142 N.E. 431 | NY | 1923
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *95 The action is brought for the settlement of the accounts of a trustee and for the construction of a will.
Jabez A. Bostwick, who died in August, 1892, divided his residuary estate into three equal parts.
One of "said equal third parts" he devised and bequeathed to the New York Life Insurance and Trust Company in trust to pay the income thereof to his wife Helen C. Bostwick during life, and "upon her death to pay the same" to his daughter Mrs. Nellie Bostwick Morrell during life, and upon the death of his "said wife and daughter to convey, assign and deliver the said estate real and personal so held in trust to the lawful issue of Mrs. Nellie Bostwick Morrell share and share alike, or *101 in default of such issue to the next of kin of Mrs. Morrell."
A second share was given to another trustee upon like trusts, but for the benefit of another daughter.
A third share, disposed of upon trusts for the benefit of a son, was the subject of a litigation recently before us (Matterof Bostwick,
The first of the three shares is the subject-matter of this action. Nellie Bostwick Morrell died without issue in January, 1906. Her mother, the testator's widow, died in April, 1920. The trustee was then under a duty to distribute the estate so held in trust among the next of kin of Mrs. Morrell. We are to determine the point of time which the testator had in mind as the one for the ascertainment of the class. On the one hand it is asserted that the next of kin in being at the death of Mrs. Morrell acquired a title that was indefeasible though they died before the end of the trust and so before the date of distribution. This was the view of the Appellate Division. On the other hand, it is asserted that the class was to be ascertained when there was a duty to convey and deliver, and that survivorship at that time was one of the conditions of the gift. *102
Much that was said in construing the trust for the benefit of the son is applicable here. The testator was mindful of the possibility that the daughter might die before the wife. Accordingly, he was careful to provide that only upon the death of both — "upon the death of my said wife and daughter" — was the trustee to convey and deliver the subject-matter of the trust. The mandate is to distribute among issue, and "in default of such issue" among next of kin. But in default of issue when? It happens that none were born. Plainly, if any had been born, their interests would have been defeasible, at least until their mother's death. This, indeed, is conceded by counsel for respondents. The very provision for the substitution of another class, the class of next of kin, is a token that survivorship was thought of as a condition of the gift (Salter v. Drowne,
Whether the same construction would be appropriate if the ultimate remainder had been given, not to the *103
next of kin of the daughter, but to those of the testator, we need not now determine. Such a gift is more readily interpreted as a declaration that the law shall take its course, that the estate shall be disposed of as if a will had not been made (Matter of Bump, supra; Whall v. Converse,
Survivorship being a condition, we hold that it is survivorship at the time of distribution (Vincent v. Newhouse, supra; Teed
v. Morton,
The question remains whether distribution is to be made percapita or per stirpes. In April, 1920, at the termination of the trust, Mrs. Morrell's sister, who was then Mrs. Voronoff, was living. Her brother, Albert C. Bostwick, was dead, but he had five children, who survived. Both the referee and the Appellate Division included the brother's children in the class of next of kin. The referee limited them, however, to the share that would have been taken by their parent. The Appellate Division took the view that the division must be equal.
A stubborn rule of law bound the courts for many years to the holding that a gift to "issue" was to be treated as a gift percapita. The rule was often deplored (Petry v. Petry,
We think a gift to "heirs" or "next of kin" is the same in meaning and effect as one to "legal heirs" or "legal next of kin," and that one as much as the other imports a reference to the statute. This is the view that has prevailed in many other jurisdictions (Allen v. Boardman,
We find no support in the decisions in New York for the rule that the next of kin who will take under a will are not the next of kin upon intestate succession. We ought not to incorporate into our law a rule so discredited *108
in the jurisdiction of its origin. We have not done so yet. The English cases were cited and rejected in Slosson v. Lynch (43 Barb. 147). This court in Tillman v. Davis (
We do not ignore the direction that the gift, if it passes to issue, is to be divided "share and share alike." The mandate is not repeated in connection with the gift to next of kin. We are asked to hold that repetition is implied. In some jurisdictions, a gift to issue with *109
a direction that division shall be equal, is read as equivalent to a direction that it shall be equal between stocks (Hall v.Hall,
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the judgment entered upon the referee's report affirmed, with costs to all parties filing briefs in this court payable out of the estate.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., HOGAN, POUND, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.