65 A.2d 737 | N.J. | 1949
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *107 The primary question here is the meaning and the validity of this testamentary condition:
"Tenth: — It is my will and command that should any of my children or said grandchildren institute or maintain any proceeding in any court, for the purpose of attacking the validity of this Will, or for the purpose of effecting a disposition of my estate other than in the specific manner aforementioned, by court proceeding or otherwise, then it is my will and I do hereby order that the respective devises and bequests, other than those herewith made to my executrix aforementioned, be cancelled and deemed forfeited, unless otherwise ordered verbally and in writing by my said executrix, regardless of whether or not they have in any way participated in said contest, and in such event, I devise and bequeath their respective shares to my said devoted and faithful child and executrix, Theresa Alper, aforementioned, provided that such contest by court litigation is not instituted in the first instance by my said executrix, it being my purpose and intent that the validity of this Will and its purposes, as herein expressed, should not be attacked in any manner whatsoever, directly or indirectly, by my said heirs."
The decedent died July 12, 1945. By a will made May 4, 1939, he devised and bequeathed certain real property and the residue of his estate to seven of his eight children and to the children of the eighth child, Goldye Shapiro, in these shares: 40% to his daughter Theresa; 10% each to his daughters Pearl and Mildred and his sons Nathaniel and Harold, and the like interest to Theresa in trust for Goldye's children; and 5% each to his son Jerome and his daughter Cecele. There were also certain charitable bequests payable out of the personal estate only. The testator expressed the "same love and affection" for "each and all" of his children, and explained that his estate was divided "on the basis of the financial needs and requirements" of his children and grandchildren. Goldye is not a beneficiary under the will. She was estranged from her husband; and it is clear that the testator thus sought to put beyond his reach the share of the estate that would otherwise have gone to Goldye. *109
Goldye entered a caveat to the probate of the will, charging that it was the product of undue influence exercised by Theresa, and prosecuted the inquiry to a conclusion. The Essex Orphans' Court resolved the issue against her and directed probate of the will. On Goldye's appeal, the decree was affirmed in the Prerogative Court. In re Alper's Will,
The subject matter of the bill of complaint is the validity of certain inter vivos transfers of real property and moneys and bank credits made by the testator, allegedly induced by undue influence exerted by Theresa. The learned Vice-Chancellor ruled that under the cited clause of the will the proceedings on the caveat worked a forfeiture, in favor of Theresa, of all devises and bequests to the testator's other children and the grandchildren, and so they are without interest in the subject matter.
The antecedent noun equivalent to which the personal pronoun "they" is referable is to be found in the provision for the "cancellation" and "forfeiture," for condition broken, of "the respective devises and bequests, other than those herewith made to my executrix aforementioned." The breach of the condition shall work a forfeiture regardless of the nonparticipation in the "contest" of the beneficiaries of such "devises and bequests," and there is in that event a gift over of "their respective shares" to Theresa. This is to give an orderly arrangement and relation to the words of the sentence in accordance with the rules of syntax. It conforms to established usages of grammatical construction and sentence structure.
It is to be noticed, also, that there was prior mention of all of the testator's children by name.
And the closing words "by my said heirs" are not significant of a different intention. It is suggested that this phrase was used in a popular nonlegal sense to refer to children and grandchildren who are beneficiaries under the will, and thus to exclude forfeiture in the event of a contest of the will by a disinherited child.
But terms of art are to be given a technical construction unless their use in a popular sense is evident from the will, taken as a whole. Their normal signification in the law is presumed to be their testamentary sense, barring a clear expression contra. Chandler v. Thompson,
But the forfeiture clause is not grounded in the principle of election. It is a condition subsequent or, in technical strictness, an executory limitation. The provision is not merelyin terrorem. There is a specific gift over. In re Carr'sEstate, 138 Pa. St. 352, 22 A. 18 (1890); Rudd v. Searles,
Public policy is the public interest; and the essential question is whether the public interest will be best served by the absolute enforcement of the condition or its nonenforcement where there existed probabilis causa litigandi. Do the opposing considerations of policy weigh in favor of enforcement or nonenforcement of the restraint? It is a vexed question that has given rise to a contrariety of view in this country. The consensus of the legal scholars who reviewed and assessed the pertinent reasons of social policy pro and con in the restatement of the law of property is that the rule ofprobabilis causa litigandi should be applied where the contest of the will is waged on the ground of forgery or subsequent revocation by a later will or codicil; but where the contest proceeds upon the typical grounds of fraud, undue influence, improper execution or lack of testamentary capacity, the condition is entirely reasonable and enforceable, notwithstanding the existence of probable cause for the contest. The restraint is defended as a reasonable safeguard against attempted overthrow of the testamentary dispositions by a disappointed heir, striving for an undue advantage, and a device to lessen the wastage of the estate in litigation and the chance of increasing family animosities by besmirching the reputation of the *113 testator when he is no longer alive to defend himself and to discourage the contesting of wills as a means of coercing a settlement. In these latter cases, the balance of social policy is held to be normally in favor of the validity of the restraint. Where, however, the contest is based upon the claim of revocation by a later will or codicil, the public has an interest which forbids, as in contravention of social policy, a deterrent upon the presentation of the later will or codicil. It is held that one knowing of such an instrument has at least the moral duty of submitting it for consideration; and if he proceeds with "probable cause," he is not subject to the forfeiture prescribed by the contest clause. Likewise, it is said, the principle applies where there is a claim of forgery, for the public has an interest in the discovery of the crime of forgery, if such there was. Apart from the foregoing considerations, it is considered that a claim of forgery or of subsequent revocation by a later will or codicil is usually based upon evidence far more definite in character than "the shadowy lines of demarcation involved" in mental capacity, undue influence or fraud, and is less likely to be employed as a means of coercing a settlement. Here, it is said, the balance of social policy is against full validity of the restraint. Forfeiture should not be visited upon the contestant with probable cause where, because of the nature of the case, the public interest forbids the closing by such means of the door to judicial inquiry. Restatement, Property, § 428 (1944). See, also, 49 Columbia Law Review, 320, 327.
Where the contest is predicated upon a claim of forgery or of subsequent revocation by a later will or codicil, the very existence of the will is the thing in controversy; and the public may have a sufficient interest in the inquiry respecting the authenticity or subsistence of the proffered instrument to justify such qualification of the general rule. A forged instrument has no existence as a will; and a will is superseded or modified by a later will or codicil. But this question is not before us.
So much for the underlying philosophy! The question, of course, arises only where the attack upon the will is *114
unsuccessful. Generally, such testamentary conditions subsequent and executory limitations have long had recognition in this State, unqualified by the rule of probable cause or good faith.Hoit v. Hoit, supra; Kayhart v. Whitehead,
And the condition is also enforceable against the infant grandchildren. The testator so willed; and there is no consideration of policy which forbids nonenforcement of the provision. It is in no sense a punitive measure, but a devise or bequest upon condition subsequent with a gift over, and therefore an executory limitation. Upon the happening of the prescribed contingency, the gift over becomes effective. The grandchildren take the estate provided by the will, neither more nor less.Rudd v. Searles, supra; Old Colony Trust Co. v. Wolfman,
It is immaterial that one or more of the testator's children claim to be creditors of the estate. Complainant did not sue in a representative capacity; and the complaint is not a creditor's bill. The rights of creditors are enforceable in an appropriate proceeding. The decree herein does not put the property beyond the reach of creditors.
We have no occasion to consider the questions of pleading raised by some of the defendants. They do not affect the substantive rights of the parties.
The decree is affirmed.
For affirmance — Chief Justice VANDERBILT, and Justices CASE, HEHER, WACHENFELD, BURLING and ACKERSON — 6.
For reversal — None. *116