10 Mills Surr. 65 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1913
The will contains a legacy of $5,500 in trust to invest on first mortgage upon improved real estate at the rate of five per centum and to pay the net income to a daughter during her life.
There follow several general legacies, and then this provision :
“ Ninth. In the event that the total of my estate shall be insufficient to pay in full the legacies above provided for, I
The estate, except for items which were less than the debts and. expenses of administration, was unproductive stock in a real estate corporation. This stock was held for two years until a fair chance arose for the sale of the corporate property and the conversion of the stock into money by the executor.
The provision for the daughter, especially in view of the solicitude of the testator that the trust for her benefit should be preferred to other legacies, must be regarded as- a legacy for support and maintenance. It was, therefore, a gift to take effect-at the death of the testator. Payable then, it should now be paid for the entire period elapsed since the death, less the expenses of the administration of the trust. Matter of Kings County Trust Company, 141 App. Div. 43.
It is not perceived that the rule in regard to this legacy can be other than that which the law would apply if the gift had been of a specific sum payable at the testator’s death or of an annuity to commence at that time. The subject of the gift which was carved out of the general estate was income upon the trust fund at the rate of five per centum. “ It is the income which constitutes the respondent’s legacy.” Matter of Stanfield, 135 N. Y. 292, 293.
As to legacies of this kind, interest is payable from the testator’s death or, as in this case, the prescribed rate of income is to be paid from that time even though the condition of the estate was such that the payment was impracticable or impossible.
The only distinctive feature of this case is that, without
The only source from which the beneficiary of the trust can be awarded relief is the principal of the general estate and then only upon the theory that in some form the equivalent of five per centum per annum on '$5,500 was separated from the general assets and was given to the beneficiary. All that the general legatees took was the residue after the trust provision should be fully satisfied, and it is for them, and not the primary legatee, to enforce complaint if the executor has improperly held the estate in a barren condition. The theory above stated must prevail if, as was said in Matter of Stanfield, supra, “ It is the income which constitutes the * * * legacy.”
This must result notwithstanding the obiter suggestions that there can be no payment of income unless income has been earned.
Decreed accordingly.