60 A.D. 438 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The main contention is with respect to payments made by the executors and trustees of alleged income amounting to the sum of $21,763.07. That amount appears to have- been paid to the life beneficiaries in the belief on the part of the executors that the life tenants were entitled to the income of the estate earned during the first year. The decree of the surrogate is based on the report of a referee who, after a very thorough and painstaking examination, of the authorities, reached the conclusion that these beneficiaries were only entitled to receive the income of the estate commencing and accruing one year after the testator’s death. The result requires the executors to pay this large sum a second time, and only the clearest requirements of the law will justify it. ' In his report the learned referee states: “ The executors for fourteen years have -honestly administered the estate. In course of administration they have in good faith and in full belief that therein they were carrying out the wishes of the testator and the injunctions of his will, paid out this large sum, in the proportions directed and partly to the parents of these residuary legatees. These moneys have no doubt been largely used for their education, maintenance and support. It would, therefore, be quite satisfactory to affirm the transaction as if made pursuant to the will and the law. But this, as I understand both, may not be done.”
An examination of the will and of the authorities presented convinces me that this may be done, and that in paying out for the benefit of the life beneficiaries the income of the first year, the executors followed both the intention of the testator and the requirements of the law.
The testator, Robert F. Austin, at the time of his death, which occurred on March 31, 1885, was a member of a large grocery firm, from the business of which he was deriving a large annual income. His wealth was almost all invested in that business. The copartnership articles provided that each partner should receive seven per cent interest on his capital, to be charged to the expenses of the business, before any profits should be. divided, and the testator received, or was entitled to receive, for the year prior to his death, over $42,000 in interest and profits. The copartnership articles further provided that in case of the death of a partner the business
The will is dated January 31,18TT, and provides, so far as is material to the present inquiry, as follows:
“ First. I give, bequeath and devise unto my executors hereinafter named * * * all of my property, real and personal, of every name, nature and kind, of which I shall die seized or which I may have or own at the time of my decease, for the following uses and purposes, and to be held and disposed of by them as follows, viz.: I direct and require them to sell and convey the real estate, and convert all of said property, real and personal, into money as soon as it can conveniently be done without prejudice or injury to the estate, and after paying my debts and such necessary expenses as are properly payable therefrom, to invest the same in bonds and mortgages on improved farming lands, * * *. In case any part of the money or proceeds- of my said estate cannot be safely invested in the manner aforesaid, or if any part thereof cannot be so invested in such securities without great hazard, loss of sacrifice, such money may be invested in bonds and mortgages on first-. class city property. * * * In' case my executors shall at any ■ time have on hand any money — proceeds of my said estate — that cannot be properly invested ■ as aforesaid or in sums not sufficiently large to be profitably invested as héreinbefore provided, I desire and direct them to deposit the same in such savings bank or banks * * * as shall have at the time a surplus of at least one hundred thousand dollars exclusive of real estate owned by them.
11 Second. The income of iny said estate, after deducting the necessary costs and expenses of investing the property and collecting the income, is to be, and I will and direct that the same be paid out and disposed of as follows, viz.: Two-thirds thereof is to be annually retained by or paid over to my beloved wife, Anna Schuyler Austin, during her lifetime, and is to belong absolutely to her. The remaining one-third 1 direct and require my said executors to pay out for the necessary use and expenses of the family of my beloved son, Daniel W. Austin, including himself, in such, sums,*441 for rent, food, clothing, family supplies and expenses as may be necessary for the support of himself and family.
“ Third. From and after the death of my said wife, in case my said son shall then be living, I direct and require that all of the income of my said estate be paid out annually and in such sums as may be needed for the support and maintenance of my said son and his family in the manner and as provided in the next preceding (the second, clause of this). But in case my said son shall not then be living, it is my will and I direct that my whole estate shall be given to and be divided among his children and his widow (if there shall then be one), share and share alike.”
The rule governing the construction of this will in its relation .to the controverted question as deducible from all the authorities was stated with great clearness by Judge Maynard in Matter of Stanfield (135 N. Y. 292). • He said (p. 294): “ Where the income of an estate, or of a designated portion, is given to a legatee for life, we think it is clear that he becomes entitled to it whenever it accrues, and if the estate is productive of income from ■the death of the testator, he can require the executor to account to him for the income from that time. The rule that general legacies shall not bear interest until the expiration of one year from the grant of' letters testamentary, or of administration (Matter of McGowan, 124 N. Y. 526), has no application in such a case. It is, by its terms, limited to general legacies payable out of the corpus of the decedent’s estate. In the present case the bequest is not of a part of the principal of the estate, or of cmy property possessed by the testator in his lifetime; but of that which is to arise or accrue after his death from a specified fund to be set apart for that purpose. It is the imcome which constitutes the respondent’s legacy. He is not seeking to charge the estate with interest upon his legacy, but is simply endeavoring to secure the legacy itself, and his effort, therefore, involves no infringement of the rule regulating the payment of interest upon general legacies.” In reference to the necessity for an investment of the fund by the executor as bearing upon the right to immediate interest, he said (p. 295): “ The direction to the executor with respect to the investment of the fund, has reference to the admvnist/ration of the trust and cannot be available to
On the principles enunciated in the Stanfield case and supported by substantially every precedent authority, the life tenants in this case should be held entitled to all the income accruing from the date of the testator’s death. There is nothing in the will to indicate a contrary intent. The direction to convert the estate into money and to invest the money in the specified securities is not a controlling condition where the income bequeathed is not in terms the income arising from the investments, or the income accruing after the investment, but is as here “ the income of my said estate ” and “all of the income of my' said estate.” The cases which controlled the learned referee and surrogate are clearly distinguishable by this distinction. Vickers v. Scott (3 M. & K. 500) presented the question as to when the life tenant would be entitled to the rent of real estate. The will ■ directed a sale of the real estate and the investment of the purchase money. “ Upon investment thereof ” the income dervved from such investment was bequeathed. The Master of the Rolls, Sir John Leach, said (p. 504): “ The tenant for life, by the clean language of the will, is not entitled to the rents and profits of the residuary real estate until it has been sold, and the produce invested.”
So, too, in Clifford v. Davis (22 Ill. App. 316) the bequest was in express terms the interest -to be collected by the executor on his investments. The court said (p. 320): “ The general rule is, that in case of the bequest of a life estate in a residuary fund, and where no time is prescribed in the will for the commencement of the inter
In Williamson v. Williamson (6 Paige, 298) the chancellor said (p. 304): “ The result of the English cases appears to be, and I have not beeii able to find any in this country establishing a different principle, that in the bequest of a life estate in a residuary fund, and where no time is prescribed in the will for the commencement of the interest, or the enjoyment of the use or income of such residue, the legatee for life is entitled to the interest or income of the clear residue, as afterwards ascertained, to be computed from the time of the death of the testator. All the cases which appear to conflict with this rule, except the two decided by Sir John Leach, which are no longer to be considered as authority, will be found to be cases in which the testator had directed one species of property to be converted into another, or the residuary fund to be invested in "a particular manner, and had then given a life estate in thefu/nd as thus concerted or invested. In such cases it appears to be consistent with the will of the testator to consider the life interest as commencing when the conversion takes place, or the investment is made, either within the year or at the expiration of that time.” ■
All the cases seem to accord with the views herein expressed. (See Cooke v. Meeker, 36 N. Y. 15; Rodman v. Fincke, 68 id. 239; Matter of Schermerhorn, 29 N. Y. St. Repr. 196; Wells v. Knight, 5 Hun, 50; Powers v. Powers, 49 id. 219; Barrow v. Barrow, 55 id. 503; Matter of Barnes, 7 App. Div. 13; Sargent v. Sargent, 103 Mass. 297.) I find none of the cases cited by the respondents to be in contravention of the principle in issue. They are all cases where the fund to be invested is first to "be obtained by a sale and conversion, the subsequent gift being expressly attached to the fund so created, and none where the gift is of the interest arising
In relation to the controversy over the commissions an appellate court can do little more than announce the principles established by the authorities. The executors are entitled to commissions in that capacity and also as trustees. (Matter of Johnson, 57 App. Div. 494.) They are also entitled to commissions on the annual income, unless they are found to have waived the right by paying over the entire income without any deduction for commissions, and without retaining in their hands or afterwards receiving any funds belonging to the same beneficiaries, and from which such commissions could afterwards be deducted. That is to say, they cannot pay the income in full and deduct commissions on such income from the principal where the income goes to one set of beneficiaries and the principal to another. By paying in full without retaining the commissions, where such commissions if afterwards collected would be charged upon other beneficiaries, the right is clearly waived. (Spencer v. Spencer, 38 App. Div. 403; Matter of Haight, 51 id. 310.)
The account will of necessity require to be restated in order to determine the exact amount of income and its proper disposition in accordance with this opinion, and the commissions can then be adjusted as suggested. It may be that upon such readjustment, the expenses of the liquidation of the business of the firm being charged ratably and equitably as against principal and income, surplus income will be disclosed sufficient to meet the commissions which the appellants would otherwise lose, but which may thus be saved to them unless the surrogate shall find a waiver as a matter of fact.
The decree should .be modified and the proceedings remitted to the surrogate for disposition accordingly.
All concurred.
Decree of the Surrogate’s Court of Kings county modified and proceedings remitted for disposition in accordance with opinion of Hirschberg, J., with costs to all parties to this appeal payable out of the estate.