1 N.Y.S. 307 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
The testator gave to Mrs. Austin all his property, in trust, to apply the income to her own use during her life, and at her death provided that the estate should be divided among her four sons, naming them, and a daughter, naming her, and the issue of her deceased son, John W. Austin, and in such shares and proportions as she may by her last will and testament direct and appoint; and in default of such direction and appointment the said estate shall go to her said five children now living, and the issue of said deceased son, in six equal shares; the issue of said deceased son to take one of said shares; and should either of said intended beneficiaries die before that one’s intended share vests, then the issue of the one so dying shall take the portion intended for such deceased. It will be observed that no disposition of the share of any living child is made in case of his or her death without issue, the only provision relating’to that subject being that the intended share in case of death should be taken by the issue of such person dying. The codicil, which, so far as it affects the question, is as follows: “I direct that on the death of my said wife the share of my estate to go to our- son James and our grandson Charles, now known as James and Charles Austin, shall be held by my surviving executors in trust for them during their lives, and the interest thereof applied to their use, and at their respective deaths the prinG’pal shall go to their issue, if any; if none, then the same shall fall into my general estate, or as my said wife shall by will direct, ”—does not correct this seeming omission except as to the share given to James and the grandson Charles, which, in case of death, is to go to the issue, if any; if none, then the same, as the codicil declares, “shall fall into my general estate, or as my wife shall by will direct.”
The first thought which presents itself in the natural order of review is, what w'as the intention of the testator, to be gathered from these instruments, as to the disposition by his wife of the share of the grandson Charles, in case of his death before her, without issue? For this is the guiding and controlling principle in the construction of wills, and when steadily kept in view overcomes many obstacles and rejects many refinements which too much elaboration has uselessly if not unfortunately imposed upon the courts. Was the share to be given to one of the class named orto any person whom she might select? It must be conceded that it is not an easy task to answer the question, in contemplation and consideration of the elaborate briefs submitted, and the wide range of thought and research which they contain; but, approached in the manner and guided by the principle suggested, it would seem as if, after full examination, free and untrammeled by abstruse propositions, and treated by and resting uponthe doctrine of intention, the response must be that if the contingencies contemplated should occur, namely, thedeathof the son or grandson without issue, his wife could do with the share of either whatever she might elect. There is no restraint, and none was intended. The power conferred on her of distributing the whole estate in such proportions as she chose to adopt was the expression of unlimited confidence in her judgment and sense of justice, and the testator avoided expressly any absolute disposition of the shares of James and his grandson Charles beyond their issue unless his wife failed to exercise the power of disposition given her. He confided that part of his estate to her judgment, relying upon her ability and her convictions of what was right to be done. This confidence in lier was thus clearly declared, as it had been in the will itself, where greater power was conferred, covering
The difficulty of determining what was meant by the testator as to the disposition of the share of Charles is increased, and arises perhaps by the use of the word" “or,” and it may doubtless well be contended that two modes of disposition of it were provided, namely, one by which it was to become a part of the general estate, and thus augment that estate for distribution among the survivors of the class designated in the will, or became subject to the use of the power given to the wife of the testator for its distribution, and for the reason that the children had been provided for in the will, and the whole estate appropriated in six shares with which the testator did not wish to interfere further. In this connection it may be instructive to ascertain what is the definition of the word “or” by the lexicographers. In Worcester it is said to be a disjunctive particle that marks an alternative, generally corresponding to either, as “either this or that.” And in Webster it is said to be a connective that marks an alternative, as “you may read or may write; that is, you may do one of the things, at your pleasure, but not both.” The application of this definition in completing the sentence would result thus: “If none, then the same shall fall either into my general estate or as my wife shall by will direct.” The alternative is thus clearly expressed which is given in the definition, and leaves no doubt of the intention. “If the.plain and definite purposes of the will are endangered by inapt or inaccurate modes of expression it is our duty to subordinate the language to the expression. In such a case the court may reject words and limitations, supply them or transpose
Daniels, J., concurring. Bartlett, J., not voting.