40 N.Y.S. 791 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
Peter Garlock, the executor, complains of the surcharge of 81,020, made by reason of his improper conduct in the sale of the farm of 204 acres, in virtue of the power conferred in the will. Hpon a careful perusal of the evidence which was taken in the Surrogate’s Court we are of the opinion that it sustains the conclusion that the sale was collusive and that it also fully sustains the conclusion upon it reached by the surrogate; and we are of the opinion that, as matter of law, upon the facts found by him, the executor was properly surcharged by the surrogate with five dollars an acre, the difference between the price which the executor received for the farm and the actual value of the farm as found on the evidence before the surrogate — conflicting to a large extent though that evidence was. (Gardner v. Ogden, 22 N. Y. 327 ; Forbes v. Halsey, 26 id. 53; Colburn v. Morton, 5 Abb. [N. S.] 315, 325.) In the course of the opinion delivered in the case last cited numerous cases are referred to, and it was said by Davis, J., viz.: “ Where a purchase has been made in violation of these principles, the cestui que trust, or those who may have succeeded to his rights, can either apply to have the sale set aside, or may affirm the sale and charge the
(2) We are of the opinion that the evidence before the Surrogate’s Court warranted the surrogate in surcharging the one per cent interest upon certain notes mentioned in the decree, which the executor had, in violation of his duty, taken. It is quite evident that he was more willing to oblige members of his family than he was to follow the strict rules of law in the administration of the assets of the estate. (Matter of Estate of Scheideler, 75 Hun, 185.) When the executor undertook to loan the funds of the estate upon personal security, and disregard the law relating to trustees, which requires special classes of security to be taken, it is quite evident that he had as a motive the accommodation of members of his family. Under such circumstances, we think, it was very proper that the surrogate should surcharge him the interest which, by his misconduct, was lost to the estate. (King v. Talbot, 40 N. Y. 76 ; Adair v. Brimmer, 74 id. 539 ; Matter of Myers, 131 id. 409; In re Estate of Goetschius, 2 Misc. Rep. 278.) If he had paid the moneys upon the legacies instead of loaning the same, he would have come nearer the vigilant discharge of his duty as executor. (Brown v. Rickets, 4 Johns. Ch. 302.)
(3) At the time of the death of the testator he was the owner of a bond and mortgage dated October 5, 1880, made by Cornelius Vandevort to him, to secure the payment of the sum of $8,000 purchase money of premises described in the mortgage. The mortgage contained a clause declaring it to be a security for the payment of the sum of $8,000 purchase money, with interest thereon according to the condition of a bond. In the bond were the conditions of payment in the following language: “ The condition of this obligation is such that if the above bounden Cornelius Vandevort, his heirs, executors or administrators shall and do well and truly pay or cause to be paid unto the above-named Thomas Vandevort, his certain attorney, executors, administrators or assigns, the sum of seven thousand dollars in sixteen equal annual payments, with annual interest on all sums due and remaining unpaid, no principal or interest to be paid, however, till April 1,1882, when the first pay
Cornelius W. Vandevort, the mortgagor, died September 18, 1885, and letters testamentary under his will were issued to T. Spencer Vandevort, December 10,1885, and on November 5,1887, T. Spencer, as executor of Cornelius, contracted to sell the mortgaged premises to Edwin K. Burnham, subject to the lien, however, of the mortgage, and Burnham immediately transferred his contract to purchase to Abram Garlock. On November 12, 1887, Abram Garlock made a payment on the mortgage. On the 18th day of March, 1889, Peter Garlock, as executor, executed a satisfaction piece in which it was declared' that the mortgage was redeemed and paid off, satisfied and discharged “ except the sum of one thousand dollars which becomes due April 15th, 1897, and said mortgage is valid to secure the same,” which discharge was recorded in the clerk’s office of Ontario county.
The appellant, T. Spencer Vandevort, requested the surrogate to find, viz.: “ That upon the death of the said Thomas W. Vandevort, the alternative clause in the bond of said Cornelius Vandevort, mentioned in the Thirty-first finding" of fact, operated to make said $1,000 due and payable immediately to the executors of said testator, mortgagee, Thomas Vandevort, and the account of said executor, Peter Garlock, should be surcharged with the sum of $1,000, together with interest thereon from the 28th of June, 1885, the date of the death of the said Thomas W. Vandevort.” The surrogate refused the request so made and an exception was taken. The same appellant also requested the surrogate to find that it was the duty of the executor to collect such $1,000 and to receive and reduce the same to money, should opportunity be offered to him to do so; and that he should have collected said mortgage in the month of March,
We think the contention of the appellant that, by the death of Thomas W. Vandevort, on the 28th day of June, 1885, the §1,000 mentioned in the mortgage became presently due, cannot be sustained. The specification of April 15, 1897, as the túne for the payment of the §1,000 is clear and definite, and the provision in the bond is to the effect that it shall be payable at that date and without interest. No other specific time is mentioned for the payment of the §1,000. After mentioning the date upon which the §1,000 should be paid without interest, to wit, April 15, 1897, the bond contains the following words : “ Or if, in case of the decease of my grandson, Thomas W. Vandevort, before that date, he (the mortgagor) shall pay said thousand dollars to my executors, administrators or assigns.” The effect of the last-quoted language is to change the party who shall receive the payment, but it does not change the time when the payment shall be made by the mortgagor or obligor.
Undoubtedly it is the duty of the court to put itself, in giving construction 'to the instrument, as near' as may be, in the situation of the parties, and view the surrounding circumstances and bear in mind the occasion and apparent object of the parties, and therefrom to determine the meaning and intent of the language employed in framing their agreement. (Dent v. North American Steamship Co., 49 N. Y. 390-395 ; Smith v. Kerr, 108 id. 31-37; Kennedy v. O. & S. R. R. Co., 67 Barb. 169.)
. In this case the transaction was between father and son. The son’s circumstances, to some extent, had become embarrassed, and evidently required the conciliatory and accommodating terms which the father consented to give to him in the adjustment of the indebtedness due from the son to the father; and a liberal extension of the terms of payment was agreed upon between them. In that same spirit of liberality it is fair to suppose that the father consented to postpone the payment of $1,000, which he provided should be made to his grandson, to a period of time when the latter should arrive at the age of twenty-one years, to wit, on April 15,1897. However, the father contemplated the possibility that the grandson might die, and caused a clause to be inserted providing that if he should die before
if or do we think there is any controlling force in the contention of the appellant that the surrogate should have charged the accounts of the executor with interest upon the $1,000 from April 1, 1889, because of the omission of the executor to enforce the mortgage. The evidence relied upon to support such a contention is not satisfactory, and we are of the opinion that the surrogate properly omitted to charge the executor with dereliction of duty in having failed to collect the bond and mortgage before, by the terms thereof, they were due, as already intimated. We, therefore, find no occasion to disturb the conclusion reached by the surrogate in respect to the $1,000 secured by the mortgage of Cornelius Vandevort.
(4) The testator, by the terms of his will, gave to his wife the household furniture and household effects, and provided that she should receive, during the term of her natural life, the interest at seven per
“ Seventh. I hereby nominate and appoint my son-in-law, Peter Garlock * * * and my son, Gilbert M. Vandevort, * * * Executors of this my last Will and Testament, with full power and authority to sell and convey any and all my real estate of which I shall
The will was executed on the 4th day of August, 1875, and on the 4th of February, 1878, the testator made a codicil to the will, in which he declared that it was his intention that the legacies to lhs grandchildren provided in the third section of the will should be paid to them at the time therein mentioned, but with no interest on the amount of said legacies or any of them. He also canceled the legacy of $1,200 given to Sarah E. Emery, declaring that he had, since the making of the will, advanced that sum to her. On the 12th of June, 1879, he made another codicil revoking the legacy to Albert Vandevort, and giving and bequeathing to him instead thereof “ the sum of three thousand dollars to be paid him within one year after my decease if he shall then have attained the age of twenty-one years, or if he is not twenty-one years old at my decease to be paid to him when he shall have reached that age, but without interest.”
From the provisions of the will quoted it is quite apparent that the testator contemplated that there must be a considerable lapse of time before the will could be fully executed; and the language used by the testator would seem to indicate a disposition to distribute his entire estate, both real and personal, among his children and grandchildren in such a manner as to be in accordance with the plan to distribute the whole of his estate, both real and personal; and that to carry out each and every part of the plan was essential to a complete execution of his intentions in respect to the several members of his family. To effectuate such purpose he conferred power and authority upon his executors “ to sell and convey any and all my (his) real estate of which I shall die seized and possessed — to pay off the said legacies and to make the proper division of my property as herein provided.” Considerable significance should be given to the words “ to pay off the said legacies and to make the proper division of my (his) property as herein provided.” Those words seem to be in harmony with the general intent of the testator that all of his legacies and all of the provisions made for the several members of his immediate family, as well as his grandchildren, should be carried into effect. Those words were used following the provision in the sixth clause of the will authorizing his executors to
In Matter of James (80 Hun, 371) it was said that where legatees named in a will are relatives of the testatrix the court will presume the existence of a desire on the part of the testatrix that all parts of her estate shall be made liable for the payment of such legacies.
The language of the will seems to warrant the conclusion that it was the intention of the testator that the legacies should be paid in full, and that the residue and remainder of his estate should be divided in accordance with the language used in the sixth clause, wherein he directs, after providing for the sale of a certain portion of his real estate, that the “ rest, residue and remainder of my property, both real and personal, including the proceeds of my homestead farm of two hundred and four acres of land, which I desire my executors to sell, to be equally divided between my children and my grandchildren who shall be living at my decease, share and share alike.”
In the course of the opinion delivered by Smith, P. J., in Scott v. Stebbins (27 Hun, 335; S. C. affd., 91 N. Y. 605) he said: “It is hardly to be conceived that the testator contemplated that any part of the proceeds of the real estate should be distributed between his sons as a surplus until their legacies were j>aid in full. In other words, it is to he presumed that he intended that the real estate should be applied to the payment of their legacies before there could he any remainder of the proceeds of the real estate to he divided between them.”
In the course of the opinion delivered in the Court of Appeals in that case (91 H. Y. 614) it was said: “ The presumption is he meant the legacy to he paid; that he did not intend to go through the mere form of bequeathing a legacy to his own son without leaving something to pay it with. He evidently intended the legacy should he paid under all circumstances.” It appeared in that case that the testator, at the time the will was drawn, was the owner of considerable personal property which in December previous to making the will he had inventoried at a large amount. And it is further said in the course of that opinion, viz.: “ So far as we have been able to
We. think this last expression is an answer to the suggestion made in the argument of the learned counsel for the appellant, that the fact that the testator had devised his real estate in Michigan was an indication that he did not, by the subsequent language used, intend to have the proceeds of the real estate, known as the home farm, used in payment of the legacies. The language of the testator seems to indicate that he intended that the real estate (the home farm) should be sold, and that the proceeds should be treated as a fund for distribution. Under such circumstances the doctrine of equitable conversion would apply. (Stagg v. Jackson, 1 N. Y. 206; Horton v. McCoy, 47 id. 21; Taylor v. Dodd, 58 id. 335; Kalbfleisch v. Kalbfleisch, 67 id. 354; Le Fevre v. Toole, 84 id. 95 ; Shipman, v. Rollins, 98 id. 311; McCorn v. McCorn, 100 id. 511.)
Appellant calls our attention to Bevan v. Oooper (72 N. Y. 317), in which case the general rule was laid down that the personal estate is the primary fund for the payment of legacies, and that it is the only fund unless express direction or clear intent is found in and may be gathered from the will, in connection with the surrounding circumstances. In the course of the opinion delivered in'that case it was said: “ It is of much moment, too, that the residuary clause provides for those who had a claim upon his forethought — his widow and his children—while the legacies sought to be charged are to strangers to his own blood, and having no claim upon him, unless it be that of faithful service, or the remote one of relationship to a first wife, and that of former domicile in his household. * * * Courts have often struggled to find reason in a will for charging upon the real estate devised, a legacy to a child; and it is in the same line not to be too ready to make the estate devised to them subject to a legacy to another not of the testator’s kin.” We think that case is quite distinguishable from the one in hand.
Nor do we think Morris v. Sickly (133 N. Y. 456) aids the contention of the appellant. In that case the testatrix gave two money legacies, and then disposed of her residuary estate. At the time the will was made she owned no real estate, and a year afterwards she purchased certain real estate; and it was held that the legacies were not
Upon looking at Burns v. Allen (89 Hun, 552) it is found that there was no indication in the terms of the will of an intention to charge the legacies upon the real estate of the testatrix; and it was held that the extrinsic circumstances did not indicate an intention of the testatrix to charge the legacies upon the realty. We find nothing in the opinion inconsistent with the views stated here.
We reach the conclusion that the learned surrogate was right in determining “ that the proceeds of the testator’s realty, of which he directed a sale, as well as his personal estate, is applicable to the payment of general legacies,” and that “ the money, arising from the sale thereof became legal assets in the hands of the executor when received by him, and for which, as such executor, he was bound to account as personal estate. The intent and direction of the testator to sell the land was absolute, or ‘ out and out ’ for all purposes (Stagg v. Jackson, 1 N. Y. 206), and that the surrogate had authority to construe the provisions of the will in determining their meaning and validity in order to make a decree of distribution.” (Purdy v. Hayt, 92 N. Y. 446; Garlock v. Vandevort, 128 id. 374; Cahill v. Russell, 140 id. 402; Matter of Bolton, 146 id. 257; Baldwin v. Smith, 3 App. Div. 350.)
The foregoing views lead to the conclusion that the decree of the Surrogate’s Court should be affirmed.
All concurred •
Decree affirmed, with costs and disbursements allowed to respondent Emery against Peter Garlock personally, and with one bill of costs and disbursements in favor of respondents Clarence S. Yandevort and Gilbert M. Vandevort, payable out of the estate.