11 N.Y.S. 458 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The action was to charge a general legacy on real estate of which the testatrix died seised. The legacy in question and one other were given after the payment of debts and funeral expenses and the expense of a tombstone, and they were immediately followed by the familiar residuary clause, which disposed of “all the rest, residue, and remainder” of the estate, “both real and personal.” Concededly this will did not, by its terms, purport to charge the plaintiff’s legacy on the real estate of which the testatrix should die seised; but its terms were not inconsistent with such an intention on the part of the testatrix, and it might be construed to do so, provided that intention should be made to appear from extrinsic circumstances. Brill v. Wright, 112 N. Y. 129, 19 N. E. Rep. 628. It must also be admitted that if the inquiry for the intention of the testatrix were limited to the extrinsic facts as they existed at the time the will was made, the answer must be fatal to the plaintiff’s case, because there was at that time not only no insufficiency of personal estate for the payment of the legacies, but there was no real estate upon which they could have been charged. But clearly our inquiry is not thus limited, and the facts mentioned are not conclusive upon the question of the intention of the testatrix. As the effect of a will is not confined to property possessed by the testator at the date of its execution, but extends to property subsequently acquired, so the intention of the testator must be supposed to embrace future probable or possible changes in the form and character of his estate; and his subsequent dealings with his property may furnish satisfactory evidence of the intention with which the provisions of his will were made. It was upon evidence of this character that the judgment of the court of appeals was made in the case of Scott v. Stebbins, 91 N. Y. 605, where the court, after stating what appeared from the evidence respecting changes in' his property made by the testator subsequent to the execution of his will, proceeds to say: “It is evident that he must have known and intended that his personal property would not be charged alone with the payment of the legacies. The reduction of his personal property, and the increase of his real estate, evince that he must have regarded the latter as chargeable with-the legacies.” And in Briggs v. Carroll, 117 N. Y. 288, 22 N. E. Rep. 1054, the same effect is given to evidence of the character referred to. In that case, Finch, J., speaking of the action of the testator subsequent to the execution of the will, by which his personal estate had been largely depleted, says: “Either he must have intended to sacrifice the comfort and welfare of his wife and his son Charles for the benefit of his older and married children, and' deliberately continued to make their situation worse by putting personal estate into land and incurring debts, or he sup