235 A.D. 170 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1932
Upon this agreed submission of facts for decision by this court in the first instance the following facts appear:
On February 3, 1927, plaintiff executed a deed of trust to the United States Mortgage and- Trust Company, which was later merged into the Chemical Bank and Trust Company. On December 15, 1931, he served upon defendant written notice of demand for revocation of said trust instrument, and at the same time delivered to it a written consent to its revocation executed by himself.
Plaintiff has a wife and infant child, both of whom are living.
We find in the indenture the following provision: “ The grantor hereby agrees with the trustee that in consideration of its acceptance of the trust hereby created and of its consent to act as trustee hereunder, this agreement and the trust hereby created shall be irrevocable by him.”
It is defendant’s claim that the trust cannot be revoked, first, because of the above covenant by plaintiff against revocation, and, second, because the wife and infant son are persons beneficially interested in the deed of trust and their consent to revocation has not been obtained.
Plaintiff urges that he is the sole person beneficially interested in the trust, within the meaning of section 23 of the Personal Property Law, and that having given his consent, he is entitled to its revocation.
It has been held (Aranyi v. Bankers Trust Co., 201 App. Div. 706; Schwartz v. Fulton Trust Co., 119 Misc. 831; Franklin v. Chatham Phenix National Bank & Trust Co., 234 App. Div. 369) that neither a failure to reserve the right to revoke, nor a provision in the agreement that the trust shall be irrevocable, will destroy the grantor’s statutory right of revocation. Here there is an affirmative agreement against revocation of the trust upon the special consideration that the trustee accept and consent to act thereunder. We are not unmindful that plaintiff may have had in mind the statute and perhaps inserted this provision with the design to protect himself as beneficiary against his own future improvidence. Whether he could so contract as to make irrevocability impossible or deny himself the right to the privilege of revocation given by section 23, is not before us for decision because defendant, in its brief, “ formally and expressly disclaims any desire or intent to invoke any contractual right which it personally may have to keep the trust in existence.” That leaves for determination whether any person, other than plaintiff, is beneficially interested in the trust.
Here the situation is different. We hold that there was no intent to create a vested remainder. Ño person other than plaintiff is specifically mentioned as a beneficiary; the income is made payable to plaintiff for a period of twenty years, at the expiration of which the principal is to be transferred to firm. The trustee is without power to change the investments constituting the trust estate without the grantor’s consent. Throughout, the intent of the grantor to make himself the virtual sole beneficiary is manifest.
Plaintiff relies upon Doctor v. Hughes (225 N. Y. 305, 312) wherein Cardozo, J., stated: “ There may be times, therefore, when a reference to the heirs of the grantor will be regarded as the gift of a remainder, and will vest title in the heirs presumptive as upon a gift to the heirs of others. * * * Even at common
law, a distinction was taken between grants to the heirs as such, and grants where the reference to heirs was a mere descriptio personarum. * * * But at least the ancient rule survives to this extent, that to transform into a remainder what would ordinarily be a reversion, the intention to work the transformation must be clearly expressed.” Indeed, the cases of Doctor v. Hughes (supra) and the “ Second Whittemore case ” are not, as defendant contends, irreconcilable. The result in each case depended upon. the intent oLthe ..creator- -of-the - trust estate ~as-gathered. from the ..trust instrument, taken asji .whole. Ás “no one is heir to the living ” (Doctor v. Hughes, supra, 313), the rule is that a grant to one’s next of kin creates a reversion in the grantor and gives nothing to the next of
In construing the particular agreement before it in the “ Second Whittemore ” case, the Court of Appeals reiterated the rule (p. 302) that “ This is all a matter of intention. The creator of a trust can do as he pleases with his property and the courts look to his words to guide them in decisions.”
Examining the indenture here, we find that the only contingency upon which some one other than plaintiff could acquire an interest, would be his death prior to the expiration of the twenty-year period. In making himself the sole beneficiary for twenty years, and providing that then the estate return to him, if he be then living, and not giving the trustee full control over the investments of the fund, it is obvious that he erected this trust for his own benefit. If the grantor had intended to strip himself of all rights and to create a remainder in his next of kin which could be divested only by the exercise of the power of appointment, he would have omitted some of those provisions and inserted such as would unmistakably have so stated. His intent was that the property was to return to the donor if he five long enough, and if not, that it should then go to his legatees or next of kin, and that, in either event it would go as his property. (The next of kin would take by descent and not by purchase)) Np remainder. .was .created. This case is governed by decisions of this court in Stella v. New York Trust Co. (224 App. Div. 50) and Franklin v. Chatham Phenix National Bank & Trust Co. (234 id. 369). The next of kin have an expectancy, but no. estate.
Accordingly, plaintiff is entitled to judgment revoking the deed of trust dated February 3, 1927, but without costs under the stipulation.
Finch, P. J., Merrell, McAvoy and Martin, JJ., concur.
Judgment directed for plaintiff revoking deed of trust, without costs. Settle order on notice.