157 N.E. 750 | NY | 1927
By the third clause of his will, Edward H. Perkins, Jr., directed his residuary estate to be divided into three equal parts to be held in trust, one for his wife and one each for his son and his daughter. He directed further that, upon the death of his widow, half of her share should be held in trust for the son during life and half for the daughter during life. Upon the death of either the son or the daughter without issue, his or her share should be held in trust for the survivor during his or her life with remainder to the issue of the survivor. The testator died in 1902, the widow in 1923 and the son, without issue, in 1925. If the will included no other direction respecting the trust, these terms clearly would violate our statutes prohibiting the suspension of *481
the absolute power of alienation and of absolute ownership during more than two lives. (Real Prop. Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 50], sec. 42; Pers. Prop. Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 41], sec. 11; Matter ofHorner,
Appellants argue with great ability and learning that by the sixth clause the testator conferred power upon the trustees in their discretion to convey to the survivor of the son and the daughter the legal title to the one-sixth of the residuary estate, that such discretionary power is absolute in the sense that it is free from any restraint except an obligation to act honestly and that such an obligation is always implied. They concede that the law of this State requires all future estates to be so *482
limited that in every possible contingency they will absolutely terminate within the period allowed or they will be void (Schettler v. Smith,
We cannot fully convince ourselves that the trustees' power was plenary. To resist the persuasion that some restriction was placed upon it seems to be impossible. The limitation might perhaps be slight; it depended upon the trustees' judgment. Their judgment in turn was subject to possibilities which might not and never did in this case develop into facts. Yet they might have happened. If they had, no power to alienate could have existed. Events outside the testator's and the trustees' control conceivably could occur which would prevent intelligent fiduciaries from honestly transferring and conveying the corpus of the trust estate. The validity of the provisions of this will must be determined not by what has happened but by what might have happened under them. (Monypeny v. Monypeny,
In Robert v. Corning (
We hold, therefore, that the sixth clause of Mr. Perkins' will does not create a more extensive power than an authority dependent for its existence upon such a judgment of the trustees as would result from an honest and reasonably intelligent appraisal of the characteristics and circumstances of the testator's son and daughter. As we read his purpose, he intended that, if their qualities would not, according to the standard of honest and ordinarily intelligent estimation, justify a conveyance to them, any transfer would be in contravention of the trust. It may be that no judicial power exists to review and overthrow a conveyance by the trustees which might be imprudent. Absence of a remedy for the correction of errors of judgment does not, however, bear upon the testator's intent. We view his primary purpose to be a restriction upon the trustees' power to transfer in the event that his children, judged by ordinary standards, should fail in sobriety, prudence and poise as reasonably intelligent people regard these attributes. That clearly appears to have been his dominant idea respecting one-sixth of his residuary estate and it includes a conditional prohibition. *486 It is apparent that he seriously considered the possibility that his children might lack the qualities which he deemed essential for the control of property and that the trustees might so judge. He did not leave their judgment wholly free. It was circumscribed by his injunction which they were bound to respect and obey. Therefore, they were not in every possible contingency authorized to transfer and convey, and, accordingly, absolute power of alienation and absolute ownership were suspended for more than two lives.
The judgment should be affirmed with costs, payable out of the estate.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., POUND and KELLOGG, JJ., concur; CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., dissent; LEHMAN, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed, etc.