189 A.D. 112 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1919
The only question involved in this appeal by one of the defendants is the selection of the individual substituted or successor trustee named in the judgment to execute a trust created by the will and codicil of George A. Powers, deceased, proved before the Surrogate’s Court of Kings county in the year 1900. By that will and codicil the testator constituted several separate trusts, one of which, involved in the present action, was for the benefit of his son, the defendant William Powers, and his descendants. The plaintiff, himself a successor or substituted trustee named in the will, brought this action to pass his accounts and asked that he might be permitted to retire from the trusteeship. The defendant, appellant, is entitled to the income of the trust estate for fife; at his death the trustee is directed to divide the trust estate into as many separate shares as shall equal the number of children of William living at his death, and to hold one of such shares during the fife of such child, paying the income to the child. Upon the death of each child the property so held in trust shall become the property of his or her surviving descendants, if any, to whom the testator devises the same in and by the will and codicil, and if there are no such descendants the property is to go to the heirs at law of the testator.
In this action none of the adult defendants appeared by attorney or answered the complaint. A guardian ad litem
It follows that the judgment should be affirmed, but without costs.
Mills, Bich, Blackmar and Jaycox, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, without costs.