99 N.Y.S. 415 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
. A testator, possessed of personal property amounting to $3,800, and real estate of the value of $800, provided by his. will, first, for the payment of his debts; second for the sale of his real, estate by his executor, and for the purchase, from the proceeds of such sale and from his personal estate, of a cemetery lot in a cemetery named, the removal • thereto of his “ father’s family dead,” and the purchase and erection of a suitable monument and markers; third, for the setting . apart by his executor of a'fund- to produce interest sufficient to provide for the care of said cemetery lot and graves, said fund to be held in trust in perpetuity; fourth, for the disposition of the residue in the following language: “ Whatever residue or remainder, if any, there may be left of my estate after paying my debts, the expenses incurred in its settlement, and in performing and carrying out the provisions and directions hereinbefore stated and ordered by me, and after paying all costs and charges therefor, I give and bequeath such residue and remainder of my estate to my Executor, Robert H. Clark, as payment for his services as such Executor in the settlement of my estate.”
The appellant, the sole heir at law and next of kin, objected to the probate of the will and insisted that its provisions were invalid, and thus the surrogate was required'to pass upon its validity to pass personal property. (Code Civ. Proc. § 2624 ; Matter of Austin, 35 App. Div. 278.) The learned surrogate held that the 3d clause of the will was void as being an unlawful suspension of the absolute ownership of personal property, and both sides concede that this determination was correct (see Read v. Williams, 125 N. Y. 560), and the appellant insists that the 3d clause failing, the entire will fails, upon the well-settled rule'that where valid and invalid por- , tions of a will are so interdependent as to constitute one scheme, so that the presumed wishes of the testator would be defeated if one portion was retained and the other portion.was rejected,: the entire
The third provision is a necessary part of the scheme, and, this failing, it is plain that a result will be accomplished which the testator never contemplated, if the rest is permitted to stand. The surrogate, however, was required to admit the will to probate as a will valid to dispose of real property, as, so far as the disposition of the real property was concerned, his jurisdiction was limited to the question of execution and testamentary capacity. (Matter of Merriam, 136 N. Y. 58.) The decree should be modified to the extent of adjudging the will invalid to dispose of the personal property, and, as thus modified affirmed, without costs.
Hirschberg, P. J., Woodward, Gay nor and Rich, JJ., concurred.
%
Decree of the Surrogate’s Court of Orange county modified to the extent of adjudging* the will invalid to dispose of the personal property, and as modified affirmed, without costs.