23 Misc. 508 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1898
The testator, Jesse B.Kenyon, died about 1869. .By his- will he made certain bequests, and then followed this clause:
“ Lastly, I give and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my personal estate, goods and chattels of whatsoever name or nature to my wife Catharine for her sole use and ■Benefit, and subject to her control during her natural life, after*456 which one-half of the remainder to be devised among my kindred as the law may direct, the other half subject to the will of my wife Catharine as she may devise among her kindred.”'
The will appointed testator’s widow, Catharine Kenyon, and Jesse K. Cutler, executors thereof. In 1870 these executors filed a petition for and had a judicial settlement of their accounts. The specific legacies were duly paid and a decree of this court was entered settling the accounts. The remainder of the estate passing under the clause of the will above quoted, was found in and by said decree to be $8,832.67. No part of this remainder was in money; that sum represented the par value of certain stocks, bonds and other securities which were turned over, us such estate in remainder, to Catharine Kenyon, life tenant.
She assumed and had sole charge, .care and control of the estate in remainder from that time down to the time of her death. She died on the 13th day of March, 1895, leaving a last will and testament which has been duly admitted to probate and letters testamentary issued thereon. Upon the death of Catharine Kenyon, the surviving executor took charge of said estate in remainder. In these proceedings for a judicial settlement of his accounts as such surviving executor, numerous questions are raised by the various patties interested. I have given all of these questions very careful consideration and have, passed upon them all in the findings filed herein. None of these questions warrant any discussion here, except, perhaps, the question raised as to the portion of this estate which should pass to the representative of the estate of Catharine.
As stated before, the estate in remainder of which Catha-rine had a life use, was made up of stocks, bonds and other securities of the par value of $8,832.67'. What the actual value was does not appeal*. By the accounts of the surviving executor filed in this proceeding, it appears that he has realized in cash from the sale of securities which came into his hands
It is claimed by those interested in the estate of Catharine Kenyon that the difference between this sum and the sum first above stated (being about $3,000), represents accumulations of income; that these accumulations belong to the estate of Catharine Kenyon; that the heirs of Jesse B. Kenyon should now be paid only one-half of the said sum of $8,832.67, and that the balance of the moneys now in the hands of the surviving executor should be paid to the personal representative of the estate of Catharine Kenyon, to- be distributed under her will.
It is a settled rule of construction that courts in the determination of questions of this kind are to be guided by the intent of the testator, to be ascertained from a consideration of all the provisions of his will. Under the provisions of this will, the life tenant was undoubtedly entitled to the income from the estate in remainder. If she succeeded in living within that income and saved each year a part thereof, these savings undoubtedly belonged to her absolutely and became her personal estate. Shangle v. Hallock, 6 App. Div. 56; Hendricks v. Hendricks, 3 id. 604.
It now becomes necessary to determine whether this apparent increase is the result of accumulations of income, or whether it is simply an increase resulting from the sale of the stocks, bonds and other securities of which the estate in remainder consisted. No evidence is offered by any of the parties, except such as can be gleaned from the accounts filed in 1870 and the accounts now before the court. As before stated, the par value of the stocks, bonds and other securities which constituted the estate in remainder in 1870, was $8,-832.67. What the actual value of these securities-were at that time does not appear. ' It might have been twice the par value or any other sum. Among the securities were nineteen shares of bank stock; seven of these shares were sold by the life tenant ; the remaining twelve shares were sold by the surviving ex-
The estate in remainder also consisted of $3,000 in town bonds of the towns of Milford, Otsego and Richfield, and $3,000 in government bonds. These were sold by the life tenant, and the proceeds reinvested in other securities. The law is settled, I think, that in investments and reinvestments of this kind, gains realized are capital and not income. Gains made on stock taken at par and sold above par are accretions to the estate in remainder. Chaplin on Express Trusts & Powers, page 313; Matter of Gerry, 103 N. Y. 445.
No presumption will lie that this remainder has been in■creased by accumulations of income. The estate in remainder was in the sole charge of the life tenant. The investments and •securities coming into the hands of the surviving executor, on their face, all belong to the estate in remanden It will not be presumed that the life tenant mixed her own moneys with the moneys belonging to the estate in remainder; or that she invested her own moneys- as executrix, or in the name of the •estate.
I have, accordingly, found that the moneys now in the hands of the surviving executor all belong' to the. estate in remainder.
A decree may be entered according to the findings.
Decreed accordingly.