Judges: Fowler
Filed Date: 7/15/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The will of the testatrix, who was a widow without children or other descendants, contains the following direction to her executrix:
“ 4. To deposit the sum of one thousand ($1,000) dollars in the Bowery Savings Bank in the City of New York, or other safe savings bank therein, for the benefit of Joseph Richard Hebblethwaite, son of Kate Hebblethwaite of No. 309 West 144th street, City of New York, and to pay said sum, with all interest thereon, over to Joseph Richard Hebblethwaite when he shall attain the age of twenty-one .years; in case of his death before such period to pay said sum and interest to his said mother, Kate Hebblethwaite.”
The will was executed in 1884, and the testatrix died in 1899. Kate Hebblethwaite had predeceased her, dying in 1896, to the testatrix’s knowledge. Joseph Richard Hebblethwaite survived both his mother and the testatrix, but died in 1908 at the age of about nineteen years. At the time of his death the above mentioned legacy of $1,000, with accumulations of interest, was on deposit in the Emigrants’ Industrial Savings Bank in the city of New York in an account standing in the name of the executrix as trustee for Joseph Richard Hebblethwaite. Thereafter the executrix, proceeding upon the assumption that the legacy had failed, distributed the fund under the residuary clause of the will to the children of Fanny Maley, a deceased sister of the testatrix, the fund then amounting, with accrued interest, to the sum of $1,276,26. These facts inter alia appear from
The testimony taken upon the hearing was directed to showing that when Kate Hebblethwaite was about four years old she was to some extent adopted by the testatrix and her husband as their child, and it sufficiently establishes that she was taken into the house by old Mr. and Mrs. Brennan and treated as one of their family prior to 1873, the year in which the first general statute was enacted authorizing adoptions. The evidence given in does not show any formal adoption, or even affiliation of Kate Hebblethwaite by Mr. and Mrs. Brennan. It is not now contended in the brief filed on behalf of the petitioner that such adoption created any rights of inheritance or brought the legacy within the protection of section 29 of the Decedant Estate Law, which prevents the lapsing of legacies in certain cases. No such contention could be maintained. Carroll v. Collins, 6 App. Div. 106; Matter of Thorne, 155 N. Y. 140; Smith v. Allen, 161 id. 478.
In the position now taken by the petitioner no rights are traced through Kate Hebblethwaite. It is contended, in respect to the gift over to her of the legacy which was pri
My view of the matter is that the legacy vested in interest: in Joseph Richard Hebblethwaite upon the death of the testatrix, but that it was subject to be divested by his death before reaching the age of twenty-one years, and was so divested (Matter of Lehman, 2 App. Div. 531; Matter of Dippel, 71 id. 598) ; that the gift over to Kate Hebblethwaite lapsed because of her death within the lifetime of the testa
Decreed accordingly.