111 N.E. 762 | NY | 1916
Mary Jane Gallagher died April 25, 1912, and left a last will and testament, executed June 27, 1908, which was duly probated, and an estate of upwards of $45,000.
The first clause of the will provides:
"First. After my lawful debts and funeral expenses are paid, I give and bequeath unto my cousin, Mary Ann Harris, of West Lynn, Massachusetts, the sum of Three thousand dollars ($3,000.00), and all of my household effects, including my wardrobe, bed, bedding, pictures, except the picture of George Washington worked in Worsted, and I also give her the contents of my safe deposit box, in the vaults of the Garfield Safe Deposit Company, at Twenty-third Street and Sixth Avenue, in the Borough of Manhattan, New York City, consisting of jewelry, c., excepting my Savings Bank Books which are therein; but in case of her death the same are to go to her daughter, Nellie Spinner."
Other legacies follow and she then gives all the residue of her estate to the appellant, the Methodist Episcopal Church Home.
The surrogate has found that at the time of the execution of the will the safe deposit box above referred to contained a certificate of deposit of the Union Trust Company, dated May 7, 1902, for the sum of $6,853.60 and a lease for ninety-nine years of lands of the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association; that on February 8, 1909, the certificate of deposit was surrendered by testatrix and a new certificate taken by her in its place; that at the time *114 of her death the certificate of deposit and the lease were at her residence; that the executors realized on the lease $12,760.75, which they paid to the residuary legatee, and that they have collected on the certificate of deposit $7,052.73. The surrogate has also made as a finding of fact the following: "That it wasthe intention of the testatrix that said lease for ninety-nine years and said certificate of deposit, dated May 7, 1902, should pass to the objectant, Mary Ann Harris, under said clause first of her said will." And he directs the payment of the proceeds thereof, with interest, to the respondent, said Mary Ann Harris.
The contention of the Methodist Episcopal Church Home is that the certificate of deposit and the lease are not specifically bequeathed to Mary Ann Harris, and that the will does not speak as of the time of its execution, when the certificate of deposit and the lease were in the safe deposit box, but speaks as of the time of the death of the testatrix, when they had been removed therefrom. If "the contents of my safe deposit box" include only such articles as were in the box at the time of the death of testatrix, the certificate of deposit and the lease do not pass under the first clause of the will, but if the words include such articles as were in the box at the time the will was executed they go to Mary Ann Harris.
The intention of the testatrix is to be determined from the language of the will as construed in the light of the facts and circumstances surrounding its execution, and where a finding of fact as to such intention is based only on the will and the surrounding facts and circumstances as found by the trial court, the judicial construction of the will is a question of law reviewable by this court, although the decree of the Surrogate's Court has been unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division. (Williams v. Jones,
That a legacy of the "contents" of a safe deposit box, a desk or a chest, plainly means whatever might be therein at the time of the death of the testator has been generally held. (Robson
v. Hamilton, L.R. [2 Ch. 1891] 559; Gaff v. Cornwallis,
It is urged that the intent of the testatrix specifically to bequeath the certificate of deposit and the lease is to be inferred from the exception of "my savings bank books which are therein." This conclusion seems strained and unnatural. She might except from the contents of the box any articles which might be contained therein without *116
in the slightest degree indicating an intention not to make the gift a better gift by putting other articles into the box, or a worse gift, or none, by removing a part or the whole of the contents before her death. She describes the contents of the box as "consisting of jewelry, c.," and if it were not for the reference to the savings bank books, the inference that "jewelry,c." included securities and evidences of debt would scarcely be suggested. So long as the will contains a residuary clause, the general words would be limited to things ejusdem generis. (Matter of Reynolds,
The most reasonable conclusion as to testatrix's intention is that she purposely left the description of the contents of the box vague and uncertain, so that she might change the legacy to Mary Ann Harris by changing the contents of the box. This method of drafting a bequest is not to be commended for definiteness, but to disregard the principles of construction above stated would lead to far greater difficulty and uncertainty, if not to frauds and perjuries, in the effort to establish what the contents of a safe or box were at the date of a will, executed perhaps many years before the death of the testator.
The order should be reversed, with costs in all courts against respondent, and proceeding remitted to the Surrogate's Court of Kings county to proceed in accordance herewith.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., CHASE, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, CARDOZO and SEABURY, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc. *117