18 N.E.2d 146 | NY | 1938
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *258 The death of James B. Kennedy occurred in England on February 24, 1931. He was a citizen of the United States and a domiciliary resident of the State of New York. On July 19, 1928, he made two wills, one of which related to his estate in England while the other was applicable to his estate in the United States. In his will disposing of his estate in this country he directed that the testamentary dispositions therein contained "be construed and regulated by the laws of the State of New York." At the time of his death, he left a son, George H. Kennedy, and a daughter, Lady Sophia Kathleen Dunbar, entitled to inherit his estate in the event he died intestate. His daughter, a resident of England, died on June 9, 1936, leaving her surviving a husband from whom she was separated, and two children of whom she had the sole custody and control, Drummond C.N. Dunbar, born in 1917, and Marjorie Frederica Ann Dunbar, born in 1919. She left no descendants of deceased children. In fact, the son and daughter *260 mentioned were the only children she ever had. Both children were living, unmarried and without descendants, at the time of her death, and are still living.
We are concerned, on this appeal, with the construction of a single provision of the Kennedy will applicable to property in this country, found in clause 2 of paragraph sixth. In that will he named the Guaranty Trust Company of New York as his executor and the sole trustee of the trust for his daughter. To his son he gave one-half of his residuary estate outright. The other half he gave, devised and bequeathed to his trustee in trust "to invest and re-invest the same, to collect the rents, issues, and profits thereof, and to apply the net income therefrom to the use" of his daughter "for and during the term of her natural life, without power of anticipation. Upon her death, to pay and divide the principal of said share to and among such of her children and issue of deceased children as she shall by her Last Will and Testament appoint; and if my said daughter shall fail effectually to exercise such power of appointment the principal of said share shall be transferred to and divided among her child or children, if any, in equal shares per stirpes; if none, then to my said Son, George Holden Kennedy, or if he be not then living to his children, if any, in equal shares per stirpes, but if none, then to such person or persons as would be entitled to take from me as my next-of-kin or heirs-at-law under the laws of the State of New York in case of intestacy."
Lady Dunbar, by will, attempted to exercise the power of appointment by creating separate trusts for her children in trustees whom she named and by directing her trustees to divide the half of her father's American estate of which she was given the life use into two equal parts, one to be known as her son's part and the other to be known as her daughter's part. The son's part she directed her trustees to dispose of as follows: "The said Trustees shall pay to my son the income of the son's part during *261 his life and after his death shall pay and divide the principal of my son's part to and among the children of my son then living in such shares if more than one and with such provisions in regard to maintenance education and/or support during minority as my said son may by any deed or deeds revocable or irrevokable and executed in his lifetime or by his last Will and Testament or any Codicil thereto appoint and in default of and subject to such appointment or in so far as such appointment shall not extend the said Trustees shall pay and divide my son's part to and among the child or children then living of my son and if more than one in equal shares absolutely. In the event that my son shall die without leaving a child or children him surviving then I direct that my son's part shall be transferred and paid over outright to my daughter if she is then living and if she is not then living said part shall be paid and divided to and among the child or children of my daughter then living and if more than one in equal shares absolutely." Then follows a parallel provision for the disposal of her daughter's part.
The learned Surrogate held that Lady Dunbar had, by the terms of her will, validly and effectually exercised the power conferred upon her, relying first upon what is asserted to be the rule that "The power conferred on the donee to appoint a fee included the power to appoint a lesser estate, there being no positive restriction in the donor's will," citing various cases to which we below refer, and that, under the decision of this court in Hillen v. Iselin (
The assertion that, in the absence of positive and express words of prohibition to the contrary by the donor, the power conferred upon a donee to appoint a *262
fee includes the power to appoint a lesser estate is, at most, only a doctrine of equity limited to particular cases where the circumstances require its application. The doctrine is not embraced in any statute. It is not a rule of universal application. It has never been laid down as a rule of construction by our court. None of the cases cited by the Surrogate are in point. In Matter of Colt (
We must look exclusively to the will of Mr. Kennedy to determine the terms, scope and limitations upon the power. It must be exercised strictly according to its terms (3 Bogert on the Law of Trusts Trustees, p. 1692). The donee was unauthorized to go outside of or exceed the power given; she was required to exercise it, if she acted at all with reference to it, within its specific terms. In construing the power, we are required not only to consider its express terms but also, if necessary, the general plan, purpose and intent of the testator as found within the express provisions and within the will as a whole. "The intention of the donor of the power is the great principle that governs in the construction of powers" (4 Kent's Commentaries, p. 345). Within limitations with which we are not here concerned, a testator may make such disposition as he wishes of his property without interference by the courts or by those who may believe that some other disposition would be more desirable or practicable. The plan, purpose and intent of Mr. Kennedy was to dispose of his property absolutely and finally as to his son's share to the son upon his own (the testator's) death and as to his daughter's share upon the daughter's death to her children then living and to the descendants of any deceased children of the daughter then living, per stirpes. By express *264
terms, he so provides; if there were any ambiguity in the words and expressions used, it would necessarily be resolved in favor of such a construction by a perusal of the will as a whole. Mr. Kennedy authorized and directed his trustee to "pay and divide" the principal of the trust for the daughter upon the death of Lady Dunbar to and among "such of her children and issue of deceased children as she shall by her last Will and Testament appoint." The class to whom his trustee was directed to pay and divide the corpus of the trust was definitely, completely and finally ascertained and fell in according to the express terms of his will upon the death of Lady Dunbar. There were then no descendants of any deceased child of hers. She left her surviving two children and two children only and to them alone had she any power to dispose of the corpus of the trust. The power was toapportion the property itself to her children and to the issue of deceased children and not a limited interest therein. She had no power to extend the ultimate vesting of the estate to some time in the future or, specifically, to the death of her children. She had a specific and limited power to allocate the corpus of the trust in such shares as she saw fit to a specific class described by the donor, the members of which were ascertained at her death (Delafield v. Shipman,
Respondents rest heavily, as did the Surrogate, upon the decision in Hillen v. Iselin (
It follows that the specific direction of Mr. Kennedy to his trustee to pay and divide the corpus of the trust upon the death of Lady Dunbar required the immediate vesting thereof upon her death in her son and daughter in the share or shares which she might apportion. The trusts which she attempted to create for the respective lives of her children with contingent remainders were void. Neither was the attempted creation of life estates in her two living children in accordance with the clear intent, purpose and express provisions of Mr. Kennedy's will and they were ineffective. Lady Dunbar, therefore, failed to exercise effectually the power which was given to her by her father to allocate the corpus among her living children at her death and the corpus passes under the provision of Mr. Kennedy's will, where he says: "If my said daughter shall fail effectually to exercise such power of appointment the principal of said share shall be transferred to and divided among her child or children, if any, in equal shares per stirpes." The power to be "effectually" exercised must have been in the manner directed by Mr. Kennedy "so as to produce or secure the end desired," and to make effective his purpose and intent as shown by his will. *266
The order of the Appellate Division and the decree of the Surrogate's Court in so far as it affects the construction of the will should be reversed and the matter remitted to the Surrogate's Court to enter a decree in accordance with this opinion; in other respects the order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs in all courts to all parties appearing and filing separate briefs payable out of the corpus of the trust.
CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, O'BRIEN and LOUGHRAN, JJ., concur; HUBBS and FINCH, JJ., dissent.
Ordered accordingly.