65 Misc. 2d 700 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1971
In this proceeding for construction of the will the court is called upon to determine the meaning to be given to the language of gift employed by the testator to bestow a presumably substantial bequest upon 11 designated charities all of which had been the object of his long time interest and the recipients of generous inter vivos donations. In article FIFTH (g) of the will, which he himself drew, he made provision for the questioned legacy in the following manner:
“ I give and bequeath a sum to be determined as hereinafter * * * set forth to [11 named charities in specified percentages].
“ The sum above mentioned shall be the value by which my taxable estate for federal estate tax purposes shall exceed * * * $5,000,000 * * * The bequests made in this Section (g), as well as all other items which are deductible in determining the value of my taxable estate, shall be deducted in determining my taxable estate for federal estate tax purposes in applying the provisions of this paragraph.”
We start the search for the purpose of the testator from the indisputable assumption that it was not his intention to use his testament as a kind of carrot and stick to torment the institutions with which he had been so closely associated throughout his adult life. Yet if the court were to follow the instructions of the will in their literal sense the charitable purpose of the testator, which we must ascribe to him from the very fact that he so carefully and selectively identified the objects of his bounty, we would arrive at a hopeless contradiction and the charities would, be the losers. In a similar situation my predecessor Mr. 'Surrogate Collins once stated that he was “confronted with the choice of ascribing a palpable error to inadvertence or of charging the testator with a manifest absurdity and visiting its consequences upon the primary objects of his generosity ” (Matter of Baylies, 104 N. Y. S. 2d 238, 240). He found a wealth of authority which enabled him to avoid the result which literal compliance with the instructions of the testator would have required and fortunately the openly expressed and overriding purpose of the testator leaves the same choice open to the court in the matter of the will at bar.
The text of this instrument bears more than one indication of the attention the testator devoted to the impact of the tax burden and the language with which we are presently dealing is in itself a manifestation of that concern. The petitioners have suggested that in the sequence of the execution of his purpose the subject instructions followed as an error of preoccupation and that what Mr. Graustein actually had in mind was a charitable bequest in an amount to be determined by deducting from his gross estate the aggregate of his debts and administration expenses, and the sum total of all taxable legacies together with the taxes attributable thereto. If that formula can be substituted for the A B C of the testamentary language, the over-riding purpose of the testator to benefit the 11 charitable enterprises he designated can be preserved intact. To do so represents an exercise of the only logical deduction
For the reasons stated the court holds that article FIFTH (g) of the will is to be construed as though the testator "had directed that the aggregate gift to the specified charities was to be determined by deducting from the gross estate the debts of the testator, the expenses of administering the estate, the amount held to constitute the marital deduction and, finally, the total of all .of the other legacies and the taxes which they generated.