11 Mills Surr. 326 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1913
The testator died on the 16th day of September, 1895, leaving a last will and testament which was duly admitted to probate on the 29th of February, 1896. In his will he directed his executor to sell a plot of real estate owned by him and known as No. 213 Spring street, New York city, and from the purchase money received to pay the sum of $1,000 to his sister, Maria Anna Zipf, and the sum of $1,000 to Julia Braun, a sister of his deceased wife. The executor was further directed to set aside the sum of $500 to defray the expenses of administration. After paying and discharging any mortgages and loans on the said property and the payment of the two aforementioned legacies the executor was to take from the purchaser of the property a mortgage for one-half of the balance of the purchase money, payable at the death of Julia Braun, the testator’s sister-in-law, with interest at the rate of five per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, which mortgage was to recite the trust and contain a provision that it should not be assigned or transferred during the life of his sister-in-law, and the trustees were directed to pay the income derived therefrom to Julia Braun during her lifetime. The remaining one-half of the purchase money was directed to be divided among his brothers and sisters and children of deceased brothers and
“ After the death of my sister-in-law, Julia Braun, I direct my executors or the survivor of them to collect the amount of said bond and mortgage and to divide the same into six equal parts or shares, and to pay one equal part or share to the following of her sisters, if living, or the children of such as shall be dead, to wit: 1. One equal sixth part or share to Barbara Glock; 8. One equal sixth part or share to Elizabeth Strauber; 6. One^ equal sixth part or share to the children of Mary Huhner, deceased; 4. One equal sixth part or share to the children of Christina Laux, deceased; 5. One equal sixth part or share to the children of Catharina Esselbom; 6. One equal sixth part or share to Agnes Ey.”
The first question of construction that presents itself is as to the interpretation of the. word “ children ” with regard to two of the one-sixth shares bequeathed by this paragraph of the will. Barbara Glock, the legatee of the first one-sixth part, died December 18, 1903, after the testator. She had two. daughters, Barbara Rohrbach and Mina Pottebaum, both of whom died before the testator and the life tenant. Mina Pottebaum Ifeft one daughter, Mary Hubschmitt, who died without leaving any children; Barbara Rohrbach, the other daughter, left her surviving three daughters and a son, Minnie Ullrich, Louisa Weber and Julia Muller and William G. Rohrbach, who died last September, so that Barbara Glock left her surviving no children, but only grandchildren, and of the five who survived
It is asked whether the word “ children ” is to be interpreted strictly or is to be enlarged to “ descendants ” so as to include grandchildren. The primary guide in the interpretation of any will is the manifest intention of the testator and it is the duty of the court to give that force and effect to the scheme of distribution devised by the testator for the disposition of his property among the objects of his bounty where a construction and interpretation of the will to that effect is not inconsistent with or does not contravene or render nugatory statutes or decisions. This canon of construction of wills is so fixedly determined that it needs no citation for its support. The testator left no widow or children, his nearest relatives being brothers and sisters and nephews and nieces. The scheme of distribution adopted by him was to divide his property into two equal parts, and the legatees into two great categories—one comprehending his blood relatives and the other his relatives by affinity. One of these parts he divided amongst his brothers and sisters and children of deceased brothers and sisters. The other part he divided between the brothers and sisters of his deceased wife, or the children of her deceased brothers and sisters. He gave a legacy of $1,000 to his sister and a legacy of $1,000 to Julia Braun, his wife’s sister. The intent discoverable from the will seems plainly to direct a distribution of his property equally and absolutely between his own blood relatives and his deceased wife’s relatives; the shares or parts of the one-half distributed among his wife’s relatives to be independent and kept separate from the shares or parts of the one-half distributed among his own blood relatives. If the word “ children ” were inter
From the whole scheme of distribution set forth in the will, 1 am of the opinion that the testator in using the word “ children ” with regard to the shares distributed by the 11th paragraph of the will, intended it (where there are no children) in the sense of “ descendants,” so as to include grandchildren, and thus keep the one-sixth share among the representatives of the legatee entitled to the share had she survived. Grandchildren may be included in the word “ children ” whenever it is necessary to give effect tó the words of a will, and it appears to have been the intent of the testator, as I think it was in this case. Marsh v. Hague, 1 Edw. Ch. 174; Hone v. Van Schaick, 3 N. Y. 538; Matter of Bender, 44 Misc. Rep. 79. The legacies contained in the 3d, and 4th and 5th subdivisions of paragraph 11 reading “ one equal sixth part or share to the children of * * * ” are unmistakably gifts to a class (Matter of Kimberly, 150 N. Y. 90; Matter of King, 200 id. 189), and only those of the class who are in being when the final division or distribution is to be made, which by this will is clearly fixed at the death of the life tenant, can share. Matter of Baer, 147 N. Y. 348; Bisson v. W. S. R. R. Co., 143 id. 125; Goebel v. Wolf, 113 id. 405; Teed v. Morton, 60 id. 506.
A more difficult question is presented as to distribution of the one-sixth part given to Barbara Glock in subdivision 1 and of the one-sixth part given to Elizabeth Strauber in subdivision 2 and of the one-sixth part given to Agnes Ey in subdivision 6. It is argued on the authority of Connelly v. O’Brien, 166 N. Y. 406, that immediately upon the death of the testator the
Decreed accordingly.