205 Misc. 101 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1953
The administratrix with the will annexed is accounting and part of the relief requested is a construction of the sixth article of the will which confers certain powers upon the executors and trustees with respect to the making and handling of investments.
The fifth article of the will creates a trust of the residuary-estate. The article following authorizes the executors and trustees to retain investments made by testator and to invest ‘ ‘ in such securities and property, real and personal, as to them may seem best and whether or not the same be authorized by law for the investment of estate funds or of trust funds. ’ ’ This is a clear authorization to invest in so-called nonlegals. The same article contains directions as to amortization of premiums paid on the purchase of securities and as to the allocation of dividends between principal interests and income interests in the trust. The seventh article of the will nominates two persons as executors and trustees and authorizes such persons to designate their successors. This article also contains a provision which section 125 of the Decedent Estate Law renders inoperative but which occasions no present concern.
The persons nominated by testator renounced their rights to letters testamentary and letters of trusteeship and thereafter when need for the appointment of trustees arose, letters of trusteeship were granted to the income beneficiary of the trust and another (Matter of Firth, N. Y. L. J., April 2, 1953, p. 1090, col. 6). The petitioner herein, who is one of the trustees, asks a determination whether or not the powers granted in the sixth article of the will may be exercised by the trustees who are now acting. The court holds that the discretion granted in this article of the will is not personal to the trustees named therein but is incidental to the office and may be exercised by the present trustees. (Matter of Fox, 292 N. Y. 19; Smith v. Floyd, 193 N. Y. 683; Irving Trust Co. v. Burt, 290 N. Y. 382.)
It so happens that the present trustees are residents of Pennsylvania and because of this fact petitioner requests a determination that under this will the trustees may remove the trust fund to the State of their residence. The court does not find such authorization in the will. Testator resided outside the United States but executed his will in this State disposing of his American property and he explicitly directed that the will “ be construed and regulated by the laws of the State of New York.” In so directing testator placed the administration of his estate assets within the control of the laws of this State to the same extent as assets of a resident decedent. (Decedent Estate Law,
Submit decree on notice construing the will and settling the account.