193 Misc. 777 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1948
This is a motion by defendant, Walter Fields, to dismiss the five “ counterclaims ” in the answer of defend
On a companion motion, decided simultaneously herewith (193 Misc. 770), this court has construed the trust agreement as providing that if the settlor dies after December 1, 1946, and the beneficiary survives him, the principal of the trust is to be paid to the beneficiary. It follows that the present motion, to the extent that it seeks an order directing payment of the corpus to the movant, must be granted. For the same reason, the answer of the executrix is insufficient to justify the granting of the relief prayed for therein, viz., that the principal of the trust fund, together with all accretion and accumulated income, be paid to the executrix, to be administered as part of the estate of W. C. Fields.
There remain for consideration the five “ counterclaims ” in the answer of defendant, Harriet V. Fields, insofar as they are directed at the movant (they are also directed at petitioner and defendant executrix).
The first 11 counterclaim ” seeks an adjudication that one half of the trust property belongs to defendant Harriet V. Fields as community property under the law of California, where the settlor, as well as said defendant, his widow, resided at the time of his death and where his estate is being administered. In view of the court’s holding that under the terms of the trust indenture the corpus passed to the beneficiary at the death of the settlor, it is clear that the first “ counterclaim ” must be dismissed as insufficient. The community property statutes are not claimed to apply to property passing by virtue of the provisions of an inter vivas trust. This is apparently conceded by the widow, for her claim to an interest in the corpus as community property is' predicated upon the theory that the corpus did not go to the beneficiary under the trust and that the settlor died intestate with respect thereto: “ Accordingly, if Decedent had left a residue in these trusts undisposed of, which by-reason of the failure of the dispositive provisions of the trust belonged to him as of December 1, 1946 or at the time of his death on December 25, 1946, such residue, if governed by California law, becomes subject to the operation of § 201.5 of the Probate Code of California ’ ’.
The third “ counterclaim ” alleges the settlor’s will read together with the trust agreements creates trusts which violate the rule against perpetuities, which allegedly is the equivalent of the nonexercise of the power of appointment provided for in the trust agreements. Consequently, the widow and her son claim under the trust agreements as “ heirs at law ”. This counterclaim does not survive the determination that the beneficiary named in each trust agreement is entitled to the corpus and, therefore, must be dismissed.
The fourth “ counterclaim ” is predicated upon the theory that the settlor’s will provides for charitable bequests which are voidable under the laws of both California and New York. Accordingly, an adjudication is sought that the excess bequeathed to charity above the amounts permitted by law belongs to the widow and the son, as the settlor’s next of kin. This “ counterclaim ” is clearly insufficient as to the movant for it does not affect the trust corpus which vested in him by virtue of the provisions of the deed of trust.
The motion is granted in all respects, for the reasons above stated. Settle order.