43 Misc. 238 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1904
The testator died in July, 1870, leaving an estate of about $500,000, consisting of both real and personal property, and leaving a will by which the residuary estate was given and devised in the following language: “All the rest, residue and remainder of my said estate, of every nature and kind wheresoever situate, I give, devise and bequeath to my executors hereinafter named, or to such of them as shall qualify and assume the execution of this my will, their successor or successors, upon the following trusts, that is to say, upon the trust, out of the income of my said estate to pay, during the lifetime of my said wife, the sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000) per annum, by equal semi-annual payments (the first payment to he at the end of six months from my decease), to each of my six children, George M. Marshall, Josephine E. Ogden, William St. John Elliott Marshall, Mary D. Marshall, John 1ST. Marshall, and Stephen Duncan Marshall, or to the child or children of any of my said children who may die during my lifetime or the lifetime of my said wife, such child or children of such deceased child of mine taking the said two thousand dollars per annum in place of its or their parent, per stirpes and not per capita.
“And upon the further trust to pay all the balance and remainder of the income of my estate to my said wife annually during her life.
“And upon the further trust, after the death of my said wife, to reduce my estate into money or interest-bearing securities, and thereupon to divide and set apart the same into as many equal parts as I shall then have of my above children, or the lawful issue of any deceased child living (the issue ¿f any deceased child, if more than one, to count as one in making such division),
Testator’s widow died in February, 1895. The respondent, Stephen D. Marshall, was testator’s youngest child, and upon his life depends the continuing of the trust.
The only question raised by the objections to the account is as to the proper treatment to be made as between the life beneficiaries and remaindermen of the proceeds of certain real estate, which had been taken in under foreclosure.
The facts are these: In June, 1872, the executors invested $15,000 of the residuary estate upon the bond of one Willis, secured by a mortgage on unimproved real property at Sixth Avenue and One Hundred and Fortieth 'Street, Hew York city, interest upon which was paid to June 1, 1878, when default was made. The executors subsequently foreclosed, and in December, 1897, took title to the property which they carried, until May, 1903, and then sold for the net sum of $54,500. The costs of foreclosure, the carrying charges, including taxes and assessments and the other expenses incident thereto, amounting in all to $16,174.33, were paid out of principal. Adding to this amount the original amount of the mortgage we have a total investment
The executors also invested part of the residuary estate in a bond of one Dever for $3,000, secured by mortgage on property on One Hundred and Twelfth street, Hew York city. Interest was paid on this mortgage to December 1, 1874, when default was made. The executors foreclosed, subsequently taking title to the property on February 15, 1875. The property was carried by the trustees until June 9, 1899, when it was sold for net sum of $9,405. The cost of carrying the property, including taxes and assessments, costs of foreclosure and other expenses, was paid out of principal. This amounted to $2,-108.15, which, together with the amount of the mortgage, makes a total of principal put into the property of $5,-108.15, The amount of income withheld is the interest which would accrue subsequent to December 1, 1874, upon the principal invested in the property or used in carrying it.
By the account it appears that out of the proceeds of the sales of these properties the trustees have returned to principal all the principal that had been originally invested, and all that had been contributed to carry the properties as well. The residue of the proceeds they have credited to income on account of accrued interest, which will uet the life beneficiaries a little less than five per cent, interest upon the total principal put into the properties.
To this treatment of the proceeds the contestants, representing the remaindermen, object, and with an insistence like unto that of a character in the “Merchant of Venice” say they are entitled to the entire proceeds of sale, and that the surplus, over
The position of the contestants recalls the questions propounded by Mr. Justice Cullen in his vigorous and classic style, in Matter of Rogers, 22 App. Div. 436, when he asks: “Why should the life tenant fast for twenty-five years that the remaindermen may feast at the end of that period ? Why should each not havé exactly his own, so far as it is possible to ascertain it ? ”
The rights of the parties in the proceeds of the sale of these parcels of real property are to- be regulated by some sure rule. There must be some legal policy to govern trustees in the administration of estates, because such a situation as now presented, the investement on bond and mortgage, the foreclosure, the buying in, the carrying until a favorable time for a sale, and the subsequent sale at a profit, is in the business of testamentary trustees a matter of daily occurrence. Trustees are entitled to have pointed out a rule which they can follow without fear of having their conduct challenged. The rule should be applicable as well to a case where the whole amount of the trust estate is invested in a defaulted mortgage as to one where only a fractional part is- so invested. So, in viewing this case and in ascertaining the rights of life beneficiaries and remaindermen, we may have in mind that the money invested in these two mortgages might have been substantially the entire trust estate.
The purchase of the property by the trustees at foreclosure was not an investment in real property, for the trustees had no power under -the testator’s will to make an investment of that character. Even if the testator had authorized an investment
The purchase of the property was in effect an act intended only as temporary, in order to prevent immediate loss to the estate. The form of the security, although physically, realty, was still to be regarded as personal property, and would eventually have to be distributed as such.
The taxes thereon, in a sense, were not annual taxes imposed against the trust estate, but a charge against this particular piece of salvage, which the executors had taken temporarily in the exercise of their prudent judgment. The taxes were part of the general expenses to which the estate was put in an effort to prevent loss.
The amount of the foreclosed mortgage, together with the expense incurred for the foreclosure, the carrying charges, and the amount of the loss of income suffered, should constitute one common account, and upon the liquidation of the account by sale of the property taken in, the interests are to be adjusted and each party, life beneficiary and remainderman, is to get u exactly his own so far as it is possible to ascertain.”
The contesting remaindermen urge that weight should be given to the intention of the testator, which they claim is apparent from the will, namely, that the life beneficiaries were to have only the income and nothing more; and they give the word “ income ” only that meaning which it has when used in reference to usury or interest.
In construing a will containing a trust of the character of the one before us, we must have in mind that the primary objects of testator’s bounty are the life beneficiaries, his children.
We must also have in mind that while we may search a will for an intention to make principal distributable as; income and then execute.such an intention, we may not search to the contrary, because to do so would be endeavoring to find an illegal purpose. Matter of Rogers, supra.
I quote from Mr. Justice Cullen in that case: “ If from the will of the testator it is apparent that he intended that the life tenant should receive as income that which as a strict matter of law would be principal, undoubteduly that intent should govern, for the testator could give the life tenant the power to consume the whole principal. Such was the case of Matter of James, 146 N. Y. 78. But if the intent is in the opposite direction, that that which the law holds to be income shall be treated as principal and go to the remaindermen, it is in effect an accumulation and wholly void. Our laws forbid accumulation except for the benefit of infants in being during their minority. Mo principle of public policy declared by our statute" law has been more firmly and rigidly upheld by the court than this inhibition against accumulations. The accumulation must not only be for infants, but it must be exclusively for infants, so much so that if an adult or person not in being is to share in the accumulation, then a trust for the accumulation is void.”
It is also urged by contestants that the life beneficiaries by virtue of former accountings and decrees entered therein, in which it appeared that the expense of carrying the foreclosed properties had been charged to principal, are estopped from now claiming that any part of the proceeds of such properties belongs to income.. But in this claim there is no merit.
As to the effect of such decrees, all that can be said is, that
These former decrees were correct; the surrogate allowed and adjudicated the accounts as presented'. The carrying charges of foreclosed properties were properly paid out of principal for the time being, but now that the properties are sold the account is closed, liquidation takes place and a distribution is to be had. This is the first time that the question of the rights of the life beneficiaries and the remaindermen in the proceeds of sale could have been adjudicated.
The rule to be applied to the distribution of these proceeds I think is clearly and unequivocally laid down in the case of Meldon v. Devlin, 31 App. Div. 146, and the rule so established, together with other questions, was certified to the Court of Appeals and was there affirmed, 167 N. Y. 573.
This authority seems to have escaped the notice of all of the counsel in this case; nevertheless, this is. not strange, because the compilers of our working digests seem to have failed to appreciate the importance of the rule established.
I quote from the prevailing opinion of Mr. Justice Barrett in that case: “ We think the court below rightly disposed of the proceeds of the sale of the water lots. These were two lots upon which the trustees originally held two of the Phillips
Under this rule the only unknown quantity to be found is the amount of income invested in the foreclosed property.. The amount of principal is known. And when we find the amount of income, or rather the rate at which income should be computed, the operation of the rule then is a sum in arithmetic. In this case the mortgages which were foreclosed' bore at the time of foreclosure, seven per cent, interest, but since then the-value of money has continually depreciated, and, therefore, it would not be equitable to continue to compute the interest at the original rate. After careful consideration of the prevailing rates which have obtained for the use of money during the past twenty-five years, I find that in this case interest may properly be computed upon the principal put into the foreclosed properties at the rate of five per cent, per annum. So applying-the rule above stated to the facts and figures of this case as I find them, the result is that the life tenants would be entitled to-
Decreed accordingly.