4 Redf. 226 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1880
The Surrogate.—In. January, 1878, the administrators with the will annexed of the testatrix finally accounted, and by the decree they were ordered to retain i in their hands..$5,276.92, subject to the further order of this court, on the final determination of the rights of
It appears that the testatrix and her two grandchildren, Joseph R. and Mary R. Walter, and their father, Charles W. Walter, perished on the steamship Schiller; that they were in the pavilion upon the deck after the disaster to the ship; that the waves broke over the ship, and testatrix was washed out of the pavilion, but the evidence does not disclose whether she was carried out into the sea, or some other part of the deck; the disaster occurred at night. The children, with their father, were seen alive in the pavilion some ten or fifteen minutes after the disappearance of the testatrix, when the pavilion with its inmates was swept away. The dead body of the testatrix was afterwards recovered, but the remains of the children were never found.
The parties who have intervened base their claim to this estate upon the alleged survivorship of the children, and claim to have given sufficient evidence of such survivorship.
The will of decedent, among other things, bequeathed to Mary R. Walter, all decedent’s jewelry, silverware and wearing apparel, and her paintings and pictures to her grandchildren, Joseph R. and Mary R., at the time her executors were directed to take possession of her house
In Newell v. Nichols (12 Hun, 604), the will of Elizabeth M. Walter, the mother of Mary R. and Joseph R., was under consideration. This will contained substantially provisions like that under consideration. It was held, in this case, in substance, that the legal title to the estate vested in the trustees immediately upon the death of the testatrix, and remained in them until the death of the grandchildren, and that the legal title or ■ interest vested in the grandchildren; that upon their deaths they had nothing to transmit, and having died without issue, before the time limited for their receiving the principal of the estate, the gifts over vested in those to whom they were upon such contingency limited. That case went to the Court of Appeals and was affirmed (75 N. Y., 78). The chief justice, who delivered the opinion of the court, stated that he fully concurred in the opinion and views of the court below. From the terms of the will, I am not able to perceive any ground of argument in favor of the legacies being vested in the two grandchildren; for
■ If this were the only clause of the will to be considered there would be no necessity for passing upon the question of survivorship. But the legacy of the jewelry, &c., was a clear vested legacy, and I am of the opinion that the legacy of the pictures is also a vested legacy ; hence it becomes necessary to determine the question of survivorship.
The case of Pell v. Ball (1 Cheves Eq. S. C., 99) is cited by counsel, and also by Judge Yah Yoest, in Stinde v. Ridgway, above cited, at page 303. The citation follows the suggestion that the evidence in this case may be sufficient to ■ justify the conclusion that the children .survived their grandmother, as they were last seen alive. But the case of ■ Pell v. Ball does not fully support that suggestion,, for in that case there was an explosion of one of the boilers of a steamer, in that part of the boat where the husband’s berth may have been situated, ’ which explosion resulted in the breaking- amidships and the sinking of the boat, and the destruction of many of • the passengers, several of whom wére killed by the ex- . plosion itself. Immediately after the explosion the ■ decedent’s wife was heard calling frantically from the
Ordered accordingly. ,