,
We see no difficulty in determining the proportion of the estate to be set apart as sufficient to yield the monthly payments (Bradhurst v. Field,
We are told that the will, if read as directing a division when payments severally cease, would fail even then to express the wish of the testator. The argument is made that immediate division of the principal would be necessary in that event if the wife died before the son. No such result would follow. The income would then be carried over to the survivor by the express mandate of the will. Not till the death of the survivor would the time arrive when the payments to the beneficiaries as directed by the testator could be said to have ceased as *Page 203 to any portion of the trust estate. Subtle refinements are unnecessary to give support to that construction. What is needed is nothing more unusual than a common sense appraisal of probabilities and meanings.
We hold that the trust for the foster daughter fails, that as to the capital reasonably necessary to produce the income payable to her, distribution is to be made upon the basis of intestacy, and that the trust is valid as to the residue.
Questions may arise hereafter in respect of the validity of some or all of the gifts to take effect as remainders when the trust is at an end. None of these questions was considered by the courts below. We leave them open now, to be dealt with hereafter by the surrogate or the Supreme Court if it shall be found expedient to answer them (Matter of Farmers' Loan Trust Co.,
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the proceeding remitted to the Surrogate's Court for the entry of a decree construing the will in accordance with this opinion, costs to be allowed to all parties appearing and filing briefs in this court, payable out of the estate.