Court Opinion

ID: 3620226
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:02:12.860444+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:25:06.848123
License: Public Domain

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Three clauses of the testator's will are submitted for our construction. Two of them may be better understood and explained if we first dispose of the graver and more difficult questions which arise out of the sixteenth clause. That begins with a statement that the testator has $30,000 invested in United States registered bonds. He does not give this fund expressly to his executors, but, assuming that it will come to their hands as such, he directs that they keep it invested until his youngest grandchild, "now born, or that may hereafter be born," before "final distribution" of his estate, shall be of full and lawful age. The date of that final distribution is afterward designated, and all through the provisions relating to this special fund is evidently kept in mind. The testator then disposes of the "increase and interest" of the fund during the first five years following his decease. He authorizes his executors to divert so much of it as may be necessary to the care and protection of a cemetery lot, and to supply any deficiency "there may be in funds to pay legacies," or meet other provisions of his will; and assuming that there will still be left a surplus of interest at the end of such five years, authorizes his executors to "make division and distribution" of such surplus, and also, "if they see fit," of $10,000 of the principal, between his four children, Thomas, Marion, Elizabeth and Howard, and his four grandchildren, Alice, Florence, Clara and Louisa, "in the proportion of my aforesaid legacies and bequests severally to *Page 101 
them." A provision for another daughter, if she should recover from insanity, is unimportant by reason of her death without having become rational. The testator then provides for the further "interest and increase" of the fund which may accrue while awaiting the period of final distribution, and authorizes his executors "from time to time" to divide and distribute it between "said children and grandchildren, in the same proportion." The possibility of their death is then considered, and provision is made that if either shall die "before payment," leaving issue, then his or her "aforesaid legacies and portion" shall go to such issue; but if either shall die without issue and "before payment," then his or her "legacy and portion" shall go to the surviving brothers and sisters. The remaining $20,000 of the principal of the fund the executors are directed to divide into two equal parts when testator's "youngest grandchild, born, and that may within twenty years be born, shall arrive at full age, or if a granddaughter, shall sooner be lawfully married." One of these moieties, being $10,000 of the remaining principal, is directed to be distributed in equal shares to the four children specifically named, all of whom were in esse at the date of testator's will, and of his death. The other moiety is ordered to be divided equally among all of the testator's grandchildren, including those born after his death, who should "be living" at the designated period of final distribution; and the same provision follows, carrying the gift, in case of a legatee's death, to issue, or in default of issue, to brothers and sisters, as attached to the $10,000 first to be divided. The disposition of the special fund closes with this further direction, "but in all cases the share and portion of any one under age shall be kept invested and on interest until he or she shall arrive at full age, or be, as aforesaid, lawfully married."
The General Term, reversing the conclusions of the trial court, held this whole bequest invalid; and that, as to the $30,000, the deceased died intestate. This result was reached upon the ground of an unlawful suspension of the absolute *Page 102 
ownership, and an illegal direction for the accumulation of interest and income.
The absolute ownership is suspended in one of two ways: either by the creation of future estates vesting upon the occurrence of some future and contingent event, or by the creation of a trust which vests the estate in trustees. (Everitt v. Everitt,29 N.Y. 71.) In both ways, it is argued, this will offends. If, by its terms, a trust estate is in fact created, the result asserted is inevitable; for such trust estate would run for a fixed period of time which might exceed the limit of two lives in being at its creation; and is not bounded by the continuance of lives at all. (1 R.S. 773, § 1.) But such a trust estate is not created by direct words in this will; the special fund is not expressly given to the executors, nor are they described as trustees, or their duties denominated a trust. If this were otherwise, the question in the end to be decided would remain the same, for the trust thus attempted to be created would be illegal, and could have no force or effect. One of two consequences would follow: either intestacy as to the special fund, or, if the language of the bequest permitted, its direct vesting in the legatees for whom it was intended. That became an ultimate question inEveritt v. Everitt (supra), although there the fund in question was expressly and in terms given to the executors in trust. The court held that it was an attempt to create an illegal trust, which must, therefore, be expunged from the will, leaving open only the question whether intestacy followed, or whether the bequest could be sustained as vested in the legatees.
While, in the present case, no trust was created in direct words by the language of the will, it must be conceded that its provisions plainly permit such a construction; but that is not to be adopted where the trust raised from the general language and apparent intention would be invalid, for there is no such anomaly in the law as a trust raised by construction only to be destroyed in the moment of its creation. While, in the present case, a trust estate in the executors would be convenient, it is not essential, and every duty imposed by the will which relates *Page 103 
to the special fund may as well be performed by the executors as donees of a power, without in any manner taking a trust estate. (Everitt v. Everitt, supra.) We may, therefore, dismiss any supposed difficulty growing out of an attempt by the testator to vest a trust estate in the executors, and go at once to the only material question, whether the will created future estates in the children and grandchildren, not measured by lives in being, or whether as to the whole or any part of the special fund here bequeathed, it vested at the death of the testator, the time of payment only being postponed.
In dealing with this question we must also concede to the appellants the advantage of their contention that the legatees took distributively — as tenants in common and not as joint tenants. (1 R.S. 727, § 44; Everitt v. Everitt, supra; Tucker
v. Bishop, 16 N.Y. 402.) The testator's purpose in that respect appears plain from the phrasing of his will. He speaks repeatedly of the "share" or "portion" of each. He defines specifically what that share or portion shall be, as regulated and measured in its proportions by the amount of legacies previously bequeathed to the same persons. In case of the death of any one, he gives "his or her aforesaid legacies and portion to his or her children," and provides that "the share and portion of any one under age" shall be kept invested. We are, therefore, to deal with the share of each separately and by itself, and determine simply whether it is proper and lawful to say that such right vested in the legatee upon the death of the testator.
It has been often held, that if futurity is annexed to the substance of the gift, the vesting is suspended; but where the gift is absolute and the time of payment only is postponed, the gift is not suspended but vests at once. Critically examined, this is little more than stating the same problem in another form of words, and amounts practically to saying that if the gift is future, it is not present; but nevertheless it has been useful in drawing sharply the distinction between a gift presently given, and its deferred payment. (1 Jarman on Wills, 759; Warner v.Durant, 76 N.Y. 136.) Out of that distinction has grown a rule which bears directly upon the present case, that where *Page 104 
the only gift is in the direction to pay or distribute at a future time, the case is not to be ranked with those in which the payment or distribution only is deferred, but is one in which time is of the essence of the gift. (1 Jarman on Wills, 762.) The cases cited as holding this doctrine were instances in which the gift was conditioned upon an event to be determined in the future. (Leake v. Robinson, 2 Mer. 363; Ford v. Rawlins,
1 Sim.  Stu. 328; Taylor v. Bacon, 8 Sim. 100.) In such cases, until the happening of the future event, it must necessarily remain uncertain whether a gift would exist at all, and that could not be said to have vested which was not certainly given. So far the rule is undoubtedly established, and rests upon evident and sound reasons. It is decisive as to that portion of the bequest of the special fund which the testator directed should be paid at the period of final distribution to his grandchildren who should be living at that date. The condition of survival attached to the gift itself: who the legatees would in fact prove to be, depended upon a future contingency. Those who were to take in the prescribed event were uncertain until it happened; might not be any one of those in esse at testator's death, and might prove to be a grandchild born twenty years later. The ultimate vesting of this portion of the principal of the special fund was, therefore, plainly postponed for twenty years, and not during designated lives in being, and must be declared invalid. (Schettler v. Smith, 41 N.Y. 334.)
Its failure does not necessarily draw with it the portion of the bequest given to the four children and four grandchildren named and who were in esse at the date of testator's death. It does destroy so much of it as consisted of the accruing interest upon the portion which failed, but the principal of $20,000 and the interest upon that as bequeathed to the eight legatees are not so interwoven with the testator's general scheme as to be incapable of separation. In Van Vechten v. Van Veghten (8 Paige, 128), the learned chancellor said, that "in trusts of personal estate, or of money which is infinitely divisible in its nature, a suspension of the absolute ownership as to one part of the fund for a longer period than is allowed by *Page 105 
law will not make void the disposition which has been made of another part thereof." Here the bequests to the named and certain legatees are in no respect dependent upon or interwoven with the void bequest to unknown grandchildren. The two provisions are not enveloped in a single trust, for there is no trust created at all, but merely a power which may be executed so far as it is valid, and so we are brought to consider, separately and by themselves, the bequests to the certain and specific legatees.
These legacies depend upon no condition or contingency. The legatees are to take, or their issue or survivors, as holders of substituted estates, in any event, and no uncertainty of ultimate vesting attaches to the substance of the gift. But time does so attach and the vesting is future, within the broad terms of the general rule to which we have referred. If that rule is arbitrary and inflexible it ends any further argument; for, in the present case, there was no immediate gift, made in distinct terms, separate and apart from the direction to divide and distribute. But while we have recognized the rule, it has been with very important qualifications and exceptions which properly limit its force as a standard of construction. In Manice v. Manice
(43 N.Y. 369), it was said, that where the terms of a bequestimport a gift, and also a direction to pay at a subsequent time, the legacy vests, and will not lapse by the death of the legatee before the time of payment has expired. And in Warner
v. Durant (supra), the general rule is declared to have an exception grafted upon it, that where the gift is to be severedinstanter from the general estate for the benefit of the legatee, and in the meantime the interest is to be paid to him, that is indicative of the intent of the testator that the legatee shall at all events have the principal, and is to wait only for the payment until the day fixed. The doctrine of these cases confines the rule within the limitation of its precise terms. It applies only where, beyond the direction for future distribution, there are no words and no provisions which import a present or vested gift, or indicate such an intent. It does not control where the language of the will, while not expressly *Page 106 
saying "I give and bequeath," does yet plainly import a present gift intended to vest immediately, without reference to the clause of distribution. Thus limited and understood, the rule is useful to aid in a construction drawn from the tenor of the whole will, and leaves full force to the intention of the testator, derived not merely from one feature of his disposition, but from all his language, and the entire scope of his testamentary scheme. This flexible rather than rigid construction of the rule was approved after a full consideration of all the cases inLeeming v. Sherratt (2 Hare, 14), and the circumstances that the gift of the residue was future, and that there was no gift of such residue except in the direction for payment, were held proper to be considered, but "certainly not conclusive." The way is open, therefore, to explore the terms and conditions of the will before us, outside of the provision for final distribution, and to ascertain whether such terms do import a present gift, irrespective of the direction for payment.
The appellants rely largely upon the provisions for the distribution of the interest to the named legatees, and seek to bring the case within the exception stated in Warner v.Durant. That exception appears to be founded upon the idea that the gift of interest, eo nomine, is difficult to be reconciled with a suspension of the vesting, because interest is a premium or compensation for the forbearance of principal to which it supposes a title. (1 Jarman on Wills, 764.) It is a very plain inference from this assigned reason of the exception that it can only apply where the whole interest is given during the delay of payment. If any part of it is diverted to purposes other than the benefit of the legatees, that is treating the principal as not belonging to them, but remaining in the estate as a source of income for the benefit of the estate; and so the authorities decide. (Leake v. Robinson, supra; Hanson v. Graham, 6 Ves. 239; Watson v. Hayes, 5 Myl.  Cr. 125; Warner v. Durant,supra.) In the present case the whole interest is not given. Some part of it, and that first accruing, is diverted to the purposes of the estate, and what is given is only *Page 107 
through a permitted discretion of the executors prior to the period of final distribution. The disposition of the interest thus made cannot safely be said to import an intention to vest the gift of the principal at the date of the testator's death.
Our attention is further directed to the language of the will as it respects the substituted estates to arise in case of a legatee's death before the period of final distribution. It is their "share" and "portion" which is carried over to issue or survivors, and their "legacies" which are to be kept invested. The argument is that the testator was, at this point, dealing with an event to occur before the period of final distribution, and his language implies that at such earlier date a share or portion had already been given to the original legatees, which identical interest the will gives in case of the death of any, first to issue, and next, to survivors as substituted estates. Some color is given to this reasoning by a criticism of Jarman upon a decision of the master of the rolls. He argues that where on a given event the "shares" of persons before named shall go in a certain manner there seems ground to infer that, in the alternative event, the property is to be retained by the legatees, and that the case is stronger where there are cross executory gifts and so no "shares" upon which the clause would operate if the vesting was postponed. (1 Jarman on Wills, 773.) The case thus criticized was that of Vawdry v. Geddes (1 Russ.  Mylne, 203) where it was held that although the bequest of interim interest raises a presumption of an immediate gift intended, yet that presumption fails entirely when the testator has expressly given the legacy over, in the event of the death of the legatee before a particular period. That would seem to be the correct conclusion. If the testator in such case intended and understood an immediate gift vesting at his death, the legacy would go by operation of law upon the decease of such legatee to issue and survivors as next of kin. A clause of substitution, aiming at precisely that result, would be unnecessary and superfluous; and only important where the vesting was intended to be postponed, and for that reason a lapse of the legacies given was to be prevented. Strong support to an inference *Page 108 
of this character is given in later cases. (Leeming v.Sherratt, supra; Van Wyck v. Bloodgood, 1 Bradf. 173.) It is evident also that the use of the words "shares" and "portions" are equivocal, and may indicate, in a provision like that under consideration, either a vested estate in the original legatee, to be divested in case of his death before payment in favor of issue or survivors, or may mean a future estate to vest in case of the legatee's death in the issue or survivors as substituted legatees at the deferred period. The testator may have used the word "shares" as meaning immediate gifts to each, or simply as descriptive of the "portions" to be given at the period of final distribution. It seems to us imprudent to found a decisive construction in a case like the present, upon the words referred to. And that is more certainly so, when we take note of the further fact, that the same word "share" is used in the same connection in the bequest to the grandchildren who should be living at the period of final distribution. Since in that case there was certainly no immediate or vested gift to the grandchildren in esse, the testator must have intended the phrase "share" of one dying before distribution to mean the ultimate amount allotted to that one at the deferred period. And while a devise over, in a case of real estate, often furnishes an argument in favor of an immediate vesting in the primary devisee, the rules as to bequests of personal estate are not identical and had a different origin. (Doe v. Moore, 14 East, 604.)
We have thus explored the will in vain for any safe and adequate ground which would take the bequests to the named legatees out of the operation of the general rule. The difficulty is that there is no present gift to them, and no language or provision from which such immediate gift can be properly inferred. The bequest to them lies wholly in the direction for future division and distribution, and can be fairly derived from that clause alone. In the whole of the clause under consideration the postponement of the legacies for a period which may reach forty years appears plainly to be intended, and is always kept in view. We cannot read the words "that may hereafter be born" and "that may within twenty years be born" as *Page 109 
referring only to the birth of grandchildren between the making of the will and the death of the testator. They plainly refer to a period after his death, and the will speaks from that date. While we are to encourage always a construction which leans to the vesting of legacies, and seek diligently for evidences of such purpose and intention, we must still construe the will, and not make it over to suit our own notions of what might have been wisest. We concur, therefore, in the conclusion of the General Term that the whole bequest contained in the sixteenth clause was invalid, and intestacy resulted as to the thirty thousand dollars.
The remaining questions in the case may be more briefly considered.
By the fifth clause of his will, the testator gave to his executors the sum of seven thousand dollars in trust, to be kept invested for the benefit of an invalid daughter, the principal to go to her if she should regain her reason before the final settlement of the estate; otherwise, and on her death, such principal to "become a part of the general fund," in the hands of the executors "for final distribution." The will contains no residuary devise or bequest, but a surplus not disposed of by the will, remains in the hands of the executors for final distribution. The question here raised grows out of the death of Julia, without having become entitled to the principal of her legacy, and is, whether the seven thousand dollars falls into the general surplus and residue in the hands of the executors, or into the fund of thirty thousand dollars, the character and disposition of which we have already discussed. We think the latter was a special fund, distinctly separated from the body of the estate, and in no proper sense answered the description of a general fund in the hands of the executors for final distribution; but under our present ruling, it becomes itself part of the general surplus. The General Term correctly held that the seven thousand dollars fell into the residue undisposed of by the will.
By the ninth clause of his will, the testator gave to each and every grandchild born within twenty years after his death and *Page 110 
before the final settlement of his estate the sum of one thousand dollars, to be paid to each on reaching full age, or if grand-daughters upon their earlier marriage. The bequest is accompanied by a request that his children consent to and acquiesce in the provision. The General Term held these legacies to be present gifts of separate and distinct portions of the testator's property, and that all must necessarily take effect completely within the period of one life in being at the death of the testator. We concur in the conclusion. The legacy vested in each grandchild immediately upon its birth, payment only being postponed until majority or marriage. The child of a daughter must necessarily take during the life of its mother, and that of a son, if born after his decease, is still regarded as living at the death of its father for the purpose of the vesting of the legacy. There was, therefore, no illegal suspension of the absolute ownership.
The question as to the right of Wisner as receiver of Thomas Edwards is not before us. No appeal was taken by him from the judgment of the General Term, and the parties who have appealed acquiesce in the disposition there made of the question.
The judgment of the General Term should be affirmed, with costs of all parties to be paid out of the estate.
All concur, except TRACY, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed.