205 A.D. 128 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
A transfer tax was fixed herein upon a transfer of property-conveyed by a trust deed made by the decedent, Amelia R. Dunlap, May 11, 1917, to the Columbia Trust Company as trustee. Decedent died on May 2, 1920. The trust provided that during the life of the grantor the entire income from the trust estate should be paid to the grantor’s four children in equal shares and in monthly installments. Upon the death of any of the four beneficiaries, during the life of the grantor, the income of the share of the one so dying was to be paid during the fife of the grantor to the issue of the one so dying — if any issue survived. In the event that the one so dying did not leave issue surviving, the income was to be paid during the life of the grantor in equal shares among the survivors of the original four beneficiaries. Any issue of any beneficiary so dying was to receive the share of the income its parent would have taken if the parent had continued to live. The division was to be per stirpes and not per capita. The death of the grantor terminated the trust as to three-fourths of the property of the trust fund. Thereupon that three-fourths was directed to be distributed in equal shares to the three daughters of the decedent, or their survivors, but if any of the three daughters predeceased the grantor, leaving issue who survived at the death of the grantor, it was directed that such issue should take the share of the parent so dying, share and share alike, per stirpes and not per capita.
As to the remaining fourth part of the estate which had been held in trust by the trustee for the son of the decedent, that fourth part was to continue to be held in trust by the trustee after the death of the decedent, and throughout the life of the son of the decedent to pay and apply the income thereof to the use of the son during his lifetime. The remainder over, after the son’s death, of this one-fourth part originally transferred in the trust deed, was to be paid in equal parts among the three daughters, or their survivors, with the provision that in the event that any one of them should die prior to the death of the grantor leaving issue surviving at the death of the grantor, then the issue should take the share of the parent, per stirpes and not per capita. There was no reservation to the grantor of the trust of any income, surplus of income or right to revoke the trust for any cause, nor is there
“ Interest remaining in grantor of express trust. Where an express trust is created, every legal estate and interest not embraced in the trust, and not otherwise disposed of, shall remain in or revert to, the person creating the trust or his heirs.”
This situation created by the statute is precisely analogous to the situation created in a deed of trust, when such deed provides that, in case a life estate for the grantor’s beneficiary should terminate, a remainder to her issue is granted; but if the life tenant should die without leaving any issue, the trust should cease and revert to the grantor. It was not an impossible contingency that during the lifetime of the grantor she would receive back the property, and in that view, remotely contingent as it might be, there was no absolute transfer of these remainders until the time of her death, when they became absolutely vested in the possession and enjoyment of the remaindermen.
The surrogate’s order was right and should be affirmed, with costs.
Dowling, Smith, Merrell and Finch, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed, with costs.