Citation Numbers: 64 How. Pr. 213
Judges: Vorst
Filed Date: 12/15/1882
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/8/2024
The question to be determined in this action is, whether the defendant Isabella Boyd, the widow of the testator, can claim dower in the real estate of her husband, as well as the specific provision made in her favor by her husband’s will.
The will does not in terms declare that what the husband specifically gives to his wife is to be taken by her in lieu of dower, nor was it necessary to have been so explicitly stated, if the will discloses a clear intention on the husband’s part that his widow should not take the provision made for her in the will in addition to dower.
And if the provision expressly made for her by her husband’s will is wholly inconsistent with a right in the widow to demand a third of the land to be set off to her, she would be put to her election.
As dower is a legal right, such result could only be reached through a necessary implication clearly arising from the terms of the will, and the disposition thereby made. There Can be no question as to the general rule upon this subject, but its application to the facts of particular cases has heretofore given occasion to apparent conflict.
This question is discussed in Adsit agt. Adsit (2 Johns,
But, upon consideration, I must hold that the caáes of Savage agt. Burnham (17 N. Y., 561) and Gibson agt. Ketchum (32 N. Y., 319) are placed upon grounds which must dispose of this case adversely to the widow’s claim to the provision of the will in addition to dower.
The executors .are clothed by the second clause of the will with a power of sale of all the testator’s estate, real and personal. This power is placed in such form, and is accompanied with such duties, as to work an equitable conversion of the realty into personalty, at the death of the testator, which it would he difficult to accomplish fully according to the general scope of the will, in the -face of a claim insisted upon by the widow, that a portion of the real property shall be set apart for her dower right.
But such difficulty might not in itself prove to be wholly insurmountable, nor be regarded as inconsistent with such claim (Wood agt. Wood, 5 Paige, 596).
But the executors are, in legal effect, invested with the title ■ to all the property. They are directed, until the property is sold in pursuance of the direction of the will, to pay to the widow of the testator, from the rents and incomes of the estate, the sum of fifteen hundred dollars per annum; but if such rents and incomes prove less than that amount, after paying taxes and assessments, the full amount of the income of the estate, after paying such taxes and assessments, is directed to be paid by the executors to her, for her support, and that of the testator’s infant son William.
The direction to pay over the rents and profits involves a power to collect and receive, and under the case of Gibson agt. Ketchum (32 N. Y., 319) such power over the real estate, and its rents and profits, invests the executors, as trustees, with the legal title; and such facts in connection with the
The remainder of the proceeds are otherwise absolutely disposed of by the testator.
The conclusion reached, therefore, is that the widow must make her election, as she cannot take both dower and the provision made for her by the will.