61 N.Y.S. 565 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
On the settlement of the account of the executors of the last will and testament of Francis McCabe, deceased, it became necessary, to enable the surrogate to make a decree, to give construction to certai-ti provisions of the will, relating to a.legacy, or bequest of income to a granddaughter of the testator, who died during his. lifetime. The testator gave all his property, after the payment of debts and funeral expenses, to his executors in trust during the life of his daughter Rosana, to invest his personalty in bonds and mortgages, ■to lease the realty, to collect the rents, issues and profits thereof, and to apply the net income as follows : $1,500 annually.in equal quarterly payments to his daughter Rosana; $1,000 annually in- equal quarterly payments to his granddaughter, Loretta Donlon ; a certain other sum annually to the widow of his deceased son Eugene, to continue during the whole trust and as long as she remained unmarried ; $1,500 annually for the support and maintenance of three children of his deceased son Eugene, or so much thereof as might be-necessary for their support and education, "with the direction to pay the accumulation in equal shares to those grandchildren upon their attaining the age of twenty-one years, and the rest and residue of the income the testator directed to be applied to the payment and discharge of bonds and mortgages outstanding upon his real estate, until said mortgages- shall be fully paid and discharged, to the end that the said real estate should be free, clear and unincumbered of and from all liens. The provision with respect to the, payment uf specific sums from income, before mentioned, to the daughter Rosana and the granddaughter Loretta, are expressly limited “ until the mortgages now liens, or which may be liens, upon my real estate, shall be fully paid and discharged.” The testator then provided that after the liens and incumbrances upon the real property were removed, a different disposition of the income should be made during the continuance of the trusts, viz.,, that income be divided into three parts, one part to be paid to Rosana, another part to the granddaughter, Loretta Donlon, and the remaining third
First. The position taken by the executors is, that the provision made for the granddaughter, until the payment and discharge of the incumbrances upon the realty, is an annuity, -a provision entirely personal to the annuitant, implying that it is to cease at her death, and that, therefore; as it could never take effect, it is a lapsed legacy,
Second. The claim of the administrator is necessarily based upon the proposition that the share of the income given to- the granddaughter until the payment of the incumbrances is assets of her: estate for administration, and it has its foundation in what is supposed to have been decided by this court in Montanye v. Montanye (29 App. Div. 377), and the -authorities cited in the opinion -of the-court in that case. It was there held in substance that where an annuity is given to one person during the life of'another, pr. for a. period other than the life of the annuitant, such -annuity does not lapse on the death of the annuitant before the expiration of the-period fixed for its payment, but on such death after that of the-testator it will pass to the personal representatives of the annuitant.. It thus becomes assets of the annuitant’s estate for administration,, because the annuitant takes- and is vested with, and enters upon the enjoyment of; the annuity.; but in this case the granddaughter never took, and could not take by any possibility, and but for the statute,, hereafter referred to, the gift would undoubtedly have lapsed.. There is a broad difference between the two cases. In the Mohtcmye case, the question was limited to the right of the personal representatives of the annuitant or legatee to .take that which the-annuitant or legatee had. ÍSTo one else claimed it. In this case the-personal -representative takes nothing, because the intended legatee- or annuitant never had anything, and never could take anything, to-be. transmitted to, or received by, a personal representative..
The decree of the surrogate should be affirmed so far as it adjudges that the gift under consideration did not lapse; but it should be modified so as to adjudge that such gift survived to and became vested in the infant, the only surviving child of the granddaughter, and that the several installments of the gift, with interest, should be paid to a general guardian of said infant when appointed. The costs of the infant on this appeal to be paid from the estate.
' Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, Ingraham and McLaughlin,' JJ., concurred.
Decree modified as .directed in opinion, and, as modified, affirmed, the costs of the infant on this appeal to be paid from the estate.