140 N.Y. 599 | NY | 1894
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I quite agree with the General Term justices that the word "children" is used in this will in its primary signification. It is very clear that the testator thus refers to his immediate descendants and not to grandchildren. When he has remote descendants in view, he refers to them through the use of the word "issue." It is undoubtedly true that the term "children" may include "grandchildren;" but to give to it that very comprehensive meaning, we should be able to find such an intention on the testator's part from other expressions or clauses in the will. I am not aware of any case, in which the term "children" has been given a broader signification than it naturally imports; except there was something in the will which called for and justified it. In this will, *604
wherever a reference is made to other descendants than the testator's immediate offspring, they are spoken of as the "issue," or the "lawful issue," of his children and in one notable instance, in the seventh clause, the testator makes a certain disposition of his estate, "in case of the death of my wife and all my children and their descendants before me." That emphasizes his understanding of the term "children" as excluding such remote descendants as grandchildren. Therefore, in directing his trustees, "if either of his said children shall die and leave no issue surviving them * * * to pay * * * the capital of the share held for the use of the one so dying, to and among my surviving children equally," the testator meant his immediate descendants, and the application of that language to the case of Mrs. Curtis' death, childless, is to hold that, certainly, the trust fund set apart for her at testator's death belonged to Gilbert, testator's son. Mrs. Beard had predeceased Mrs. Curtis and her children were certainly not accorded a participation in that particular trust fund. Thus far, then, there is no difficulty in agreeing with the opinion of the General Term, as to what should be done with so much of the estate. But I do find great difficulty in reaching a conclusion that, as to the trust fund created and held for testator's widow, during her life, when, by her death, it was ready for distribution, the grandchildren were confined to a one-third share. Restricted as we are to the reading of this instrument, in our search for the intentions which underlay its execution, I am strongly inclined to judge that an intention is manifest, from certain differences in the testamentary directions, if not from anything very positive in the expressions, of making the final division of the estate upon a more equitable basis, as to the members who should then compose the family of testator's descendants. If there is that difference apparent in the disposition of the trust fund, before and after the death of the widow, and the balance, if it does not incline in the grandchildren's favor, at least, is equal with respect to their interests, I think the courts should uphold their right to share in the fund in *605
controversy. Language should not be strained, nor words given an unusual meaning, in order to work out a result favorable to the issue of a deceased child; but where it is possible to favor them, consistently with a fair reading of the will and with an equitable view of the disposition of the estate, it should be done, upon principles of justice, as upon authority. (Scott v.Guernsey,
The General Term justices, to sustain their views, say, as to those provisions of this fourth clause by which the trustees are directed, upon the death of a child without issue, to pay the "capital of the share" held for the deceased, to the testator's surviving children, that they comprehend, or refer to the one-third part of the entire residuary estate and not merely that particular fund created and set apart upon testator's death for the child. In this view, upon Mrs. Curtis' death, her brother Gilbert thereby became alone entitled to the fund presently held for her, and eventually, upon the death of testator's widow, to the one-third appointed for Mrs. Curtis in her fund. Upon the same theory, Mrs. Beard's children must, also, upon her death, have become thereby entitled, at once, to their mother's trust fund and, eventually, to the one-third appointed for her in the widow's trust fund. The paragraph of the will, to which the General Term opinion refers, applies to both cases. If the child die leaving issue, the trustees are directed to pay to the issue the "capital of the share" held for the deceased; and if dying without issue they are to pay the "capital of the share" held, etc., to the surviving children. But such a construction makes the later direction in the clause to the trustees, as to their duty upon the death of testator's widow, quite unnecessary, if it is only meant thereby to give to the surviving issue of a deceased child the share originally *608 appointed to the parent in the trust fund held for the widow's life. The counsel for the respondents attempts to supply a meaning to this later paragraph, which the General Term seems to have ignored, and he says that its purpose was to limit the time of the payment to a grandchild of the portion of its parent's share to its coming of full age. I cannot agree with either reasoning. Under the one the later paragraph seems to be regarded as useless; while under the other it seems emasculated of that force which its explicitness and the form of its expression entitle it to. In the application which I advise our giving to it, it has an office to perform in governing the disposition of testator's estate, as reasonable as it is equitable. I think, too, it has much importance in preventing a possible intestacy in the event of the death of the testator's widow and the liberation of her trust fund.
Our conclusion is that the fund set apart at testator's death for Mrs. Curtis should be paid over to Gilbert Potter; and that the fund held in trust for the testator's widow should be divided; one-half to be paid to Gilbert Potter and the other half to be paid, in equal portions, to the daughters of Mrs. Beard, to wit; Josephine Canfield and Anna Beard, these appellants.
The judgment of the General Term should be modified, so as to direct the Surrogate's Court to proceed to make a distribution of this estate in accordance with this opinion and as so modified it is affirmed, with costs to the parties appellants and respondents to be paid out of the estate.
All concur, except BARTLETT, J., not sitting.
Judgment accordingly. *609