Judges: Putnam
Filed Date: 12/3/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
We are called upon to review the decree of the surrogate of Warren county stating and settling the accounts of Stephen Brown and Dwight Merriman, trustees under the will of Abraham Wing, deceased, in which decree the surrogate gave a judicial construction to the provisions of said instrument. The will bequeathed to Frances A. Wing, wife of the testator, his mansion house and lot, and certain personal property therein, during the time she shall remain his widow, and also an annuity of $3,000; to his daughter Mary W. Merriman, a life estate in a farm in Michigan, with remainder to her children; and the rest of his property to his executors, in trust for the uses and purposes in the will mentioned. The instrument contained the following provisions:
“Fourth. I hereby authorize and direct my executors to apply and appropriate the avails and proceeds of said property and income therefrom to the uses and purposes following, to wit: 1st. To pay my funeral expenses and all my just debts. 2nd. To pay the above-mentioned annuity to my wife. * * * 3rd. To furnish whatever money may be necessary, in the discretion of my executors, for the reasonable care and support of my sister Mary Ann Wing, from time to time, as she shall need the same, and also to pay her funeral expenses. 4th. To pay over all the balance of the income and increase of my estate, except the expenses of the execution of this trust, including taxes and all other legal charges thereon (which are to be first paid), annually, until the death or marriage of said Frances A., to my said daughters Mary W. Merriman and Ella W. Parker, share and share alike, for their own use and benefit, respectively, and in case of the decease of either of said daughters during the widowhood of said Frances A., as aforesaid, then and in such, case to pay the half share of said income to the children of such daughter which would have belonged and been paid to the deceased daughter, had she survived; and, in case of the death of both of said daughters during the widowhood of said Frances A., then such income shall be paid and belong to the children of said daughters, respectively, one-half of said income to the children of Mary W., and the other half to the children of Ella W., from and after the death of each of said daughters, respectively. Fifth. I direct my executors, on the death, or, if she shall marry, then on the marriage, of said Frances A., to convert said mansion house and lot, and any other real estate remaining undisposed of, if any, into personal property, so that my whole estate shall become personal property, and, if my sister Mary Ann shall then be living, to set apart the sum of ($5,000) five thousand dollars therefrom, and invest the same as a fund, out of which, and the income therefrom, my executors shall provide for her support and maintenance during her lifetime, as above directed, and funeral expenses; and whatever may not be used and appropriated for that purpose I give and bequeath as follows: If my daughters shall be both living, one-half to each of them; if one daughter only shall be then living, one-half to her and the other half to the children of the deceased daughter; and, if both daughters shall be deceased, then one-half to the children of one daughter and the other half to the children of the other daughter, and the balance (after deducting said $5,000), and the whole if said Mary Ann shall not survive the death or marriage of said Frances A., shall be divided into two equal parts, share and share alike, by my executors, and be disposed of as follows: 1st. If neither of my said daughters shall be then living, one of said half parts shall be paid to the children of said Mary W., and the other half to the children of said Ella W. 2nd. If one of said daughters shall be then living, and the other deceased, then one of said half parts shall be paid to the children of the deceased daughter, and the other half part shall be invested and kept invested by my executors during the lifetime of such surviving daughter, and the income therefrom shall be annually*133 paid over to her, and on her decease the principal shall be paid over to her children. 3rd. If both my said daughters shall be then living, then one of said half parts shall be set apart for and assigned to the children of Mary W., and kept invested by my executors during her lifetime, and the income thereof paid over annually to said Mary W., and on her decease the principal of such half part shall be paid over to her children; and the other half part shall be set apart for and assigned to the children of Ella W., and kept invested by my executors during her lifetime, and the income thereof paid over annually to said Ella W., and on her decease the principal of such half part shall be paid to her children. It being my intention and will that my said daughters shall have and enjoy absolutely for their own property during their lives, respectively, each one-half of the whole income of my estate from the date of my decease (subject, however, to the provisions and bequests in favor of my wife and sister, and all taxes, the expenses of executing, the trusts herein created, and all other legal charges, and also exempting the real estate and use thereof devised to said Mary W. and her children), but no part of the principal (except said §5,000, or the balance thereof which may remain after the decease of my sister Mary Ann), and that the principal (except said §5,000, or the balance thereof unexpended, and said devises in fee) shall be equally divided between the children of said daughters absolutely for their own property, subject, however, to the above-provided life estate in the same,—one-half to the children of Mary W., and the other half to the children of Ella W. And the receipts of said Mary W. and Ella W., respectively, for such income, shall be a sufficient discharge and vouehei to my executors.”
Testator died on the 13th day of June, 1873, leaving surviving him his widow, Frances A., and a daughter, Mary W., wife of Dwight Merriman, and Tracy D. Merriman, Nellie W. Merriman (now Ella W. Sharp), and Howard L. Merriman, children of said Mary W. and Dwight Merriman; also his daughter Ella W. Parker, and her two children, Frederick T. and Frank W. Taylor. All of said children were born before the execution of the will. The questions submitted to us pertain exclusively to the one-half of the estate bequeathed to Mary W. Merriman and her children. Tracy D. Merriman, one of the children of said Mary W., died intestate, never having married, on January 19, 1880. Mary W. Merriman died June 10, 1892, and her husband, Dwight Merriman, was appointed temporary administrator of her estate. Howard L. Merriman, another child of said Mary W., died August 4, 1893, and is represented by William H. Withington, as administrator. Hence, of the family of Mary W., appellant Ella W. Sharp, her daughter, and Dwight Merriman, her husband, only remain. The surrogate determined that on the death of testator the three children of his daughter Mary took a vested interest in the principal of one-half of the estate, and that one-third of the net income thereof, after the death of said Mary W., belonged to said Ella W. Sharp, one-third to Withington, as administrator of Howard L. Merriman, and one-third to Dwight Merriman, individually, as father and next of kin of Tracy W. Merriman, deceased. The appellant Sharp contends that under the provisions of the will the principal of the estate bequeathed to the children of Mary W. will not vest until the death of the widow of testator; the income thereon did not vest until the death of Mary W.; that she, said appellant, as survivor of the children of Mary W., will take the whole of said principal; that the income in the will directed to be paid to the children of Mary W. in consequence of the death of Tracy and his mother, after her
It will be seen by the above-quoted provisions of the will that the legal estate of the trustees ends, as to the one-half part of the estate bequeathed to Mrs. Merriman and her children, with the life of the widow and the daughter Mary. On the termination of these lives the trustees are to divide the estate, and their legal interest therein ceases. Hence, subject to the estate of the trustees under the will, there is a remainder not bequeathed to them, and which, unless vested in the grandchildren on the death of the testator, remained, during the continuance of the estate of the trustees, unvested. In re Tienken, 131 N. Y. 391, 30 N. E. 109; Stevenson v. Lesley, 70 N. Y. 512; Goebel v. Wolf, 113 N. Y. 405, 21 N. E. 388. There are certain welbsettled principles which it is proper to bear in mind at the outset of our investigation. One is that the law favors the vesting of estates. A remainder is not to be considered as contingent in any case where it may be held vested consistently with the intent of the testator. Moore v. Lyons, 25 Wend. 119-144. But, while the law favors the vesting of legacies as soon as possible after the death of a testator, the intention of the deceased, as deducible from the language and provisions of the will, must be carried out. Bowditch v. Ayrault, 138 N. Y. 222-229, 34 N. E. 514. It has also been held that where a remainder is bequeathed, the enjoyment of which is postponed, time enters into the substance of the gift, when its existence depends upon a contingency that may or may not happen; but where the only contingency is a death certain to occur, and the legacies are known and fixed, a postponing clause should be regarded as relating only to the period of actual enjoyment. In re Young, 145 N. Y. 535-539, 40 N. E. 226; Bowditch v. Ayrault, 138 N. Y. 229, 230, 34 N. E. 514; Moore v. Lyons, 25 Wend. 143, 144.
It is urged by appellant that in the will under consideration there is no gift by testator to the children of his daughters, but by the direction to the executors to pay, or to divide and pay, on the death or marriage of his widow, and on the termination of the life estate of the mother, and hence that the principal of the estate bequeathed to the grandchildren will not vest until the death of Frances A. Wing. But the rule invoked by the appellant is not inflexible, and is subordinate to the primary rule of construction that the intent of the testator, as deducible from the whole will, shall govern. Goebel v. Wolf, 113 N. Y. 405-412, 21 N. E. 388; In re Young, 145 N. Y. 538, 40 N. E. 226; Bowditch v. Ayrault, supra; In re Seebeck, 140 N. Y. 246, 35 N. E. 429. It becomes our duty, therefore, to carefully examine the language and provisions of the will under consideration, with a view of arriving at the intent of the testator as to the vesting of the estate bequeathed to his grandchildren. After a careful consideration of the latter part of the fifth clause of the will, and the other provisions and directions therein contained, and bearing in mind the principle above adverted to,—that a remainder is not to be considered as contingent in any case where it
“It being my intention and will that my said daughters shall have and enjoy absolutely for their own property during their lives, respectively, each one-half of the whole income of my estate from the date of my decease, * * "* and that the principal * * * shall be equally divided between the children-of said daughters absolutely for their own property, subject, however, to the above-provided life estate in the same.”
This language imports a present and direct gift of the said principal to his grandchildren, subject to the life estate of their mothers therein, although the enjoyment of such principal, under other provisions contained in the will, is postponed until the termination of the estate of the trustee. The clause above quoted has, we think, the same effect as if the testator had said:
“I will, devise, and bequeath the income of said principal sum to my daughters, one-half to each during their respective lives; and, subject to such life-estates, I will said principal to their children, to be equally divided between them.”
If this construction of the language of the instrument is correct, the case is within the principle that, where a will evinces an intent to make a direct gift to legatees, a direction for payment after the happening of a certain event does not prevent its vesting at the death of the testator. In re Mahan, 98 N. Y. 372-376; Warner v. Durant, 76 N. Y. 133-136; Moore v. Lyons, supra.
But assuming that the construction placed upon the language of the will by appellant,—that it contains no gift to the children of his daughter Mary, except by the direction to his trustees to pay at a future time,—yet we think the instrument indicates the intent of the testator that the estate bequeathed to his said grandchildren should vest on his decease. In the first place, the language used by the testator, • above referred to, in which he declares his will that his said grandchildren shall have the principal of one-half of his estate, subject to the life estate of their mothers, evinces an intent to make a present and absolute gift to them. Certainly the language used by the testator is not inconsistent with the vesting of the remainder on his death in his said grandchildren, and hence the estate bequeathed to them should not be deemed contingent. Moore v. Lyons, supra. As we have seen, the intent of the testator as to the vesting of his estate, as collected from the provisions of the will, must be carried out. In the clause above quoted he de
“There is nothing on the face of the will to indicate that the testator contemplated the death of any of his children during minority, or that any of them might not take the equal one-fourth share of his estate on the final division. The gift of the ultimate estate is not, in terms, to his children living at the time of the division, or to the survivors of his children, but the division is directed to be made among ‘my children, share and share alike.’ Words of survivorship were not necessary, if the gift, by construction of law, was to the children who should be living at the time of the division. But it would have been very natural that words of survivorship should have been inserted to emphasize his intention, if the testator had intended that only children surviving at that time should be entitled to his estate.”
Those remarks of the learned judge apply to this case. Here the testator declared his intent and will to be that the principal set apart should be divided equally between the children of his said daughters absolutely for their own property, subject to the life estates of the mothers. There are no words of survivorship. The gift is not made to those children at the termination of the life of
“Time may fairly be said, to enter into the substance of a gift when the existence of such a gift depends upon a contingency which may or may not happen; but where the only contingency is a death certain to occur, and the legatees are known and fixed, it is more natural to regard a postponed division as relating to the period of actual enjoyment, where there are other words in the will evincing an intent to make the gift.”
So, in this case, there are words indicating an intent of the testator to make a present gift, as we have seen. The legatees are known and certain. The only contingency claimed to prevent the vesting of the estate is the death of the widow, which is certain to occur.
Many late cases decided in our court of last resort might be cited which tend to support our views in regard to the vesting of the estate in question in the grandchildren of testator. In G-oebel v. Wolf, supra, the will gave an estate, consisting of real and personal property, to trustees, providing that one-half of the income thereof be paid to the wife during her life, and, after some provisions unnecessary to sta.te, contained the following direction to the trustees:
“Immediately upon the arrival of my youngest child at the age of twenty-one years, in case my said wife shall not then be living, to divide all my estate, real and personal, and the accumulation of interest, equally among my children, share and share alike, after deducting all advances made as above quoted to any of my children, so that each of my children shall have and receive an equal share of my estate.”
There was in the will no gift, in terms, to the children of the testator. It appeared that one of the four infant children living at the time of testator’s death had since died, under age, and without issue. The court held that the gift was not to the children as a class, but each, on the death of testator, took a vested remainder in one-fourth of the residuary estate, dependent upon the termination of the trust, and that the share of the one who died, with the accumulation of interest therefrom, descended to his heirs or next of kin, according to the nature of the property; also, that such descendants were entitled to any income that may hereafter accrue during the trust period. In Bowditch v. Ayrault, 138 N. Y. 222, 34 N. E. 514, the will devised the residue of the estate to the trustee and directed him—
“As fast as practicable to divide two-thirds of said residuary estate between all the children of my brother John Ayrault and my sister Mary Smith, widow of Sparrow Smith, and of my deceased' brothers Nicholas Ayrault, Boswell Ayrault and Lyman Ayrault, and of my deceased sister Emily Griffith, who may be living at the time of my decease, and to the descendants of such of said children as may be deceased when said estate, or any part thereof, is distributed; said two-thirds of said residuary estate to be divided between all such children and their descendants equally, share and share alike; all the children of each deceased person to receive, collectively, the portion to which their parent would, if living at such distribution, be entitled under this provision.”
“The gift is, however, in substance, to the children living at his decease; and we think it then vested, subject to be divested by the death of any child before distribution, and by the substitution of his or her descendants, if any were left. If there were no such descendants, then the property remained vested in the child, and, upon his death, formed part of his estate, subject to be disposed of as the law or his will provided.”
There was no gift to the children of the testator, or to their descendants, except by the direction to the trustee to divide the two-thirds as above specified. The gift was to the trustee, who held, under the will, the legal estate. It will be observed that in the case cited—the bequest being to the children of the testator and descendants of those who may have died, to be divided equally, share and share alike, between them—the court, in effect, held that each of such children, on the death of the testator, became seised of a share of the estate, which, on his death before distribution, formed a part of his estate. In Re Seebeck, 140 N. Y. 241, 35 N. E. 429, the testator devised an estate to his sister for life, with remainder to her children in equal shares. It was held that the children became vested, on the decease of testator, distributively, and not as a class. See, also, In re Tienken, supra; In re Young, supra; Moore v. Lyons, 25 Wend. 119; Stevenson v. Lesley, 70 N. Y. 512.
Counsel for appellant Sharp urges that upon the naming of a class as “cMIdren,” in a devise or bequest without words indicating that they are to take in severalty, as referring to the individuals composing the class, by name, numbers, or providing that the gift shall be “divided equally,” “share and share alike,” or similar expression, or other provisions of the will indicating an intent that they are to take distributively, they take as a class, and the survivor, at the time the gift vests, takes the whole, and cites many authorities to sustain his contention. If the conclusion reached by us is correct,—that the will in question evinces the intent of the testator to make a gift to the children of his daughter Mary, not contingent upon their surviving the widow, but a gift vesting on his decease,—the authorities so cited by appellant are not applicable to this case, nor are they in conflict with the late case to which we have called attention. The gift to the children of Mary W. Merriman vested on the death of testator. The three then surviving took the estate. The estate being so vested in them, they necessarily took it as tenants in common or distributively. It requires no citation of authority to show that where there is in a will a bequest to several children, who become vested with the property on the death of testator, said children, being thus vested, take distributively, unless a contrary intent on the part of the testator appears in the will. No intent appears in the will under consideration that the children of Mary W. should take as a class, or otherwise than distributively. See In re Seebeck, Bowditch v. Ayrault, Goebel v. Wolf, supra.
The remaining question to be considered is as to the disposition of the income of the estate since the death of Mary W. Merriman,
It follows that the decree of the surrogate should be affirmed, with costs against the appellants.
MA.YHAM, P. J., concurs in result. HERRICK, J., concurs.