Citation Numbers: 36 Misc. 262, 73 N.Y.S. 304
Judges: Scott
Filed Date: 11/15/1901
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
On May 24, 1887, John Henry Hauschildt died, leaving a mother, a widow, a daughter, Rebecca C. Tobelmann, wife of August Tobelmann, and two brothers, Frederick and Christopher Hauschildt. He left a will of which the plaintiff is the sole surviving executor, and it is to obtain a construction of the seventh clause of that will that this action is brought. Among the property disposed of by the testator was certain real estate in Houston street, upon which he conducted a hardware business. By the fourth clause of his will he gave this property to his executors in trust to collect the rents and profits, and after providing for taxes and expenses to pay over the balance of the income in -the proportion of two-thirds to his wife while she lived and remained his widow, and one-third to his daughter Rebecca during her life. After making provision for the payment of the income- in the event that the wife died before the daughter, or the daughter before the wife, he devised the lots, after the death of both his wife and his daughter, to the children of his said daughter, or to the heirs of such children in fee simple absolute, authorizing his executors, for the purpose of making division among the daughter’s children, to sell and convey the land. Since the testator’s death the city of New York has condemned and taken the premises on Houston street as a school site, and the plaintiff has received therefor and now holds the amount of the award. It is as to its disposition that a question has arisen under the seventh clause of the will, which reads as follows:
“ Seventh. My hardware business conducted by me at No. 456 East Houston street, and my factory business conducted by me in the rear of Hos. 452 and 456 East Houston street in the city of New York together with the stock in trade, fixtures, machinery and tools connected therewith I give and bequeath to my brother Frederick Hauschildt and my daughter Rebecca C. Tobelmann, to be carried on by my said brother and my daughter’s husband August Tobelmann and they are to pay my exec
It is claimed by Frederick Hauschildt, the broker to whom, conjointly with the testator’s daughter, the business is bequeathed, that the clause above quoted gives to the legatees of the business an estate or interest in the land equivalent to a lease at the rental above stated, for the lifetime of Rebecca Tobelmann, at whose death, by the terms of the fourth clause of the will the title of the property is to pass out of the executor and vest absolutely in the children of said Rebecca, and since this alleged leasehold estate has been destroyed by the exercise of the right of eminent domain by the city, and money substituted for the land in the hands of the executors, Frederick Hauschildt further claims that he and Rebecca C. Tobelmann are to receive out of the award such sum as shall represent the value of their alleged leasehold estate or interest. The will, reading all its clauses together, shows that it was the desire of the testator that his wife and daughter should enjoy the income of the property during their lives, and that the daughter’s children should ultimately own the property absolutely. It was clearly his further desire that his brother and his daughter should continue his business in the premises in which he himself had conducted it. The will, however, does not contemplate and makes no specific provision for the contingency which has now arisen, and which makes the entire fulfillment of the testator’s desires impracticable. It is to be observed that while the fourth clause of the will makes a complete disposition of the property, the seventh clause does not, in specific terms, give to the brother and daughter the right of occupying, or impose upon them the obligation to occupy the premises in the prosecution of the business, and even though it may be said that he inferentially gave such
The form of decree may be settled on two days’ notice.
Judgment accordingly.