107 N.E. 340 | NY | 1914
This case involves the construction of the will of Valentine Mott. He died in 1865, leaving a will and codicil. He gave his residuary estate to his wife for life. On her death he directed that the estate be sold and divided. We are concerned at this time with the distribution of the ninth part which he directed should be held in trust for his granddaughter, Fanny Mott. In the fourth subdivision of his will he said: "I give, devise and bequeath one-ninth part of the proceeds of such sale to each of my surviving children, and one-ninth part of such proceeds to Isaac Bell, Jr., in trust for Fanny Mott, daughter of my son, Valentine Mott, deceased, and one-ninth *171 part of such proceeds to Isaac Bell, Jr., in trust for Valentine A. Blacque, son of my daughter, Olivia, deceased." In the same subdivision he said: "In case of the death of either of my children before the division of my estate, I give, devise and bequeath what would have been his or her share, if living, to his or her issue, if any, such issue to take equally what would have been the parent's share. If no issue, then I give, devise and bequeath such ninth part to my surviving children and the issue of those deceased." By the fifth subdivision of the will he amplified the statement of his purpose in respect of the two shares which the preceding subdivision had already placed in trust. "The two several ninth portions of my estate devised to Isaac Bell, Jr., for my grandson, Valentine A. Blacque, and my granddaughter, Fanny Mott, respectively, I hereby declare to be upon the trust following: to invest such several ninth parts on bond and mortgage in City and State stocks or in other safe securities, and to collect, and after the majority of each to pay to each of them the net income of his or her respective share during his or her life. Upon the death of either I give, devise and bequeath his or her share to his or her issue, if any. If there be no issue, then to my surviving children and the issue of those deceased."
The granddaughter, Fanny Mott, afterwards became Fanny Mott Campbell. She died in 1912, leaving two daughters, Fanny Van Schaick and Lillie C. Boyd, and four grandchildren. One of these grandchildren is the child of Mrs. Van Schaick. Three of them are the children of Mrs. Boyd. The will gave this share of the estate, on the death of Mrs. Campbell, to her "issue;" and the meaning of that term as here used is the question for decision.
The surrogate held that the word issue meant descendants; that it was not limited to children; and that the division must be made per capita among the descendants of every degree. In that view, the two children of Mrs. *172 Campbell, and the four grandchildren, were entitled, each of them, to one-sixth of the share in question. The Appellate Division held that the word issue was used in this will as synonymous with children; and hence that the two children of Mrs. Campbell were entitled, each of them, to a half, and that the grandchildren were excluded. This construction is established, not only by the opinion of the Appellate Division, but also by its order, which adjudges "that the word `issue' as used in that portion of the fifth clause of the will of Valentine Mott, deceased, reading `upon the death of either, I give, devise and bequeath his or her share to his or her issue, if any,' be accorded the construction contended for by appellant, and was used by the testator in the sense of children."
We agree with the learned surrogate that the word issue was intended to include descendants; but we do not share his view that the gift was to be made per capita, with the result that children would take concurrently with their living parents. (Soper v. Brown,
The rule is that unless some other meaning is given to it by the context, the word issue is not confined to children, but includes descendants in any degree. (Schmidt v. Jewett,
We are thus brought to a consideration of the question whether the gift to the issue of Mrs. Campbell was one per capita orper stirpes. If it was per capita, children and grandchildren take concurrently. If it was per stirpes, they take by representation. (Jackson v. Jackson,
If that is the meaning of the word issue as used in that subdivision, we may fairly hold that it did not lose that meaning and take on another one in the next subdivision. (Ross v.Ross, supra; Matter of Birks, supra.) We must keep in mind the unity of scheme that binds these subdivisions together. The fifth subdivision merely amplifies and develops a gift which takes its origin in the fourth. The trusts affecting two-ninths of the estate are established in one clause; the description of them is resumed, and they are made precise and definite, in another. This cohesion of plan must have tended to impress the testator with the belief that after defining his use of the word issue in one paragraph, it was needless to repeat the definition in the next. In all likelihood it never occurred to him that the need of such repetition would ever suggest itself to any one. He knew that the property disposed of in the fifth subdivision represented the shares of two deceased children, a son, Valentine, and a daughter, Olivia. He knew that if these children, instead of dying before the making of the will, had died afterwards, but before the division of the estate or even before the testator, the fourth subdivision would give their shares to their descendants in any degree and give it per stirpes. It is incredible that he contemplated a stirpital division among issue of children who died before him, but after the making of the will, and a per capita division among the issue of those children who died before him and before the making of the will. A rule which yields so readily as the one that presumes a percapita division, must give way where adherence to it involves a discrimination so unreasonable. A case closely parallel isDexter v. Inches *176
(
The order of the Appellate Division should be modified by striking therefrom the provision that the word "issue," as used in the fifth clause of the will of Valentine Mott, was used by the testator in the sense of children, and by substituting a provision that it was used in the sense of descendants taking by representation or per stirpes, and as so modified the order should be affirmed, with costs to both parties payable out of the estate.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., HISCOCK, CHASE, COLLIN, HOGAN and MILLER, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly.