221 A.D. 612 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
Two questions are presented for our determination. The first question arises from the fact that under the 9th paragraph of the will the trustees conveyed a two-story brick dwelling house in the city of Schenectady owned by the testator at the time of his death for the sum of $25,462.50. Plaintiff, as the widow of the testator, claims the value of her dower right in said real estate in addition to the entire income paid to her under paragraph 6 of the will. Defendant, as one of the trustees, claims that she must make her election either as to the value of her dower right or as to the said income.
Dower is fundamentally favored by the law. The rule is well established that where there is no direct expression of intention in the will that the testamentary provisions shall be in lieu of dower the question is whether the will contains any provision inconsistent with the. assertion' of a dower right. There is here no direct expression in the will excluding the plaintiff from her dower right. But the intention to exclude her though not expressed may be implied if the claim of dower is inconsistent with the will. In Matter of Oorden (172 N. Y. 25) the court reviewed the authorities on the subject and cited with approval the following declaration of Lord Redesdale in Birmingham v. Kirwan (2 Sch. & Lef. 453): “ The result of all the cases of implied intention seems to be that the instrument must contain some provision inconsistent with the assertion of a right to demand a third of the lands to be set out by metes and bounds.” After thus declaring the rule the court said: “ Where a valid trust is created covering all the real estate of the testator we have always held it to be inconsistent with the right of the widow to manage or control any part of the realty.” (Italics ours.) In that case as in this the widow was one of the trustees. The trust in the present case includes all the real estate of the testator. The management of the entire estate by trustees, keeping the property in repair, paying taxes and insurance, collecting the income therefrom, and distributing the same, is deemed to be inconsistent with the divided responsibility and participation by one claiming a dower interest. Particularly is this so where as in the present case the trustees are empowered not only to sell or mortgage but also to lease the real estate. The case of Konvalinka v. Schlegel (104 N. Y. 125), relied on by plaintiff, has no pertinency. There was no valid trust in that case but only a power to sell. The lands descended to the heirs subject to the execution of such power. We think in the present case the plaintiff must make her election either to take her dower or to take the income provided "for in paragraph 6 of the will. She cannot have both.
The second question arises from the fact that the testator, being-
Judgment should be rendered in favor of the defendant on both questions propounded, without costs.
Van Kirk, McCann, Davis and Whitmyer, JJ., concur.
Judgment rendered in favor of the defendant on both questions, propounded, without costs.