147 Misc. 286 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1933
Only one question is submitted to the surrogate in this proceeding for the judicial settlement of the accounts of the
The decedent died on March 22, 1931, leaving a will and several codicils thereto, the last codicil bearing date October 9, 1930, which made it possible for the widow to file an election to take her intestate share pursuant to section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law, as amended by chapter 229 of the Laws of 1929.
To summarize the provisions of the will it is provided that the nephew Harry Bruce Leger should receive a legacy of $40,000, and the residue was given to the executor in trust, to collect the rents and income, and to pay the same to decedent’s wife for life or so long as she shall remain his widow. This restriction as to payment of income makes it less than a life estate and permits the widow to file an election to take her intestate share. (Matter of Byrnes, 260 ,N. Y. 465.)
The will and codicils were not probated until October 20, 1931, a period of over seven months from decedent’s death. In the meantime temporary letters of administration were granted to the executor named in the will, and on the judicial settlement of the accounts of said administrator on December 17, 1931, there was inserted in the decree and directed to be paid from the income of that part of the estate representing the residue the sum of $450 to the widow on account of her income from the trust created in the will. Prior thereto there had been paid to her the sum of $138; at different times after the judicial settlement there was paid by the executor to the widow various sums, the total payments amounting to $2,438. The checks for said payments and the receipts attached thereto stated that the payments were made from income received from the funds held by the executor on account of the trust created in decedent’s will for her benefit.
The widow duly filed her election to take her intestate share within the six months’ period after the probate of the will, but the matter was not brought on for a hearing before the court until the final judicial settlement of the executor’s accounts, at which time the legatee Harry Bruce Leger, who is also the remainderman of the trust created in the will, filed an answer to the election claimed by the widow, in which answer it was alleged that the widow by receiving income from the temporary administrator and from the executor had accepted the provisions of the will and thereby had waived her right to receive her intestate share under the provisions of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law, as amended.
There is no dispute as to the facts. The decedent’s estate approximated $93,817. After paying the debts and funeral and
Counsel for the nephew has submitted a very strong brief in support of the claim, and has cited numerous authorities upholding the doctrine that in accepting any of the provisions of the will the person so accepting must give full force and effect to all other provisions of the will; and that the widow in accepting this income from time to time has legally accepted the provisions of the trust created for her benefit, and is estopped from an election under the provisions of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law.
Counsel for the widow at the hearing before the surrogate stipulated that the sum so received by her should be considered as payments on account of her intestate share, and that thereby no legal injury or loss was sustained by any person in interest.
The Commission appointed to recommend changes in the Decedent Estate Law, in its various reports gave it as its opinion that more liberal provision should be made for the surviving spouse. And the Legislature in adopting the new section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law announces its intention to be, to increase the share of the surviving spouse in the estate of the deceased spouse, either in the case' of intestacy or by an election against the terms of the will of the deceased spouse, thus enlarging property rights of such surviving spouse. And by section 20 of the same law (Laws of 1929, chap. 229) stated that such provisions “ shall be liberally construed to carry out such intention.”
The Commission further in its report to the Legislature stated that there should be arrangements made whereby the immediate necessities of the surviving spouse should be provided for. The only provision in that respect created by the Legislature was a provision for the payment of $2,500 in cash in certain instances where a proper trust had been created for the benefit of the surviving spouse. There would be no question under the law as it existed prior to the enactment of chapter 229 of the Laws of 1929, but what the widow in this matter would be estopped from claiming against the will. The action of Beetson v. Stoops (186 N. Y. 456) and many other cases cited firmly settled that doctrine.
But here we are to carry out and construe the provisions of a
The nephew will be in exactly the same position as he would be if these payments had not been made to the widow. None of his legal rights have been violated.
All other things being equal, the decision should be in favor of the surviving widow.
The court does not attempt to hold that a surviving spouse may not by her or his act waive the right to an election to take an intestate share as against a will, but under the facts in this particular matter we believe that Mrs. Leger has not waived her rights and the decree should provide that she is entitled to her intestate share, and that there should be deducted therefrom the amount .already received by her from the executor as shown by the account.
Decreed accordingly.