2 Redf. 434 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1877
The general rule is, that general' legacies in their nature carry interest, and that interest iá computed from the time at which the principal is actually due and payable, and the executor is allowed by law, one year from the testator’s death to ascertain and settle his affairs, at the end of which time, the court, for the sake of greater convenience, presumes the personal estate to have been reduced into possession.
Upon that ground, interest is payable from that time,' unless some other period is fixed by the will (Wms. on Executors, 1221). The exceptions to this rule are, that if a legacy is decreed to be a satisfaction of a debt, the Oourt*always allows interest from the death of the testator. In the case of a legacy given to a child by a parent, or one in parentis loco, the court will give interest from the death, to create a provision for its maintenance. An annuity bestowed by will, without mention of the time of payment, is considered as commencing from the death of the testator, and the first payment due at the expiration of a year. As mentioned by Williams on Executors, (p. 1226,) in some instances, legacies payable at a future period will carry interest, although not given by a parent, or a person in loco parentis, where there appears an intention on the part of the testator, that the legatees shall be maintained out of the property bequeathed to them.
In the case of Lawrence v. Embree (3 Bradf., 364), it was held that annuities are considered as commencing to run at the testator’s death, and the first payment is n.qt due until the end of a year. A bequest of interest dividends, and income, of a certain sum to be vested by the executors, does not begin to carry interest until
But, as is well said by Surrogate Tucker, in the matter of Fish (19 Abbott Pr.,209), the learned Surrogate, in holding that the Bevised Statutes had not changed the rule as to the payment of interest, had doubtless failed to see the then very late case of Bradner v. Faulker(12 N. Y., 472), where the court of last resort held, that the statute in question having prescribed the time when legacies are payable, the interest should be held payable from the time when the legacies became so payable, for it is the non-payment at the time prescribed, which entitles a party to interest upon general legacies; and in the absence of a different provision, it would seem to be obvious that the interest should not be payable until the principal should be legally demanded. I am therefore of the opinion that the statute in question does change the common law rule in respect to interest upon general legacies; but the question submitted in this matter is whether a bequest of interest upon a fund bequeathed, in trust, to be invested, payable to a jjerson neither an infant, nor a widow forms an exception to the general rule above stated.
In that case, the Chief Justice says that the weight of authority, undoubtedly now is in favor of allowing the payment of annuities or incomes to commence at the testator’s death; ana he cites several authorities which I deem it my duty to examine with care.
The Lord Chancellor in that case says, that it is not very well settled 'whether a tenant for life is entitled to interest from the death, or from a year afterwards; but in that case, he was of opinion that a life tenant ought to have interest, at a given rate, from the death, and determination of the partnership, and not the profit, and at the end of the partnership was entitled to interest upon the capital, though dead.
In Hewit v. Morris (Turn. & Russ., 241) the testator directed his executors to invest the residue of his estate, after paying debts and legacies, in funds, or securities, the interest to be paid to the tenant for life, and after his death, the principal to be held in trust for his children. It was held that the tenant for life, was entitled to interest accruing from a year next after the testator’s decease, upon funds in which the testator’s property stood invested at the time of his death, and which were not required for payment of debts and legacies
In Hill v. Hill (3 Vesey & Beames, 183) it was held that a legacy to grandchildren, the object being for provision and maintenance, entitled the legatees to interest from the death.
In Hilyard’s Estate (5 Watts & Serg., 30), the testator gave and bequeathed unto his executors, $1,000 in trust, to place the same out at interest in good securities, and to pay and apply the interest and income thereof, as the same should be got in and received, unto his sister during her life, and immediately after her decease, the principal sum to be equally divided between the children
A careful examination of the treatises upon this subject, together with the decisions both English and American, leaves the question in very serious doubt, and but for the clear language of the learned judge in Cooke v. Meeker, above cited, and the two Pennsylvania authorities, I should be inclined to follow the decision by the late Surrogate Bradford, in Lawrence v. Embree ; for when the principle is recognized that an executor has a year in which to make investments, and the will as in this case directs the investment of the principal, and it appears, as in this case, that the estate in question had no securities drawing interest, out of which payment could be made for the first year, and no investment was in fact made, and there is no suggestion that the executor has been derelict in the performance of his duty, in that respect—it seems to me that there is a substantial distinction between an annuity, as such, and the interest upon a sum to be invested, payable an
But I do not feel at liberty to disregard the plain and emphatic language of the learned chief justice in Coolce v. Meeker, which may be presumed to have received the attention and scrutiny of the other judges of the court, though it may not have been necessary to the decision of that case. The two Pennsylvania cases above cited are also directly upon the point involved in this case; and therefore while I am not able to resist the force of the argument to the contrary, above suggested, I feel constrained to respect the above authorities, and to hold that the interest upon the legacy in-question began to run from the decease of the testator, and that the executor be directed to pay accordingly.
Order accordingly