Judges: Seabury
Filed Date: 7/11/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
This action is brought by the plaintiff as substituted trustee under the will of Jane V. C. Cooper, deceased, for a judicial settlement of its accounts as trustee of
Jane V. C. Cooper, the testatrix, died April 4th, 1890. She left her surviving no husband, descendant or father or mother, but as her .heirs at law and next of kin, her three sisters, Cornelia Beekman De Peyster, Elizabeth De Peyster and Catherine Augusta De Peyster, and her niece, Mary B. Bailey, all of whom have since died. The appellants are the personal representatives of the deceased next of kin. Elizabeth Newton, for whose benefit in part the residuary estate was directed to be devoted, was the first cousin of the deceased. At the time of the execution of the. will, on May 28th, 1889, Elizabeth Newton was forty-nine years of age and had been a widow since 1872. She had two sons, Albert L. Newton, then about thirty years old, and Henry J. Newton, then about twenty years old. Elizabeth Newton never remarried and died on May 16th, 1913. Prior to that date her two sons, Albert L. Newton and Henry J. Newton, had each died without issue, but both at the time of their death were over twenty-one years of age. The < respondents are the personal representatives of the said Elizabeth Newton, Albert L. Newton and Henry J. Newton.
The residuary clause of the will of the testatrix which it is necessary to construe in this action is as follows:
“ Thirteenth. All the rest, residue -and remainder of my estate, I give, devise and bequeath to my Executor hereinafter named in trust to collect and receive the rents, issues and profits thereof and to convert the realty into money at public or private sale and at such time or times and upon such terms as in his judgment may appear for the best interests of my estate,' to divide the net proceeds thereof, together with the personalty of my residuary estate into two equal shares and to set apart one of such shares for the benefit of Elizabeth Newton, of Fredonia, in the State of New York, and the other of such shares for the*384 benefit of Dorns Bailey, Florence Bailey and Mary De Peyster Bailey, three of the children of my niece, Mary B. Bailey, and to invest said shares upon Bond and Mortgage of otherwise unincumbered real estate, or upon other lawful securities, with liberty to change the investment or investments at his discretion for any other of the kind above described and to collect and receive the income thereof and to dispose of the same and of the principal of such shares as follows, to wit: First. To pay over to said Elizabeth Newton the net annual income of the share so set apart for her benefit, for and during the term of her natural life and from her decease to her children in equal shares until they shall respectively attain the age of twenty-one years, and as each of such children shall reach that age to pay over to Min- or her an equal proportionate part of the principal of such share and of the net accrued income thereof. Second. To pay the net •annual income of the share so set apart for the children of Mary B. Bailey or for the benefit of said children respectively in equal shares until the youngest of said three children shall reach the age of twenty-one years or die, whichever event shall first take place, and thereupon to distribute such share with all accrued income thereof to and among said three children the survivor or the survivors of them equally, share and share alike, the issue of a deceased child to take the share to which its parent would have been entitled if living.”
The trust referred to in this clause for the benefit of the children of Mary B. Bailey has been administered and accounted for and is not in dispute in this action. The learned courts below have held that the two sons of Elizabeth Newton took vested 'remainders in the trust estate for the benefit of Elizabeth Newton and awarded this estate to the personal representatives of the sons of Elizabeth Newton. The correctness of that determination is challenged upon this appeal. In the interpretation of this will the consideration of paramount importance is to discern the intentiop of the testatrix as ex
The residuary clause contains a clear direction severing and setting apart a particular portion of the estate to be applied to the specific purpose declared in that clause. Such an explicit direction for severance of a particular portion of the estate is in harmony with an intent that the gift should vest rather than that it should be contingent. -(Vanderpoel v. Loew, 112 N. Y. 167; Steinway v. Steinway, 163 N. Y. 183.) Not only did the testatrix provide for the severance and setting apart of a portion of her residuary estate, and that the income of that portion should' be paid to Mrs. Newton during her life, and after her decease to her children until they shall respectively attain the age of twenty-one years, and that upon attaining -that age the principal should be paid to them, but there is no provision in the will for a gift over or any words of survivorship relating to the principal gift. The absence of a gift over in the alternative and of any words of survivorship in this connection has a special
All of the circumstances' referred to above, when considered together, clearly evince an intention on the part of the testatrix that she should not die intestate as to the portion of her estate bequeathed in the residuary clause. We find nothing in the residuary clause or in the will when considered as a whole, indicative of a contrary intention. On behalf of the appellants it is earnestly argued that in the residuary clause the gift is- in the direction to pay or distribute at a-future time and that in such a case the gift will be considered not as one in which the payment and distribution -only i's deferred, but as one in which time is of the essence of the gift. • Where a contrary intention is not manifested in the will it is a settled rule of construction that if futurity is annexed to the substance of the gift, the vesting of title is suspended, • but if the 'gift is absolute and the
In the case now under consideration we think that the intention of the testatrix is clear that the gift of the residuary estate is absolute and only the time of payment or enjoyment is postponed. Futurity is not annexed to the substance of the gift. The so-called “ divide and pay over rule ” which the ap pellants invoke, would, if applied to this case, be destructive of the intention of the testatrix as that intention is revealed in her will.
In Cammann v. Bailey (swpra), where the rule which the appellants seek to have here applied was under discussion, Judge Chase said: “ The intention of the testator being reasonably clear, it is quite unnecessary to discuss the decisions made in other cases involving the vesting of property held in trust. Rules for the construction of wills are for the sole purpose of ascertaining the intention of the testator, and if the intention is clear and manifest it must control, regardless of all rules that have been formed for the purpose of determining their construction.” In Matter of Tienken (131 N. Y. 391, 409) Judge-Finch said: “ We have heretofore said that the rule of construction founded upon a gift flowing only from a direction to divide has many exceptions, and is to be used as an aid to ascertain the intention -and not qs a force to pervert it.”
The so-called “ divide and pay over rule ” is a canon of construction rather than a rule of property, and like other rules, which are applicable in the interpretation of wills, it is always applied in subordination to the intention of the testator which is expressed in the will. It is not a hard and fast rule which
It follows that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Willard Bartlett, Ch. J., Hiscock, Chase, Collin., Hogan and Cardozo, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.