Citation Numbers: 51 A.D. 310, 64 N.Y.S. 1029
Judges: Hirschberg
Filed Date: 5/15/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
Augustus Holly Haight died on the ,10th day of April, 1879, leaving a will and codicil which were admitted to probate in Orange county on the eighth day of May following. He named Louis. Haight, Edward Haight and James G. Roe executors and trustees, and letters testamentary were duly issued to them. They there-' after tiled an account in the Surrogate’s Court, and a decree was rendered on such accounting on the 10th day of November, 1880. Louis Haight died in 1894 and James G. Roe in 1896, and Edward Haight has since acted as sole trustee. He has presented an intermediate account of his proceedings, and the same has been settled . by the surrogate of Orange county in a decree dated January 23, 1899. The testator left no widow and but one child, Benjamin Haight, and these appeals are taken by" Benjamin from the last decree, and from an order denying his motion to amend and modify the first decree in so far as it limited his right to the income of the estate to the sum of $2,000 per annum, and to require the payment to him of all of said income.
Among" other bequests the testator gives to his executors the sum of $8,000 in trust for his sister, Sarah J. Smith, during life, and the • sum of $8,000 in trust for Maria Crassous during life, the principal in each instance to revert to the residue of the estate on the death
No disposition is made by the will of the annual income which shall be in excess of $2,060 during the life of Benjamin Haight’s wife and the continuance of their marriage relations; but on the death of the son leaving a child or children surviving, the executors are directed to apply the income to the maintenance, support and education of such child or children during minority, and to pay over the principal equally, to each child on the attainment of its majority; and should the son die without leaving a child surviving and attaining the age of twenty-one years, then the estate is to be paid in equal shares to the .children of the testator’s brother and sister.
Benjamin Haight married on the 21st day of August, 1877, and the will was made two days afterward. At the time of the first settlement and for several years afterward the income of the residue did not amount to $2,000 a year; but .during a few years past it has-been slightly in excess of that' sum, and the excess -is expected to-increase in consequence of the termination of the trusts for the benefit of the testator’s sister and of Maria Crassous. The former' died July 2, 1891, and the latter January 16, 1899, having each received the income of the respective trusts in full, without any deduction for commissions. By the decree of November 10, 1880, the executors and trustees-were directed to pay the income arising from the residue of the estate, less commissions, to Benjamin Haight t'o the amount of $2,000 per year, in the words of the decree “ as long as the present wife of the said Benjamin Haight shall live, or as long
The appellant insists that the provision of his father’s will which makes his enjoyment of the whole of the income dependent on the termination of his marriage relations is void as in contravention of good morals and public policy, and that he may now raise the question notwithstanding the decree of November 10,1880. I have concluded that he is correct on both points.
As to the first point, the condition must be held void if its manifest object was to induce Benjamin Haight to take such steps as might be necessary in- order that he should cease to be lawfully bound to his wife as a husband; in other words, to obtain, or provoke and so occasion, a legal divorce or separation, either in this State or in some other jurisdiction. If any other and innocent construction can be placed upon the condition, it is of course to be adopted. But the will was made directly after the marriage of-' testator’s son, and the condition must be regarded as made in hos-. tility to that union, and in the hope of destroying it in so far as that" object could be accomplished by offering money by way of a premium or reward. It is true that the condition is not in so many words that the son shall procure or suffer a divorce in order to entitle him to the entire income, but the precise effect of such an express condition is produced by a provision whicn gives him the entire income when such a divorce is procured or suffered. If the former offends public morals and contravenes public policy, it is difficult to see why the latter does not also. “ It is a general principle, well settled,” said Mr. Justice Ingraham in Wright v. Mayer (47 App. Div. 604, 606), “ that conditions annexed to a gift, the tendency of which is to induce the husband and wife to live separate, or to loe divorced, are, upon grounds of public policy and public morals, void.” In Wilkinson v. Wilkinson (L. R. [12 Eq.] 604) the testatrix gave- the
In the light of these decisions and the many eases of 'similar' import cited in the opinions, and in view of the mischief apprehended, I can but conclude that there is no difference in spirit and principle between a gift made expressly dependent upon the procurement, of a divorce,: and one which is made payable' only in the event of a divorce. The oneinvites the divorce directly and in terms, while
I have found no .cases to the contrary of the principle stated, but in Born v. Horstmann (80 Cal. 452) and in Thayer v. Spear (58 Vt. 327) provisions similar to the one under consideration were held valid, where made for the benefit of a wife to meet the deprivation of support incident to widowhood, or to the legal termination of her marital relations. In each case increased financial provision was made by will for a daughter in the event of her becoming a widow or otherwise becoming lawfully separated from her husband. The courts found the intention to be in each case only to provide for the daughter in case she were deprived of her husband’s support and made dependent upon her own resources, whether by his death or as the result of a lawful divorce or separation. The manifest object of the provision was not to induce or invite a divorce or separation, but to provide for the widow or the divorced wife, as the case might be, in the event of the happening of éither calamity. In the California case the court said (p. 459): “ Not only may there be a good and sufficient reason * * * for providing ■ that the legatee shall not have the bulk of the property until she is deprived of the support of a husband, but there may be the best of reasons for placing the same in such condition that she cannot be improperly induced by a worthless or profligate husband to squander it, while she continues to be his wife, and, it may be, under his influence and control. We think such a condition in a will is not only valid, but that, under certain circumstances, it may be just and commendable.” In ^he Vermont case the court said (p. 329): “ The first object is to ascertain, if possible, what the intention of the testatrix was ; and we find no .difficulty in reaching the conclusion that it was to have .her estate dispose.) of just as it has been by the Probate Court. It was a wise and prudent provision to make for her daughter. While she should remain a wife, her husband would be under obligation to support her, and hence the income, only, was absolutely left her during the continuance of that -relation; but when, she should cease
If the condition is void, it follows that Benjamin Haight is entitled to the entire income. This is so whether the condition be regarded as precedent or subsequent. The whole estate appears to be invested in personal securities. A subsequent void condition could not, of course, destroy an estate already vested. Assuming, however, that the condition is precedent in its character, and would, therefore, work a forfeiture of the gift in excess of $2,000 annually, at the common law, yet in equity and under the ■ civil law, though the condition is void the gift is good! “With respect to legacies out.of personal estate, the civil law, which in this respect has been adopted by courts of equity, differs in some respects from the common law in its treatment of conditions precedent; the rule of the civil law being that where a condition precedent is' originally impossible * * * or is illegal as in volving malum prohibitum, the bequest is absolute, just as if the condition bad been subsequent.” (2 Jarm. Wills [6th Am. ed.], 15. See, also, 2 Williams Exrs. [7th Am. ed.] 1261.)' “ When, however, the illegality of the condition does not concern any thing malum i?i se, but is merely against a rule or the policy of law, the condition only is void, an4 the bequest single and good.” (1 Roper Leg. 757.)
As to the second point, I do not regard the decree of 1880 as constituting a binding adjudication against the appellant. On the question now before the court there was not and could not have been any adjudication at all. The proceeding was an accounting by the executors, and the duty of the surrogate was confined • to a judicial determination and 'settlement of the accounts, and the
The remaining questions relate to the commissions and allowances. The trustee has not only paid to Benjamin Haight the income payable to him under the terms of the decree of November 10, 1880, without deducting commissions, but has paid all the income arising from the investments made for the benefit of Sarah ,J. Smith and Maria Crassous respectively, to the. beneficiaries
As to the allowances other than to the special guardian the provisions of sections 2561 and 2562 of the Code of Civil Procedure must control. The surrogate should fix the costs and disbursements of the trustee in accordance with the requirements of these sections. (See Matter of Welling, post, p. 355.)
The management of the estate has been admirable and beneficial. The trustee has followed the adjudication' in .the Surrogate’s Court, and has lost commissions by reason of a technical rule and a liberality by which the appellant has benefited. There is no injustice, therefore, in directing that the matter of the accounting should be remitted to the surrogate for resettlement in accordance with this opinion, with costs and disbursements of this appeal to all parties payable from the fund.
The apq>eal from the order will be dismissed, with costs and disbursements to the special guardian, and the appeal from the decree remitted to the Surrogate’s Court of Orange county for disposition" in accoidance with this opinion, with costs and disbursements to all parties payable out of the estate.
All concurred.
Appeal from order of Surrogate’s Court of Orange county-dismissed, without costs, excepting to the special guardian, and decree in proceedings for the judicial settlement of the intermediate account reversed, • and proceedings remitted to the Surrogate’s Court of Orange county for disposition in accordance with the opinion of Hirschberg, J., with costs and disbursements of this appeal to all parties payable out- of the estate. ■