Judges: Difalco
Filed Date: 2/27/1974
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In this accounting proceeding, the trustee requests a construction as to the disposition of one fifth of the principal of the residuary trust. The question is whether the adopted child of the testator’s son comes within the description of ‘ ‘ issue ’ ’ of such child, entitling her to the share of the residuary trust which had been held for her father’s life use, Or whether such share passes to the four surviving children of the testator.
Testator died June 3, 1932. In his will, testator created a trust of his residuary estate and directed the trustee to pay all of the income to his wife during her life. Upon her death the trustee is directed to divide the residuary estate, including the property held in trust, ‘ ‘ into as many equal shares as there shall be children of mine then living and children of mine then deceased leaving issue then living ”. The share of each deceased child is to be paid to his issue and the share of each living child is to be held in further trust for the child’s life. Paragraph seventh provides: “In case of the death of any child of mine for whom one of said equal shares shall be held in trust the respective share so held in trust shall upon such respective death be disposed of as follows: If any such child shall leave issue living at the time of such death the respective share so held in trust shall be transferred and paid over per stirpes
Testator’s wife died February 8, 1960 and five of the children survived her. Two other children had predeceased the wife but left no issue. Following the widow’s death the trust was administered for the benefit of the five children. Robert D. Petty, one of testator’s children died on December 14,1972. He had no natural child but was survived bya daughter whom he had adopted subsequent to testator’s death.
Respondent Richard S. Petty, one of testator’s surviving children, relies upon former section 114 of the Domestic Relations Law to defeat the claim of the adopted child. Section 114 (renumbered 115 in 1938 [L. 1938, ch. 606] and 117 in 1961 [L. 1961, ch. 147, § 1]), which was in existence at the time of testator’s death, provided that the “foster parent or parents and the person adopted sustain toward each other the legal relation of parent and child ’ ’, including the right of inheritance from each other. The statute further recited, however, that “ as respects the passing and limitation over of real or personal property dependent under the provisions of any instrument on the foster parent dying without heirs, the person adopted is not deemed the child of the foster parent so as to defeat the rights of remaindermen.” This last quoted paragraph, usually called the “precautionary addendum ”, was deleted from section 117 in 1963 (L. 1963, ch. 406, § 1 eff. March 1,1964) and applies only to instruments executed prior to March 1, 1964. (Matter of Snowden, 31 N Y 2d 322, 326, n. 2.)
Respondent Petty contends that in the provision for distribution upon death of a child of testator, the word “ issue ” by operation of section 114 does not include adopted children. The adopted child, however, maintains that under the Court of Appeals decisions (Matter of Park, 15 N Y 2d 413; Matter of Silberman, 23 N Y 2d 98, mot. for rearg. den. 23 N Y 2d 921), the presumption is that testator intended to include adopted children and that where there is a finding of intent to include adopted children, the precautionary addendum is inapplicable (Matter of Upjohn, 304 N. Y. 366).
There are decisions, which support the position of the adopted child that the Park-Silberman presumption in favor of adopted children extends to circumstances in which the so-called ‘ ‘1 pre
It is noteworthy that in Matter of Snowden (38 A D 2d 926) the Appellate Division failed to mention its prior decision in Matter of Hilton (36 A D 2d 514, supra) in which it held that: “The Park-Silberman presumption in favor of adopted children extends to circumstances in which the so-called ‘ precautionary addendum ’ * * * would otherwise be applicable ”. but stated that: “If the decisional law on this subject is to be changed, it is not for this court, but for the Court of Appeals, to make that change.” The Court of Appeals (Matter of Snowden, 31 N Y 2d 322, supra.) in its reversal of the Appellate Division failed to even mention the Park or Silberman decisions. This court therefore may not apply the Park-Silberman presumption since testator’s son, Robert D. Petty had no natural child, but must consider the context of the will — no extraneous facts having been shown — in order to determine whether the testator intended to include adopted children. (Matter of Carll, 27 N Y 2d 917, supra; Matter of Washburn, 17 N Y 2d 895, supra.)
It clearly appears from a reading of the will in this case that the testator explicitly limited the trust remainder to his ‘ ‘ bloodlines ”, that is, to his children and their issue. No basis exists for a finding that testator intended to include adopted children. (Matter of Carll, supra; Matter of Washburn, supra.)
In Matter of Carll (supra) the testator, who had died in 1904, created a preresiduary trust with the income payable to his daughter and her son, Jesse Carll Wright, and to the survivor of them. At the termination of the trust, i.e., upon the death of the survivor of them, the trust would terminate and the corpus paid to the issue of Jesse, then surviving, per stirpes. In default of such issue, the corpus was to be distributed to decedent’s three children in equal shares or, if they failed to survive, to their descendants “ per stirpes ”. The trust terminated. Jesse had no natural children but had adopted a child, after the testator’s death. The Surrogate (Matter of Carll, N. Y. L. J., Aug. 22, 1969, p. 11, col. 2), applying the presumption in Matter of Park (supra) and Matter of Silberman
The trust provisions in the will in the instant case are similar to those construed in Matter of Carll (supra). Although the will herein does not provide for continued payment of income following a child’s death, it does provide for the child’s equal share of principal to be paid to his issue or, in default of issue, to the surviving children of the testator or their issue. In the instant case as in Carll, the adoption took place following the testator’s death, and there is no power of appointment granted in this will nor any other indication that the remainder is to pass, under any circumstances, outside of testator’s “ bloodlines ”.
The court is of the opinion that this proceeding is governed by the ‘ ‘ precautionary addendum ’ ’ and that since there is no indication in the will of an intent to include an adopted child, the adopted child is not deemed issue of the testator’s son Robert D. Petty. The one-fifth equal share of the principal of the trust shall be paid to and among the surviving children of the testator.