124 Misc. 320 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1924
This is an accounting of Joseph W. Harriman as trustee under he last will and testament of William M. Harriman. The question iirectly involved is whether the latter’s sister, Anna Ingland Van ensselaer, exercised a power of appointment over certain property iven to her by the testator’s will. The present case is a novel ne for I have been unable to find any decision in our State reports hich passed upon the exact issues, which are: Have the courts f New York exclusive jurisdiction to determine whether a nonesident’s appointment of a power granted by a New York resident or is not a will? Can the will of the donee be admitted to probate ere notwithstanding it has been rejected by the courts of the onee’s domicile? The special guardian of certain infant remainder-en filed objections to the account and contends that the power as validly exercised, and that the courts of New York State he State of the domicile of the donor of the power) have exclusive risdiction to determine the validity and effect of the instrument of ppointment. On the other hand, the children of Anna I. Van ensselaer contend that her wills were ineffectual to execute the ower; that they were denied probate by the courts of the State of alifornia where the donee, Mrs. Van Rensselaer, resided; that the ecrees denying probate to her various wills are conclusive upon e courts of New York State, and that in default of the exercise the power, the trust fund must be distributed as directed by the
The will of William M. Harriman was admitted to probate by the Surrogate’s Court of New York county on April 27, 1903. It created by the 5th paragraph a trust fund, now amounting to $68,474.19, all personal property, for the benefit of his sister, Anna Ingland Van Rensselaer, with direction to pay her the income for life. Upon her death a small annual income was directed to be continued to be paid to a niece of the testator, Cornelia Van Rensselaer. As to the remaining corpus of the trust the will provided, upon Mrs. Van Rensselaer’s death, that “ the remainder of the capital and the principal of said trust fund shall be paid over and delivered in accordance with the appointment or provisions of the last will and testament of my said sister, or if she die intestate, to her children or descendants, in equal shares, per stirpes and not per capita”
Mrs. Van Rensselaer, the life tenant of the trust, died December 14, 1920, a resident of Los Angeles, Cal. Her six children and Katrina Van Rensselaer, a grandchild (the only surviving child of James F. Van Rensselaer, a deceased son), claim to be entitled to the remainder of the trust by reason of the failure to appoint under the power. The special guardian represents certain infant grandchildren of Mrs. Van Rensselaer, who are the remaindermen in her will. Mrs. Van Rensselaer appears to have executed a will last in point of time on August 7, 1919, a prior will executed on May 29, 1911, and a codicil thereto dated July 19, 1913. Each will is in excellent legal form and recites her specific intent to exercise the power given by her brother’s will. The will of 1919 was offered for probate in the Superior Court of California. Objections were filed, under the procedure of that State, attacking the validity of the will, its due execution, and raising the principal objection that the will was procured by undue influence. This influence was alleged to have been exercised by one John D. Clarke, whom Mrs. Van Rensselaer described as her adopted son. The infant remaindermen' under Mrs. Van Rensselaer’s will were not mentioned in the petition for probate, were never served in the proceeding and their interests were not protected by a specia guardian or guardian ad litem. Out of a considerable estate disposed of in this will Clarke was given the relatively small legacy
I hold that under the circumstances of this estate the decrees of California are without legal effect on the courts of this State. The contention of the counsel for the children of Mrs. Van Rensselaer that these-decrees are entitled to full faith and credit in this State, under the Federal Constitution, must be overruled. The identical question involved here was settled by the United States Supreme Court in Blount v. Walker (134 U. S. 607). That decision was not cited in any of the briefs submitted to me. In that case the grantor of the power resided in South Carolina. The grantee of the power resided in North Carolina and her will was probated there. It was claimed that the decree admitting the will to probate in North Carolina was conclusive upon the courts of Soutl Carolina. The South Carolina court held that the question of the sufficiency of the instrument, by which it was attempted to execute the power, was within its exclusive jurisdiction; that the purportec will of the donee was not her last will and that it was invalid as a] execution of the power in the donor’s estate because it was no
William M. Harriman was a resident of New York State. His will was admitted to probate in this State, and the distribution of his estate is subject to the decree of the Surrogate’s Court of New York county. It is the established law of this State that the courts of New York alone must determine the validity and effect of an instrument, whether will or deed, which purports to exercise a power of appointment under the will of a New York donor. That principle applies, in my opinion, not only to the construction of the will of the donee, but also extends to the jurisdiction to admit or reject it as a will under the criteria of our probate law. This rule was recognized in Matter of New York Life Insurance & Trust Company (Estate of Hallgarten) (139 N. Y. Supp. 695), where my distinguished predecessor, Surrogate Fowler, comprehensively reviewed the English and American law as to the execution of powers. There the donee was a resident of Italy, and the donor was domiciled in New York. His decision was affirmed without opinion by the Appellate Division, First Department (157 App. Div. 916), and by the Court of Appeals in a per curiam decision (209 N. Y. 585), wherein the court stated: “ The learned and ¡xhaustive opinion of Surrogate Fowler makes it unnecessary or us to discuss at length the important and interesting question nvolved in this case. We regard his reasoning as sound, but refer to put our decision squarely on the ground that the contraction and effect of the will of Madame Franchetti, in so far as t involved an exercise of the power of appointment conferred by he will of her father, is governed by the law of this State, the omicile of the donor of the power, and the situs of the property, he learned surrogate was able to find as a fact that she intended er will in that respect to be construed according to the law of this tate and so did not consider it necessary to determine whether as atter of law such an intent would be presumed. We adopt the ule applied in Massachusetts and concur in the reasoning of Chief ustice Gray in support of it in Sewall v. Wilmer (132 Mass. 131).” That decision was also followed by the Appellate Division, 'irst Department, in Matter of Canda (197 App. Div. 597), where Justice Merrell likewise reviewed the pertinent precedents.
The latter decision was followed in the leading case of Murphy v. Deichler, in the House of Lords (L. R. [1909] App. Cas. 446), very similar in its facts to the question involved here. There the power of appointment created by the will of an English resident was exercised by a will executed in English form, although the appointor was domiciled abroad in Germany and the will was not validly executed according to the law of her domicile. It was held that the document might be admitted to probate as a will for the purpose of the appointment although not admissible for any other purpose. (See, also, 1 Jarm. Wills [Sweet 6th Eng. ed.], 800, and the cases cited.) In Sewall v. Wilmer (132 Mass., 131), cited by the Court of Appeals in Matter of New York Life Insurance & Trust Co. (Estate of Hallgarten) (supra), the donor was a resident of Massachusetts. The will of the donee was admitted to probate in Massachusetts, although she was a resident of Maryland. It was held that the validity and effect of the donee’s will was governec by the law of Massachusetts and not that of Maryland. Sewal v. Wilmer (supra) was followed in Walker v. Treasurer & Receiver-General, etc. (221 Mass. 600; 109 N. E. 647), where the court pointec out that the property was not that of the donee, but of the donoi who established the trust and created the power, and that the situi of the property did not attach to the domicile of the donee of the power. The court also held that the power of appointment bj will might be exercised by an instrument valid in the jurisdictioi where the power was created, although not valid as a will in th< domicile of the donee.
The rule has likewise been followed in Pennsylvania in Bingham’ Appeal (64 Penn. St. 345). Such is the law also in Rhode Islam (Rhode Island Trust Co. v. Dunnell, 34 R. I. 394), and in Maryland (Prince de Bearn v. Winans, 111 Md. 434). In a very recent decisioi in our own State, dealing with this general subject, Mr. Justic Dowling in his opinion sustained the jurisdiction of our Suprem Court in an accounting action for the distribution of the estat of Jay Gould who died a resident of New York (Gould v. Goulc 211 App. Div. 78).
To summarize the rules of law to be applied; where no questio:
The report of the referee is, therefore, erroneous in holding that the decrees rejecting the wills in California were conclusive; .in declaring that Anna Ingland Van Rensselaer died intestate, and in directing a distribution in accordance with the will of William M. Harriman as though Mrs. Van Rensselaer died intestate without exercising her power of appointment. The various authorities cited by the learned referee in his opinion relate to the conclusiveness of foreign decrees dealing with the individual property of a decedent and are not applicable to a power of appointment given by a New York resident. I have already pointed out that the United States Supreme Court has held that such decrees are entitled to no recognition in the State where the original estate is administered. (Blount v. Walker, 134 U. S. 607.)
At the instance of the special guardian the depositions of the draftsman and witnesses to the various wills and codicil of Mrs. [Van Rensselaer were taken by commission. Their testimony amply satisfied the requirements of law as to the execution of all the testamentary scripts, and particularly the last will of 1919. ivVhile all the necessary parties interested have been cited in this proceeding, I am of the opinion that the will of the donee cannot be proven in this accounting proceeding even for the purpose of establishing the execution of the power of appointment. Section 167 of the Real Property Law provides:11 Where a power to dispose If real property is confined to a disposition by devise or will, the Instrument must be a written will, executed as required by law.” In other words, the instrument purporting to exercise the power must first be admitted to probate here before it becomes effective. ■The sufficiency of the instrument as' a will must be tested by our law of wills. The purpose and reasons for the enactment of this lection of the law are clearly set forth in the notes of the original levisers of the Revised Statutes under the heading, Execution of mowers (Fowler’s Real Prop. Law [3d ed.], 1302). In their discus
Section 167 of the Real Property Law is likewise applicable to the trust of personal property involved here. (Pers. Prop. Law, § 11; Matter of Moehring, 154 N. Y. 423; Cutting v. Cutting, 86 id. 522.)
I, therefore, hold that there must be an independent probate proceeding under the solemn form required by our practice.
The special guardian of the infants is directed to forthwith file a petition offering the scripts for probate as the last will and testament of Mrs. Van Rensselaer, the donee of the power, for the purpose only of establishing the validity, under the laws of New York, of the exercise of the power. The distribution of the trust fund here will be suspended until the final determination of the probate proceedings.
The referee’s conclusions are overruled and the report denied confirmation. Submit decree accordingly.