47 N.Y. 389 | NY | 1872
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *393 This court has only to do with the bequest of the personalty. The real property devised by the testator is situated in California, and whether the devise is valid depends upon the laws of that State.
Title to real estate can only be acquired or lost agreeably to the law of the place where the same is situated. (Abell v.Douglass, 4 Denio, 305.) The tenure, mode of enjoyment, transfer and descent of real property is regulated by the lexloci rei sitae. (2 Kent Com., 429; Story Confl. Laws, §§ 465, 474.)
Whether, therefore, the trust created by the will as to the realty is valid, or whether it is void as in conflict with the laws or policy of the State of California, can only be determined by the courts of that State.
Although the real and personal property are given by the same clause of the will, and upon the same trusts, they are severable, and the validity of one does not depend upon that of the other. One may be good by the lex loci rei sitae, while the other is bad, by the lex domicilii, or vice versa; but they are not necessarily brought into the same condemnation by reason of their connection with each other. The real and personal property are entirely distinct, and the trusts as to each can be well executed and effect given to the will of the testator, without reference to the other. The intent was to *396 create a trust in all the property, real and personal, for the benefit of the three individuals named, for their lives, and can be well executed as to part, although it may fail as to another part of the property. The testator having been domiciled within this State at the time of his death, the validity of the bequests of the personalty depends upon the laws of this State. (Wood v.Wood, 5 Paige, 596.) By the devise, if valid, the title to the personal property necessarily vested in the executor.
It was given to him in trust, and no title or interest vested in the cestui que trust. They acquired equities under the will, but no legal estate in the property itself. (Amory v. Lord, 5 Seld., 403.) The devise was to the executor in trust, the whole income of the property devised to be paid to the brother William B. Jones, during his life, and upon his death to be divided equally and paid to the sisters Catharine and Georgiana, during their lives, and in case of the death of either, the whole income to be paid to the survivor.
It is not a passive trust, but a duty is devolved upon the trustee to receive and pay over the income as it accrues. This necessarily gives him the legal property in the personalty and a right to the possession of the same, and excludes the idea of successive estates in the corpus of the property in the brothers and sisters in the order named. The income was to be paid to them by the executor and trustee, and no other person is named or recognized as the devisee and donee of the property itself. The clear intent of the testator was to vest the title in the executor during the continuance of the lives named, with limitation over at the death of the survivor. The executor was authorized by necessary implication arising from the duty imposed of paying over the income, to collect and receive the same, which takes the trust out of the class of passive trusts condemned by statute. (Boynton v. Hoyt, 1 Denio, 53.) The whole tenure of the will, as well as the particular devise, negatives all intent to give the corpus of the estate, or any part of it, to the persons entitled to the income for their respective lives in succession. The will then suspends *397
the absolute ownership of the personal property, for a longer period than during the continuance of two lives, in being at the time of the death of the testator, and is void. (1 R.S., 773, § 1; Gott v. Cook, 7 Paige, 521.) The executor and trustee is not the absolute owner. He holds it upon a special trust, and there can be no absolute ownership, until after the death of the last cestui que trust, and the title vests as a gift over after that event. It is true that it is possible, that by the death of one or both of the sisters, during the life of the brother, the absolute ownership may not actually be suspended beyond the time allowed by law, but this possibility will not sustain the will. If the suspension of absolute ownership will not, under all circumstances, that is, necessarily, terminate within the prescribed period, the disposition is void. (Schutter v.Smith,
The ultimate limitation over is too remote, being suspended until the actual termination of three lives in being. (Wood *398 v. Wood; Amory v. Lord; Schutter v. Smith; Gott v. Cook,supra; Van Vechten v. Van Vechten, 8 Paige, 104.) The trust created was an entirety, and cannot be avoided in part and sustained in part. The trust is to receive and pay over the income for the three lives, to the brother for his life, and then to the two sisters, with cross limitations over as between them, and the vesting of the estate in those to whom it is ultimately limited and given cannot be accelerated, if for no other reason than that it cannot be known who will be ultimately entitled under the will, until the death of the last sister, for then, and then only, is the limitation over to take effect. A decree or judgment declaring the trust good for two lives, and determining the trust upon the death of the sister first dying, would not accelerate the vesting of the estate in those ultimately entitled.
The testator has not given, as between the sisters, successive estates or equitable interests; they take simultaneously, with cross remainders, and the case is not within the rule which allows courts applying the doctrine of cy pres to give effect to parts of a will, while avoiding other parts of the same instrument. A void trust, which is separable from other valid trusts, may be cut off when the trust thus defeated is independent of the other dispositions of the will, and subordinate to them, and not an essential part to the general scheme. This was held in Manice v. Manice (
The judgment of the Supreme Court should be reversed, the bequest of the personal property declared to be void, and, after the payment of the debts and legacies, other than the legacies of Georgiana Onativia and Catharine Griffing, and other proper charges, the same should be divided equally between William B. Jones and Georgiana Onativia and Catharine Griffing, the distribution entitled under the statute of distributions, and the costs of the several parties to be adjusted by the Supreme Court, and paid from the fund by the executor before making distribution. Proceedings should be remitted to the Supreme Court for such further action as may be necessary to give effect to the judgment of this court.
All concur.
Judgment accordingly. *400