14 N.Y.S. 194 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
This action was brought by Annie E. Foster, to recover a balance of interest claimed on the sum of $10,000, directed by the will of Mary Hopeton Drake, deceased, to be by the defendant as her executor deposited with the United States Trust Company, and the interest and income thereon to be paid to Annie E. Foster during her life. The testatrix, Mary Hopeton Drake, departed this life on the 30th day of June, 1884, but the money directed to be held in trust was not deposited by the defendant with the United States Trust Company untilcthe 19th of June, 1889. After the receipt of the money by the defendant it was deposited by him in the Central Trust Company, where it remained until it was deposited with the United States Trust Company. During this interval the defendant received about $600 interest on the deposit from the Central Trust Company, and that washy him paid over to the beneficiary in the trust directed to be created; and by
The defendant was the only witness sworn upon the trial, and he testified that the testatrix left personal estate amounting to the sum of $38,000, $13,000 of which was specifically bequeathed, and that the balance was devoted to the payment of funeral expenses, probate and other expenses of the will, debts, and other expenses afterwards paid, leaving real estate only out of which this and other trust funds could be realized; and, as his evidence was in no respect controverted, there seems to be no impropriety in assuming this to have been a truthful description of the condition of the estate, especially as that evidence was followed by the court in making its decision. So much of the will as is in question in this action, is the following: “All the rest, residue, and remainder of my estate, both real and personal, I order and direct my executor hereinafter named, or whoever shall undertake the execution of my will, to sell at public or private sale or sales, and at such time or times as they may think for the best interest of my estate, and to convert the same Into cash. And I hereby authorize and empower my said executor to give good and sufficient deeds for the conveying to the purchaser or purchasers of said real estate the title thereto. Out of the proceeds of such sale or sales I ■order and direct my said executor to pay over the following amounts to the following persons and parties, respectively, and I do hereby give and bequeath the same as follows: * * * I order and direct my said executor to pay ■over the sum of ten thousand dollars to the United States Trust Company in the city of New York, and I direct the said company to hold the said money in trust, and invest and keep the same invested upon such securities as they may deem safe, to receive the interest and income therefrom, and to pay over the same as received unto Mrs. Annie E. Foster, .wife of Rufus Foster, now living in Quincy, Massachusetts, for and during her natural life; and upon her death I order and direct my said trustees to pay five ti u-and dollars of the principal of said trust property to her daughter Susan E. Foster, and the Temaining five thousand dollars of the same to her daughter Mary Hopeton Drake Foster, to whom t give and bequeath the same. ” To obtain the money to create this trust it was within the contemplation of the testatrix, Mary Hopeton Drake, that her real and personal estate must be sold, and it was out ■of the money to be thereby obtained the trust was intended and directed to be created. This sale was not to be immediately made, but at sucli time as the person undertaking the execution of the will might think for the best interest •of the estate; and while an indefinite postponement was not within the power vested in that person, it is still evident that the testatrix was aware of the fact that it could not take place immediately after her own decease. The money to create this trust was obtainable from no other source, and it was only after it should be so obtained that the deposit was directed to be made, .and the interest and income therefrom to be paid over to the plaintiff commencing this action, and who seems to have died after the appeal was taken. It therefore could not have been intended or expected from these directions in the will that she would receive any benefit from this trust until some period •of time after the decease of the testatrix. The defendant, who is the person who undertook the execution of her will, was entitled to a reasonable time to raise this sum of money, before he was obligated to deposit it in the United States Trust Company, and during that time the beneficiary was entitled to no benefit, interest, or income from the trust. The judgment charging him with legal interest from the decease of the testatrix, was therefore not warranted by these directions contained in the will.
Authorities have been brought to the attention of the court sustaining the might of the beneficiary to interest from the decease of the testator, where
The defendant further testified that the beneficiary in this trust, Mrs. Foster, applied to him to make some disposition of this trust fund by which she would obtain more interest than the trustee would pay, and, as a suit was to be commenced for the construction of other parts of the will, requested him to make that subject a part of the suit. This request he stated had been made by letter, which he was made to produce; but in the statement made by him, he has been corroborated by the form given to the complaint in that action, and the answer of this beneficiary, and the letters received in evidence which were written to her attorney. This suit was begun early in 1887, and completed in March, 1889; and it resulted in a refusal of this request, and three months after that this trust fund was taken from the Central Trust Company, and deposited under the will with the United States Trust Company. And during the pendency of that suit the defendant has also been charged with interest on the fund at the rate of 6 per cent. This was an erroneous charge, for while the suit was pending in part for her benefit, and the money remained with the Central Trust Company with her assent, she was entitled to no greater rate of interest than was allowed by that company. During that time he was not in default, but was endeavoring to secure a benefit applied for by her, and should have been charged with no more interest than he received. It is for the default of the executor that he can be charged with legal interest, and while the suit was in progress he was not in default for not paying the money to the United States Trust Company. State v. Adams, 71 Mo. 620. The suit was there instituted by the legatee and others, and it was said in the decision that “while the suit contesting the will was undetermined, the executrix could not carry into effect the provisions of the will, and could not, therefore, be in default to the legatees. Interest should have been allowed only from the time the suit to contest the will was dismissed. Id. 622. And this principle is applicable to the disposition of so much of this chaige of interest, and it was followed in Vandergrift’s Appeal, 80 Pa. St. 116; and Hamilton v. Porter, 63 Pa. St. 332, proceeds on the soundness of this rule. In re Godon, 1 Dem. Sur. 118, and Kent v. Dunham, 106 Mass. 586, may not be entirely harmonious with it, but its essential justice must still, under the facts of this case, commend it to the approval of the court. Other authorities have been cited, which do not require further notice, except, perhaps, Loder v. Hatfield, 71 N. Y. 93; but there a charge had been made upon lands which was held to become obligatory on