Judges: Bartlett, Cardozo, Chase, Collin, Cuddeback, Hogan, Pound
Filed Date: 12/28/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
The will of the testator contained the following provision:
“ VI. I direct my Executor to purchase within one year after my death of some Life Insurance Company or other Company sound financially doing business in Great Britain of said Executor’s selection an annuity payable quarterly to each of the following named individuals, said annuity shall be such sum as the amount specified in each case shall procure. There shall be expended for each one of said annuities as follows:
“ 4. The same sum of Ten Thousand Dollars shall be expended in each case for an annuity as above provided for each one of the following named individuals, viz.:
“ a. Clarissa Sprake, of London, England, wife of Henry Sprake and daughter of my mother’s brother Henry Oboke.”
Clarissa Sprake, the person for whom the foregoing directions requiring the purchase of an annuity were made, applied to the Surrogate’s Court for an order authorizing the Union Trust Company, the executor, to pay her the sum of $10,000
It is the settled law of England, and has been for more than a century, that the gift of an annuity must be regarded as a legacy of the definite sum required to purchase the annuity. The rule was laid down,- and the reason for it stated, as long ago as 1797, in the case of Barnes v. Rowley (3 Ves. Jr. 305), where the chancellor said: “ Could I have prevented her selling the annuity the next day, if it had been laid out in an annuity for her ? The whole 252 pounds would have been gone. The interference of the court against the will of the legatee to compel the laying out the money in an annuity for a person, her own mistress, would have been perfectly nugatory and vain. The executor can never benefit by it. I cannot raise a doubt upon it.”
This case,has since been followed in an unbroken line of decisions apparently to the present time. The last case I find is Matter of Brunning (L. R. [1909] 1 Oh. 276). The same principle prevails in the state of Massachusetts. (Parker v. Cole, 208 Mass. 260.) So far as the decisions of this state go the case of Reid v. Brown (54 Misc. Rep. 481-482) is the only one cited where the subject has been considered. That was a decision made at Special Term by Justice Trtjax, and it is precisely in point. Justice Trttax said: “Where an absolute and unqualified annuity is given, -with instructions to invest a sum sufficient to purchase the annuity, the annuitant
The counsel for the appellant strenuously insists that the right of election claimed by the petitioner thwarts the clearly expressed intention of the testator. I think not.
It must he assumed that the will of the testator providing for the annuity was drawn with regard to the law existing on the subject. The testator knew, it must be assumed, that the gift of the annuity might be regarded as a legacy of the definite sum set aside to purchase the annuity. If he had desired to defeat this power of election, he should have followed the suggestion contained in Reid v. Brown (supra) and placed the $10,000 in trust for the benefit of the annuitant.
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs to the respondent payable out of the estate.
Order affirmed.