26 Barb. 224 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
Francis Depau in the year 1833 made his will, and died in 1836. He left two sons
The whole of the provisions of the will in the first alternative contemplated by the testator- are thus seen to be valid. The other provision—made upon another contingency, on the other alternative—-forms no connecting or concatenous part of the first: it does not provide for part of the same chain of events, nor form part of the estates to be created in the succession of events first provided for. It provides for an event contrary to that for which the first provides. The two cannot therefore be united as if forming part of one estate, and thus defeat each other. That second provision is, in case any child of his should die without leaving issue surviving him or her, then neither of the preceding remainders is to arise, for they were to the children or grandchildren of the testator’s child who left issue; this for the testator’s child who should leave no issue. In this last event the remainder in the share allotted to the testator’s daughter, (she dying without issue,) is to form part of the testator’s residuary estate and to belong to the surviving brothers and sisters of such deceased one and their issue, in the manner and proportion herein already specified. This would vest the one-seventh, on the death of the testator’s child, in her brothers and sisters equally for life if they were living, and remainder to their issue in fee, with a contingent remainder over if such issue died under 21 years of age. In this case the power of alienation would be suspended as to one-seventh part during the
It is supposed, however, that if one child should die without issue and her estate be divided into six equal part's, and one of her brothers and sisters should afterwards die without issue, not only his one-seventh would fall into the residue and be divided as the share of the previous decedent was, but that also the one-forty-second part of the testator’s estate which the second taker acquired from the previous decedent would pass in the same way. The will does not say sol it had “ allotted” (to use its words in this clause) a life estate to each child in the first part of this clause, and provided for a remainder over, also in the first part of this clause; it is that remainder, which was one-seventh of his estate, and that only, which the testator gives over, not a new remainder in a one-forty-second part to arise out of the contingency provided for in the latter part of this clause. It is the one remainder in the estate allotted to the daughter so dying, and that only, which is to fall into the residue. The language of the will, after providing for the life estate to each daughter with remainder over, is, “should either of my said daughters die without leaving issue at the time of such death, surviving, then the remainder of and in the estate, both real and personal, hereby allotted to such daughter so dying, shall fall into,” &c. The remainder of the estate hereby allotted, means the remainder in that part of the estate which was herein-before allotted to said daughter; and does not include any estate which the daughter might acquire by the prior decease of a sister or brother.
Again, successive contingent limitations over of an estate are . not to be implied, without a very clear intent to that effect. Jar-man (see his edition of Powell on Devises, vol. 2, ch. 32) considers that cross remainders may be implied on a devise of an estate in tail, but seems to hold that cross executory limitations are not to be implied in a devise in fee, or a bequest of personal estate. Much less should successive limitations be implied
The whole sixth clause of the will is therefore valid; and if the latter part of the clause were not so, its- invalidity would
The clause of the will appointing the executors trustees is in these words : “ I hereby constitute and appoint (them) the trustees of my daughters and grandchildren during their respective lives.” If'this be not a trust to receive the rents and apply them to the use of the daughters and grandchildren respectively for life, it would be merely inoperative as to the real estate, and would leave the legal estate in the children and grandchildren, under § 49 of 1 R. S. 728. So I am inclined to regard this clause. It does not profess to give the estate itself to- the trustees: it appoints them trustees, not of the estates of the children, &c. but trustees of the children themselves; intending to make them curators or guardians over, rather than possessors of, the estate; but this intention is frustrated by the above section 49.
As to the power to sell the real estate. The will merely “authorizes and empowers the executors” to sell the real estate. It does not direct or order them to do so; nor does it authorize the sale for any purpose of distribution, or to carry out any trust. It gives a mere power, to be exercised only if found convenient. It is not imperative, and is not a power in trust; the beneficiaries are the same, whether the estate remains real or be converted into personal: no beneficiary can compel a sale against the judgment or will of the executors. To cause a conversion from real to personal, the will should decisively and definitively fix upon the land the quality of money, as Lord Rosslyn said in the converse case as to the conversion of money into land. (Walker v. Denne, 2 Ves. jun. 184.)
If these conclusions be correct, some slight alterations should be made in the judgment below. It should be corrected, where it states that the whole estate of the testator is to be deemed personal estate from the death of the testator, and where it requires the executors to sell the real estate
Mitchell, Mamies and Olerke, Justices.]