8 Misc. 2d 550 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1944
An application is here made by the surviving spouse of deceased for a determination of the validity and effect of his election to take against the will of his deceased wife. In answer to his application the executor sets up as a bar to the claim of right to elect a document executed and acknowledged by deceased and petitioner on October 17, 1939. The parties stated orally upon the record of the hearing that there were no controverted issues of fact. In the brief of petitioner he refers to the document relied upon as a bar by the executor and says: ‘ ‘ The validity and construction of this last mentioned paper writing therefore is at this time the sole issue before the court * * *. It is the contention of the petitioner that such paper writing is legally insufficient to constitute a waiver of his right of election ”. On this state of the record the court conceives the parties to have submitted the matter for decision on a factual basis not in dispute; and that included in the facts deemed established is the fact that the document set up in the answer of the executor was executed by deceased and petitioner and was acknowledged by them on the day specified therein. The court understands that it is also agreed between the parties that petitioner intermarried with deceased after September 1, 1930 and that the recitals in the
The pertinent text of the document in issue says:
“ Agreement, * * *
‘ ‘ Whereas, the parties hereto have each previously been married and each have children by a prior marriage, and
‘1 Whereas, the party of the first part is desirous that her children shall inherit her property, and the party of the second part is desirous that his children shall inherit his property, and
‘ ‘ Whereas, the parties hereto mutually agree to waive any and all interest in and to the estate of the other,
“ Now, Therefore, it is mutually agreed:
“ That the parties above named, in consideration of the sum of One and no/100 ($1.00) Dollar, lawful money of the United States, and other good and valuable consideration, to each in hand paid by the other, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, each party for herself and himself, hereby renounces and releases to the other party, his or her heirs and assigns forever, all and any right, title and interest, or right of dower, in any property, both real and personal, that said parties may now be seized of or that they may hereafter acquire.”
The quoted text is alleged to fail to meet the requirements of subdivision 9 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law. Counsel’s argument as to those requirements points up the problem and makes clear the issue. He says that subdivision 9 speaks of three types of instrument or agreement. The first of these, he says, is a waiver, by instrument executed after September 1, 1930, of right to take against a particular will. The second of these, he says, is a waiver, by agreement made after September 1, 1930, of right to take against any will. The third and last of these, he says, is an agreement made before September 1, 1930. Counsel develops his argument by asserting a legislative intent to deny to either an instrument or an agreement executed after September 1, 1930, any operative effect as a waiver of election if it merely waives or releases rights in the estate of the spouse but does not mention the word will. His contention is that only in an agreement executed before September 1, 1930, will general text be effective as a release of a right of election. Petitioner’s counsel also attacks the effectiveness of tl*e document by denying to the recitals ip the writing
When the document is considered in the light of its recitals, it must be held that it states the intention and agreement of each party thereto for himself to surrender all choate and inchoate rights in the property of the other party thereto not only in respect of what each then owned but also in respect of what each might thereafter acquire. While it is said that recitals in a contract form no part of it (Ross v. Ross, 233 App. Div. 626, 635) such recitals may be resorted to as indications of the intentions of the parties and the scope and meaning of the agreement (Maloney v. Iroquois Brewing Co., 173 N. Y. 303, 307). Here the last recital is in form an agreement. There is no reason why it cannot be so considered. If it and the other recitals are regarded merely as declarations of intention and scope such declarations leave no doubt as to the coverage intended for the renunciations and releases which are interchanged by the text. At the time the document was signed the right to elect against a will had long been the established law of the State. There is present therefore no such problem in the interpretation of the paper as that discussed in Matter of McGlone (284 N. Y. 527, affd. sub nom. Irving Trust Co. v. Day, 314 U. S. 556). The document is held to be sufficiently broad in its text to operate as a renunciation and surrender by petitioner of all interests in the property of his now deceased wife; unless some provision of subdivision 9 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law requires the court to hold the paper inoperative according to its tenor.
The controversies which have arisen concerning the true meaning of the text of subdivision 9 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law are largely due to its inexact language. In referring to the waiver of a right to take against a particular will the subdivision uses the word “ instrument ”. When it refers to a waiver of right to elect against any will the subdivision uses the word “ agreement ”. When referring to the waiver of right against a particular will the text is set off by a comma from the remainder of the sentence relating to any will; and in the remainder of the sentence the “ agreement ” is referred to as one which might be “ made before or after marriage.” No explicit reference is made to the time of the ‘ ‘ instrument ’ ’ which is declared to operate against a particular will. The use of a comma before the disjunctive “ or ” ordinarily would
In a search for the legislative, as distinguished from the draftsmen’s intent it is appropriate to look at the legislative documents which preceded the enactment of subdivision 9 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law as it now exists; and to look also at the public declarations of members of the commission which no doubt constituted a part of the general body of information upon which the Legislature acted. The Commission to Investigate Defects in the Law of Estates was the creation of the Legislature. (L. 1927, ch. 519.) Its membership included four Surrogates, a number of legislators and some members of the general public. In its original report to the Legislature of 1928 (N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1928, No. 70) a group of proposals was submitted which included a proposed section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law having in it no subdivision 9. It is apparent from the speech of Surrogate Slater delivered at the meeting of the New York State Bar Association on January 18, 1929 (see combined Report of Decedent Estate Comm., Reprint, pp. 161-174), that the presentation of the legislation proposed in 1928 was designed to elicit bar and public opinion respecting the general tenor of the program. He said (p. 163): “The report of the Commission was made to the legislature in 1928, with an accompanying bill to be introduced for the purpose of securing printed copies for distribution. The bill was not pressed for passage, as it was deemed desirable to have it widely circulated and considered. Bar associations, courts and lawyers were invited to criticise and offer suggestions.” Surrogate Slater spoke of the holding of public hearings in the fall of 1928 and of the revision of the original proposals and of the presentation in 1929 of a revised bill which the commission
“ 9. The husband or wife during the lifetime of the other may waive the right of election to take against a particular last will and testament by an instrument subscribed and duly acknowledged, or may waive such right of election to take against any last will and testament of the other whatsoever in an agreement of settlement so executed, made before or after marriage.”
To the new section 18 generally there was appended a legislative note which discussed the general purpose of the newly granted right of election, the limitations on the right, the disqualifications which would bar election, the jurisdiction of the Surrogate in respect of issues arising under a claimed right of election and the personal nature of the election. The note to the 1929 legislation says nothing whatever about subdivision 9 or about a waiver.
At this point it is needful to call attention to the phrase — “ an agreement of settlement ” — which is in the original 1929 text just quoted. Careful search in th e encyclopaedias, the law dictionaries, the American Digest System and Words and Phrases fails to disclose any case which treats the phrase “ an agreement of settlement ” as having any distinctive connotation. The bar was fully aware of course of marriage settlement agreements and of antenuptial agreements and of separation agreements; but it had no guidepost to enable it to determine what the draftsmen meant when they referred to “an agreement of settlement.” The phrase squints perhaps at an agreement between husband and wife but it was apparently used by the draftsmen as if it had a fixed meaning for the profession. The profession apparently repudiated that assumption because as now to be noted the phrase was changed.
The body of legislation first enacted (L. 1929, ch.. 229) contained provisions respecting its effective date and its operative area. It was not to take effect in any respect until September 1, 1930. The reason for this delay is stated in the final legislative note of 1929 wherein the commission stated that its general purpose was to defer the effective date “ in order to permit attorneys and the public to become familiar with the nature of these changes.” In its first supplemental report (N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1929, No. 62) the commission reported that the bulk of
The background of professional concern respecting the operation of the legislation enacted in 1929 probably furnishes an adequate explanation for the phrase now in the final sentence of subdivision 9 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law,- — • “made before the taking- effect of this section.” It probably furnishes also an adequate explanation of the text which speaks of “ all rights in the estate ” rather than of a will. It seems clear from the legislative history of the act that the profession was concerned with the problems that would arise if the newly granted right were to upset long-established family arrangements. The bar was gravely concerned respecting the effect of
The analysis which follows develops the attitude of the courts toward contentions based upon the wording of the subdivision under consideration. The cases discussed appear to be the entire body of reported case law on the subject. Reference is made to the year in which the controversy first arose so far as indicated by the reports, so that the development of judicial thought will be understood.
In Matter of Tierney (148 Misc. 378, 381) the will in issue was dated November 11, 1929. The marriage of the testator occurred September 16, 1930. He died December 12, 1931. The question was whether or not the widow could claim a widow’s share on the basis that the will was revoked by the later marriage. The testator and his wife executed a separation agreement on February 10, 1931 in which each of the parties contracted that the other should have “ full power to * * * dispose of [his or her] property in [his or her] lifetime or by his last will and testament as fully and effectively as if he were unmarried ’ ’. The agreement was held sufficient to bar the widow from any share in the estate.
In Matter of Leger (147 Misc. 286) the death occurred March 22, 1931. A codicil had been executed by deceased on October 9, 1930. The widow filed an election to take her intestate share. She was entirely without resources. From the date of deceased’s death the executor had paid her over $2,400 for her maintenance and support. The executor argued that this constituted an acceptance of the terms of the will and invalidated the election. The court held that payments made thus for an impecunious spouse did not constitute a waiver of the right of election.
In Matter of Brown (153 Misc. 282) the death occurred April 14, 1933. Codicils were executed after August 31, 1930. The husband and wife had executed a separation agreement in 1910 and had lived apart thereafter. In the agreement the wife contracted not to sue her husband for maintenance and she purported to quitclaim her dower right to him whether in property then owned or thereafter acquired by him. No real property in fact was owned by deceased. The opinion discusses various cases dealing with separation agreements. The court held that the tenor of the agreement did not suffice to bar her right of election.
In Matter of Shapiro (154 Misc. 55, 57) the deceased with his prospective bride had visited a lawyer who drew and explained to both parties an antenuptial bilateral agreement which they executed and acknowledged on June 16, 1931 prior to their marriage. The will in controversy was made on June 15, 1931. In the antenuptial agreement the prospective wife accepted $500 “ in place and stead of all rights, which, as widow, [she] might otherwise have * * * as a distributive share of the personal property under any statutes now or hereafter in force or effect.” The prospective husband on his part contracted that the $500 liability should be a first charge upon his entire estate. The Surrogate’s opinion discusses the text of subdivision 9 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law and says in terms that the types of writings defined in the subdivision “ are obviously of two varieties.” (P. 58.) He held the agreement to be an effective bar to an election by the surviving widow. The case appears not to have been appealed but it was cited with approval in Matter of Denison (255 App. Div. 294).
In Matter of Sachs (155 Misc. 233, affd. 246 App. Div. 546) the agreement was a written and acknowledged separation agreement dated March 27, 1929. It provided that the petitioning husband would transfer certain property to the deceased and that she could retain whatever movable personal property she then had in her possession free of any claim thereto by the husband. In it deceased released and discharged petitioner from any claims of hers against him. No similar clause of release by the petitioning husband was contained in the agreement. It was held that the agreement did not constitute a
In Matter of Smith (243 App. Div. 348, 351-352) there was under review a decree of the Chautauqua County Surrogate made on July 31, 1934, which had denied to a surviving widow a right of election. On July 28, 1925 a judgment of separation had been entered between the spouses. The parties adjusted their differences thereafter and apparently went through a needless second marriage ceremony in the fall of 1926 and thereafter lived together until the death of deceased. It appears from the report that while the separation action was pending and four days before the decree was granted a sum of $500 was paid to the wife in consideration of which she executed to her husband a general release. On the same day she gave her husband a purportedly irrevocable power of attorney authorizing him to execute in her name any deed or transfer of her dower rights. Later the parties on October 4, 1928 executed and acknowledged a written instrument by the terms of which each released the estate of the other from their respective ‘1 right of inheritance or dower or set-off of exempt property to the end that the heirs of each may take all of the property of which either dies seized and possessed either by will or inheritance without any claim being made by the other in any name or nature whatsoever.” Particular reliance was placed upon this instrument as an effective waiver of the widow’s right of election. The court noted that the right of election did not exist when the paper was executed and says: “ That fact alone, however, does not make the instrument inoperative as a release or waiver of appellant’s right.” The court goes on to say that if the release was the free act of the widow and if it was clear and certain that it was her intention to relinquish all rights in her husband’s estate “ then, undoubtedly, the instrument will prevent her from taking advantage of her statutory privilege of election, even though that right did not exist at the time of the execution of the release.” The appellate court held on the facts that the last discussed instrument was procured by fraud and deceit practiced on the widow and hence held that it was void and ineffective as a release of a right of election. It reversed the Surrogate’s contrary conclusion and remitted the matter for proper action in the court below. The appellate court held that the release executed in 1925 did not extinguish the right of election and held further that the power of attorney of the same date was void since it
In Matter of McCann (155 Misc. 763, 767, 768) the court considered an election filed by a surviving husband against his wife’s will. The assets of the latter reported in the account appear to have consisted of a piece of real property and the proceeds of a Totten trust in the name of deceased in trust for her sister, the executrix. The intermarriage of the parties occurred in 1924. They executed a separation agreement in April, 1926. At that time the husband and wife held the real estate by the entirety. The agreement provided for the delivery of a deed by the husband of all his interest in the real estate. The deed so delivered recited that it was intended “ to bar every estate or right of the said grantor, John P. McCann, in said premises hereby conveyed including tenancy by the cur-tesy.” The court held that the separation agreement and the deed when taken together required construction that the surviving spouse had barred himself from any right of inheritance in the property of his wife. The court emphasized the reference to tenancy by the curtesy as showing the husband’s understanding that he was releasing a right which would vest only on his wife’s death. No appeal was taken in this case. The claimed right of election was held invalid though the court said that the “ validity of this deed as a waiver and release is not before the court.” The opinion says nothing concerning acknowledgments, but the inference is that the deed was acknowledged or proved since it appears to have been recorded.
In Taber v. First Citizens Bank & Trust Co. of Utica (247 App. Div. 580, 583, affd. 273 N. Y. 539) defendant was executor of a will made in 1927, three days after the marriage of deceased with plaintiff. Deceased died September, 1931. The action was initiated to compel specific performance of an alleged oral agreement to make a will providing for plaintiff. It also sought to set aside an acknowledged antenuptial agreement under which provision for the wife had been made. That agreement stated that it was intended to make provision for the prospective bride “ ‘ in lieu of the rights which, after the consummation of said marriage [she] might or could have as wife, or widow or otherwise in the property ’ which [the husband] then had or might thereafter acquire,” The court held the antenuptial agreement binding upon the widow according to its terms. It affirmed the finding of the court below that there was no oral agreement such as was pleaded and dismissed the
In Matter of Swanson (163 Misc. 294, 296) the widow of deceased elected against a will the date of which is not given but which would appear to have been drawn after the intermarriage of the parties in 1931. The spouses separated on December 19, 1932. On that day deceased gave his wife $3,900 and she executed and acknowledged a unilateral receipt and release in the form of the usual printed general release. The opinion emphasized that the tenor of this paper was expressly limited to its date and to rights then existent. It went on to say that the right of election which the widow sought to have validated had arisen only at a later date, to wit, on the date of deceased’s death and “was in no way provided for in this release, and apparently not contemplated therein.” Accordingly the widow’s right of election was held valid.
In Matter of Rogers (250 App. Div. 26) the court considered a decree of the Surrogate of Suffolk County enacted in July, 1936 and affirmed his determination that the petitioner was not entitled to an election. Petitioner had twice executed acknowledged waivers contemporaneously with the execution of wills by deceased. The first such waiver was unilateral and was prepared by the draftsman of the will of deceased and both will and waiver were executed on the day the parties intermarried, August 28, 1933. The next day the surviving widow executed a will and deceased executed a unilateral acknowledged waiver of his right of election against it. This instrument was prepared by the widow’s attorney. Later and on January 13, 1934 deceased’s attorney drew a new will and a unilateral waiver of the wife’s right of election against it. After deceased had executed his will the widow executed and acknowledged the waiver. She did not have independent counsel on this occasion and the evidence on the trial largely concerned itself with a claim of fraud upon the widow. But in the brief of the widow on appeal she asserted that the statute contemplated two varieties of waivers,— the first a waiver of right to elect against a particular will which could be by unilateral instrument only and the second a waiver of right to take against any will which must be by agreement. She argued the differences in the type of instruments prescribed so as to emphasize that in the one case the instrument needed no consideration and in the other the consideration was furnished hy the mutuality of the agree
In Matter of Moore (165 Misc. 683, 685, 687-688, affd. 254 App. Div. 856, affd. 280 N. Y. 733) the surviving husband elected against the will of deceased and the issue was whether his election was valid. He was 40 on May 17, 1935 when he intermarried with deceased who was then 60. One week after the marriage he executed a unilateral document in which he declared that he waived his right of election “ to take against any Last Will and Testament ” of his wife. (Italics added.) The instrument was acknowledged and was delivered to Mrs. Moore’s attorney. The will of deceased in issue was executed on September 15, 1936. Counsel for the surviving husband argued (as did counsel in the Rogers case, supra) that the Legislature must be deemed to have employed the words “instrument” and “ agreement ” in different senses. These contentions were overruled by the trial court and are characterized by it as “highly refined, technical and tenuous arguments.” The opinion of the Trial Judge discusses the history of the statute and comments on the footnote to chapter 174 of the Laws of 1930 which completed subdivision 9 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law in the text which now stands. The comment on the footnote says that “ The waiver might be embodied in a trust deed executed by the husband or wife for the benefit of the other, or in a separation agreement, or in any other form of agreement ’ ’. It has already been made clear that the note to the bill speaks only of (1) a separation agreement, (2) an agreement in a trust inter vivas and (3) an agreement of settlement. The note does not say ‘ ‘ any other form of agreement ’ ’. Examination of the briefs in the Court of Appeals in the Moore case discloses that, the appellant argued at length the claim that the Legislature intentionally distinguished the word “ agreement ” from the word “ instrument ”, Pages of the appellant’s
In Thompson v. Thompson (163 Misc. 946, 947, affd. 254 App. Div. 601) the court had before it an action for partition in which apparently it was sought to determine whether a right of election could be exercised by a widow against a will executed in 1933. The parties had intermarried in 1928. One of the parcels involved had been acquired in 1914, the other in 1932. There was a separation of the couple in October, 1932 and in July, 1935 they entered into an acknowledged agreement of separation. In this agreement the wife released all her claims against the husband up to the date of the agreement and released her dower. It then provided that the wife “ covenants that she will permit any will of the First Party to be probated, and will allow letters of administration upon his estate and personal effects to be taken and received by any person who would have been entitled thereto, had the Second Party died during the lifetime of the First Party.” The court considered some other questions raised by the parties but said that the only issue which it needed to decide was whether the widow had lost her right of election by reason of her abandonment of deceased or by reason of her waiver. The court found on the facts that there was no abandonment by the widow. It held that the
In Matter of Denison (166 Misc. 940, 941-942, revd. 255 App. Div. 294, affd. 280 N. Y. 589) the court considered acknowledged instruments, unilateral in form, which were executed simultaneously by the husband and the wife respectively. The wife survived her husband and elected to take against his will. The question was whether the instrument subscribed by her in 1926 barred her election. This instrument said on her part that she 1 ‘ renounces and releases to the said party of the second part [the husband], his heirs and assigns forever, all and any right, title, interest or right of dower in any property, both real and personal, that said second party may now be seized of or that he may hereafter acquire. And further that she specially renounces and releases to the heirs at law, next of kin, or legatees and devisees under the last'will and testament of said party of the second part, should said second party predecease said first party, all and any right, title, interest and right of dower, of every name and nature that said first party might have or be entitled in and to the estate, both real and personal, * # * and of which he may die seized.” The instrument recites that the agreement is mutual and that the desire of the parties is that their respective issue by former marriages should inherit from their respective parents. At the time the instruments were interchanged a daughter who was sole issue of the husband was living but she predeceased him. The Surrogate held that the instruments contemplated the continued existence of issue and that the death of the daughter of the husband defeated the object of the agreement. He held accordingly that a right of election enured to the surviving spouse. The Appellate Division noted that the will against which the claim of right to elect was urged had been made by the husband more than five years after his daughter had died. It reversed the Surrogate (citing Matter of Shapiro, 154 Misc. 55, supra) saying: 1 ‘ The agreements were a proper compliance with the provisions of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law ” (p. 298). Again referring to the respective documents as “ agreements ” the court said .that they resulted “ in each of the
In Matter of McGlone (171 Misc. 612, 614, revd. 258 App. Div. 596, determination of Surrogate reinstated 284 N. Y. 527) the court had under consideration an unacknowledged and unwit-nessed unilateral instrument signed by the surviving widow just prior to her marriage on February 4, 1922 with the deceased. In it the prospective bride said that she renounced “ all right, title and interest * * * in any estate, real or personal, of which my said husband to be, John J. McG-lone, might die seized.” Deceased executed a will on August 20, 1930 and a codicil on July 6,1934. The Surrogate said (p. 615) that subdivision 9 of section 18 spoke of “ three varieties of documents * * * namely, the ‘ instrument ’ of waiver against a single identified will, the 1 agreement ’ of waiver against any will which is executed after the effective date of the statute, and the * agreement ’ of waiver or release executed prior to the effective date of the statute ” (emphasis not in original). Having said that only a document of the particular description contemplated by the legislation would operate to constitute a waiver, the Surrogate held the document ineffective because not acknowledged. Having made a decision on this ground the Surrogate goes on to say (p. 618): “ The infirmity of the document does not, however, terminate here. The subdivision expressly prescribes the particular variety of instrument which is requisite for a waiver of the rights of election of a surviving spouse against all wills or in situations in which it was executed prior to the effective date of the statute. In both such connections such instrument must be ‘ an agreement ’. This term is a word of art possessing a well-defined and thoroughly established meaning in the law not only of this state but of every other common law jurisdiction.” The Surrogate held the paper signed by the prospective bride to be merely “ a unilateral statement of intention” and not an agreement. The writer expressly dissented from Matter of Moore (supra) and reaffirmed his own viewpoint stated in Matter of Shapiro (supra). Continuing with the argument as to the legislative meaning the
In Matter of Colaci (260 App. Div. 795, revd. 288 N. Y. 158) the court had for review a decree of the Queens County Surrogate made on July 31, 1939 which validated a claimed right of election by a widow. The parties had intermarried in 1926 and owned as tenants by the entirety some 11 parcels of real property. In 1928 they agreed upon a distribution of this
In Matter of Markel (175 Misc. 570, 571, affd. 261 App. Div. 950), the instrument under consideration was an acknowledged antenuptial agreement executed November 29, 1935. The parties intermarried three weeks after the date of the instrument. The will of deceased was executed 10 days later. Its dispositions conformed to the terms of the antenuptial agreement. The agreement contained a waiver by the husband of any right to elect against the will of his prospective wife. The prospective bride agreed that the testamentary provisions contemplated should be “in place and stead of all the rights which she, as
In Matter of Hearn (261 App. Div. 924, affd. 287 N. Y. 775) the court had under consideration a decree of the Queens County Surrogate adjudging to be invalid a notice of election filed by a surviving husband. The instrument in issue was an unwitnessed and unacknowledged separation agreement executed February 10, 1938. The will in question was executed February 9, 1935. Citing Matter of McGlone (supra) and Matter of Israel (149 Misc. 620) the Appellate Division held the separation agreement ineffective as a waiver solely because it was not acknowledged. In the memorandum prepared by the State Reporter (290 N. Y. 563) it is indicated that in the record there was evidence that the parties had lived together after the separation agreement had been executed. Th executor, having failed in his direct attack on the election, then instituted an action for specific performance of the separation agreement and sought to compel the surviving husband to execute and deliver a valid waiver of his right of election. The agreement was asserted to entitle the plaintiff to such a waiver since it provided that each signatory would join in “ any deed or instrument ” necessary to convey good title to the other’s property, “ without any claim or demand of or for any interest therein”. The prior text of the agreement expressly waived “ all right that either may have in the property of the other owned by the other at this time, or at any future time.” The trial court denied a motion to dismiss the complaint. The Appellate Division (Kissling v. Hearn, 264 App. Div. 900) reversed and granted the motion on the ground that the determination on the prior appeal was res judicata. It said in addition that the plaintiff could not “ invoke an agreement to execute a waiver, which would accomplish by indirection a dispensation of the requirement of subdivision 9 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law.” This result was affirmed in 290 N. Y. 563.
In Matter of Maul (176 Misc. 170, affd. 262 App. Div. 941, affd. 287 N. Y. 694) the instrument was not acknowledged by
In Matter of Herrick (177 Misc. 537) a surviving widow sought to elect against a will. Her claim was contested on the ground that after some hotly litigated matrimonial differences the spouses entered into an acknowledged separation agreement on January 21, 1938 which contained among other things a waiver by the wife of her right to elect. The trial appeared to have proceeded on the issue of the fairness of the agree
In Matter of Lamash (8 Misc 2d 544), the court had for consideration an acknowledged antenuptial agreement made in 1933 and alleged to be a waiver of right to elect against a will made in 1936. The agreement was held by the court to be limited in its operative area to the rights of the parties in a single piece of real property. After noting that the text of subdivision 9 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law refers to waiver of right to elect against a particular will and to waiver of right to elect against any last will and testament, the court says (p. 545): “ The agreement here relied upon refers neither to a particular will nor any will. It contains no express waiver. Neither can one be inferred from its provisions. There is no reference to a waiver or release of all rights in the estate of the testator. By its terms the surrender or release of petitioner’s rights is limited to a particular piece of real estate.” The agreement was held not to bar a notice of election.
In Matter of Chandler (175 Misc. 1029) the court had under consideration an acknowledged separation agreement made apparently in the year 1937. At its date the husband was over 60, was unemployed and had no property of his own. The agreement expressly recognized that he had no earning capacity and expressly dispensed him from any agreement to support deceased. By the agreement he received $100 to cover his expenses in moving. The will disinherited the husband who elected against it. The court held that the separation agreement and the circumstances of the parties established that the electing spouse had not abandoned deceased and that his failure to provide her with support was with her consent. The court validated his claim to an intestate share and his claim to a family exemption under section 200 of the Surrogate’s Court Act. The opinion emphasizes the reservation by the husband of a right to sue his wife respecting property in her name. No text is suggested to have been in the agreement which constituted a release of rights of inheritance.
In Matter of Willett (178 Misc. 1000, 1001-1002), the court had under consideration an agreement of separation made in 1937 between deceased and a former wife under which deceased agreed to make provision for her in his will and to pay her a monthly sum while he lived. The agreement provided that if deceased died leaving a widow or children the former wife would take one third of his residuary. Deceased obligated
At the date of the will deceased was contemplating marriage with a second woman and a week after the date of his will — July 7, 1938 — deceased entered into an antenuptial agreement with the latter. In this antenuptial agreement it was expressly provided that neither party thereto should have any claim to or in the personal estate of the other and that the estate of each should pass as prescribed by will or in intestacy “ as though no marriage had ever taken place between ” the parties thereto. In the antenuptial agreement deceased agreed to provide for his second wife if she survived him a sum of $7,500. This sum is described as “in full satisfaction, payment and discharge ’’ of all her rights as ‘ ‘ widow, or heir at law, to an allowance * * * or to any share, or part of, or interest in,” the estate of deceased under either ‘ ‘ present or future law. ’ ’
On July 8, 1938, deceased intermarried with the lady who so made the antenuptial agreement with him. He died survived by her and by his former wife who was entitled as of the death of deceased to the benefits provided for in the separation agreement. Both the separation agreement and the antenuptial agreement, it should be noted, were duly acknowledged by the parties. The argument of the former wife of deceased was that the second wife was disentitled to make claim of status as widow because of the antenuptial agreement and that those provisions of the separation agreement should be given effect under which the first wife would take two thirds of the residuary if deceased' died ‘1 leaving neither widow * * * nor any child him surviving.” (P. 1001.) The court held without basis a separate ground of attack on the status of the second wife of deceased and then went on to say that the antenuptial agreement could not be given the effect contended for by the first wife; that it preserved deceased’s “right to dispose of his estate by will ‘ as though no marriage had ever taken place ’ ”; and that deceased was free to give to his second wife any benefit he chose under the will consistent with his obligations to his former wife under the separation agreement. Accordingly the court held that only one third of the net was payable to the first wife. The court held however that the second wife by executing the antenuptial agreement had effectively waived her widow’s exemption under section 200 of the Surrogate’s Court Act.
In Matter of Brenner (44 N. Y. S. 2d 447) the writing was apparently a duly acknowledged separation agreement between husband and wife who were represented by respective counsel. It was dated in April, 1942 and was urged as a bar to an election against a will made in May, 1942. Among other things the agreement contained a clause which said: “ Each party hereby waives all rights of election to take any property against any last will and testament of the other party and also waives any intestate share of the property of the other party ’ ’. (Matter of Brenner, 43 N. Y. S. 2d 149, 151.) The right of election claimed by the husband was held barred.
In Matter of Lambert (183 Misc. 115), acknowledged waivers indorsed on a will executed in 1934 and on a codicil executed in 1935 respectively were assumed to be valid though no ruling was made thereon. The proceeding was one for construction of the terms of the will.
Some few cases may be noticed also which were decided after the change in our Decedent Estate Law though they dealt with instruments executed prior to September 1,1930. The cases are
In Matter of Burridge (261 N. Y. 225, 227), the question was whether a separation agreement made in 1917 and revised in 1929 would operate to defeat a claim to property exempt under section 200 of the Surrogate’s Court Act. The agreement under consideration provided for payments to the wife so long as she lived, in return for which she agreed ‘ ‘ to accept all the provisions * * * in lieu of all other claim and provision for her support ”. She also renounced all rights of dower in deceased’s real property. The court said that had the agreement been limited to the joint lives of the parties it presumably would have left the wife free to claim her rights against the deceased’s estate (referring to Girard v. Girard, 29 N. M. 189). It held that since a reasonable construction of the agreement was that it contemplated complete exoneration of the other spouse and his estate in return for the annual payment for the life of the widow her claim to exempt property should be denied. The reasoning of the opinion would seem to be applicable to a claim of right to elect. In Girard v. Girard (supra) the Supreme Court of New Mexico reviewed a number of authorities in various States and held that a separation agreement would not be construed to affect rights of inheritance unless it so provided in express terms or by necessary implication.
In Matter of Green (165 Misc. 108, 109) the court had for consideration a will made in 1908 before deceased’s marriage. The will was offered by deceased’s sister and the widow filed objections to it. The sister moved to strike out the objections on the ground that an antenuptial agreement executed- between deceased and his surviving widow operated to release all interest in deceased’s estate on the part of the widow, and so removed her from the class of persons ‘ ‘ interested in the estate ” and entitled to file objections. The agreement provided a sum of $18,000 yearly for the life of the prospective wife and in consideration therefor she “ waived and released all interest in the decedent’s estate ”. The widow made attack upon the antenuptial agreement on various grounds which were held insufficient. The court struck out the objections on the ground that the antenuptial agreement' disentitled the widow to file them.
In Schoonmaker v. Crounse (261 App. Div. 77) the court had under consideration a separation agreement made in 1926. The question was whether such agreement operated to revoke a will made in 1917 which gave deceased’s entire net estate to her husband. The Supreme Court had held that nothing in the agreement worked a revocation. This was sustained on appeal, citing Thompson v. Thompson (163 Misc. 946, supra) to the effect that such an agreement would not be held to cut off rights by implication.
Finally a brief word is desirable about cases decided before the change in our Decedent Estate Law effective in 1930. The eases are too numerous to discuss seriatim but some typical cases may be noticed. In Matter of Wylie (187 App. Div. 840) a separation agreement was held to bar a widow even from the right to take exempt property. In Matter of Klein (121 Misc. 568) this court held that a separation agreement barred objections to the will of deceased since by reason of the terms of the agreement the widow was no longer “ a person interested ” in the estate. Again in Matter of Kiltz (125 Misc. 475) a separation agreement was held sufficient to disentitle the widow to any benefits under section 35 of the Decedent Estate Law arising by reason of her intermarriage with deceased after the date of his will. The opinion in this case discusses a great number of authorities on the effect of separation agreements. It holds that under the agreement before the court the widow had no interest in the estate and could not file objections to the will.
The foregoing review of the decided cases suffices to show that the obscurities in the text of subdivision 9 of section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law have repeatedly given rise to queries in the minds of lawyers and judges as to the true meaning of the legislative text. In the search for that meaning a comment of Surrogate Wingate in Matter of Bommer (159 Misc. 511, 512, 513) is pertinent. The fact is that some of the decided cases originated before Surrogates who were members of the Commission to Investigate Defects in the Law of Estates. In the cited case Surrogate Wingate said that as a member of the commission he was “ completely conversant with the motives and purposes which actuated the Commission ”. He said in addition that he possessed “ a clear conception of the actual legislative intent”. But then he said: “ Use of this personal knowledge is, however,- inhibited by basic rules of decision, and the only bases of interpretation which may be employed are the words of the enactment when read in the light of the explanatory notes which were before the Legislature at the time of the consideration of the proposed bills.” Since it is settled law that the Legislature itself could not say what its prior legislation was intended to mean (City of New York v. Village of Lawrence, 250 N. Y. 429, 447, 448) Surrogate Wingate was clearly right in saying that neither he nor any member of the commission could, on the basis of individual views derived from participation in the work of the commission or even on the basis of personal preparation of the statutory text, say what the Legislature meant by the text here under consideration. All judges alike must use only the accepted standards of decision. As Surrogate Wingate says,
The insistence of the Bar that existing family arrangements be left undisturbed was the major consideration in the final composition of the text of the subdivision. The cited cases show congruity of judicial attitude in respect of such agreements whenever made. They show that the courts have construed the subdivision in accordance with the same general legal principles as those which governed the decision of cases arising prior to its enactment. In none of the cases analyzed did the decision turn on the point that the writing was unilateral rather than bilateral. In no case did the decision turn on the point that the writing was executed before marriage rather than after marriage. In no case did the decision turn on the point that the writing was executed prior to September 1, 1930 rather than after August 31, 1930. In no case did decision turn on whether the writing construed referred to a ‘ ‘ particular ” or “ any ’ ’ will rather than to ‘ ‘ all rights in the estate ”. The cases since the enactment of the subdivision evidence that the courts in construing writings asserted to constitute waivers took into consideration the factors always present in litigations respecting writings. They considered the background of the parties, the circumstances attending the preparation and execution of the paper in controversy, the objective which the parties sought to attain and the tenor of the paper itself. Clearly the courts have assumed that the Legislature did not intend to disturb the body of case law established prior to 1928 nor intend to defeat existing family arrangement or to deny complete freedom in the making of such arrangements.
Only in the McGlone (171 Misc. 612, supra) and Colaci (260 App. Div. 795, supra) cases is there any language which suggests a strict construction of the text of the subdivision. In each of these cases such declarations were obiter. All that the McGlone case decided was that the statute in express terms
The writing executed and acknowledged by the surviving spouse of deceased is held to constitute an effective waiver on his part of a right of election against her will. His purported notice of election to take an intestate share is held to be without validity and to have no operative effect on the terms of deceased’s will. Submit, on notice, decree accordingly.