58 A.D. 207 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
These appeals involve the judicial construction of the will of George Rudd, the grandfather of Genevieve. M. Rudd. George Rudd died in New York-city on September 14, 1884, leaving a. last will and testament dated August 27, 1870, and a codicil dated August 28,1880, and leaving him surviving his widow, Janet Rudd, and Eliza Moore Rudd, George Rudd, Mary Frances Rudd, Marvin W. Rudd and Althea S. (Allie) Rudd, his children. By his will the testator gave to his wife a specific. bequest of his household furniture, printed books and plate, and then provided as follows:
“ Third. I do give, devise and bequeath to my executors hereinafter named, the survivors and survivor of them, all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real and personal, wheresoever and whatsoever, in trust and for the purposes following; that they invest my personal property on bonds secured by mortgages on real estate, or stocks of a permanent character, and that they rent my real estate, and that during the lives of my two children, Marvin W. Rudd and Allie Rudd, and the survivor of them, that they apply one-third of the net rents and income of my said estate to the use of my said dear wife Janet for and during the term of her natural life, if she shall so long live, and that they apply the residue of said rents and income, and the whole thereof after the decease of my wife, to the use of my children, viz., Eliza Moore Rudd, George Rudd, Mary Frances Rudd, Marvin W. Rudd and Allie Rudd, in equal shares, and in case either of them shall die before the death of the survivor of my said two children, Marvin and Allie, leaving lawfúl issue surviving, then the share of the one so dying to be paid over to such issue,, if one solely, if more than one jointly and equally, but if the one so dying leave no lawful issue surviving then such share to be paid to the survivors; and upon the death of the survivor of my said two children, Marvin and Allie, then upon the further trust that my said executors or the survivor of them do divide my estate and pay one-third thereof to my wife, if she shall then be living, and one share of the residue thereof (and of the whole if my said wife shall have deceased) to each one of my children who shall then be living, and to the issue of such of them who shall have died, leaving lawful issue him or her surviving, such issue to take the share of the parent, if one solely, if more*210 than one jointly and equally.” He then provided for a sale of certain unimproved real estate in the discretion of his executors, before the time of. division; nominated and appointed his wife the testamentary guardian of the minor children, and nominated and appointed his wife the executrix, and his brother and brother-in-law executors. By the codicil, the appointment of the brother and brother-in-law as executors was revoked, and the wife and daughters, Eliza Moore Rudd and Mary Frances Rtidd were nominated and appointed executrices. The will was probated as a will of both real and personal property, and the executrices qualified. and entered upon the discharge of their duties.
Marvin' W. Rudd, one of the persons for the period of whose lives the trust was created, died in March, 1888, leaving his wife, the defendant Annie E. Cornell, and his daughter .Genevieve as his only next of kin and heir at law. Genevieve died in April,1897, leaving her mother, the said defendant Cornell, as her sole next of kin and heir at law. The daughter, Eliza Rudd, died in August, 1892, and the daughter Mary in January, 1894; neither left issue nor had either been married. Janet Rudd, the testator’s .widow, his son George and the daughter Althea are still living. George Rudd had a wife and one child at the death of his father, and at the time of the commencement of this action there had been born to him four other children, who now survive; they are the four infant defendants -herein. The trust created by the will has not yet terminated, the period for distribution beine: postponed until the death of .Althea S. Rudd.
We are called upon to determine what share or interest Genevieve Rudd, the daughter of Marvin Rudd, took in the trust estate created by this will upon the death of her father. Had she a vested interest both in the income and the corpus of the estate, which, upon’her death prior to the period fixed by the will for distribution passed by the statutes of distribution and descent to her next of kin and heirs at law? Or was'her interest in both of such a nature that it was divested by her' death ? For answers to these questions we must look for and determine the intention of the testator by construing the will' by which he created the estate. -Whenever the construction of a will turns upon -the question as to whether the particular estate bequeathed or devised vests in the legatee or devisee a, present vested
We agree with the construction which has been placed upon this will by the learned referee and, in the main, with the reasons which he assigns therefor. We think that its language indicates a clear intent upon the part of the testator to keep the entire corpus of his estate together until the period fixed for distribution, which was the full period in his power to provide under the Statute of Perpetuities. The language of the will is so clear in this respect as not to present a debatable question. The intent of the testator to make the right of a child to take at the expiration of the trust period to depend upon survivorship is not controverted by any one, nor could it be, as such is the express provision of the will. There is no present gift, except of income, to children or the issue of children, and the words of gift in each instance are to children and their issue. While it is true that the will does not in express terms make the right of the issue of a child to depend upon survivorship at the end of the trust period, yet there are no words of present gift to such issue. The only words of gift are contained in the direction to the trustees to divide and pay at the termination of the trust, and no distinction whatever is made in this regard between children and the issue of children. Prior to that time the status of the issue is precisely that of the parent, so far as the present interest in the estate is concerned, and survival at the time to which distribution is postponed seems to be essential in order to acquire any vested interest in the trust estate. While this provision of the will is not coupled with the same language as the clause before it, relating to the disposition of the rents and income, i. e., “ but if the one so dying leave no lawful issue surviving, then such share to be paid to the survivors,” yet it seems to be plain that the whole scheme of the will and the clear intent of the testator was, after the death of his children, for the term of whose lives the trust was created, to give of the trust estate one-third to the widow if she survived the period and the remaining two-thirds to his descendants living at the termination of the trust.
It is the well-settled rule in construing wills that, where futurity
So far as the bequest of income is concerned, force is added to the disposition intended to be made of the corpus, for the direction is clear and specific that of the income prior to the termination of the trust estate upon the decease of one entitled to take, the survivors, by express terms, take the whole. The case in this respect, therefore, is stronger than that presented in Dougherty v. Thompson (54 App. Div. 456), where it was held that a present bequest of income
It is evident, also, that the construction which we place upon the' will ought to obtain, as we think that it was the intention of the testator, as evidenced by the whole scheme of the will, to vest in children of the blood the ultimate title to the whole estate. This intent is so clear that a construction of the will which diverts the disposition of the property from the line of succession which the testator evidently intended ought to be avoided if the language were less conclusive than it is, and such construction could be sanctioned without violating rules of law. Under decisive authorities for construing this will, we find no such difficulty in this case, and, therefore, conclude, so far as the construction of the will is concerned, that Genevieve took no greater estate or interest than that possessed by her father, and that, having died before the period of distribution arrived, her estate therein was defeated, and her heirs and next of kin take nothing by virtue of the will, except income accrued at the time of her death.
The conclusion thus reached leads to an affirmance of the judgment appealed from, unless we are constrained to sustain the contention of the appellant as to the effect of two certain judgments, one rendered in an action for an accounting brought by Janet Rudd, as sole surviving executrix of the will in question, against the legatees, devisees, next of kin and heirs at law of the testator, and the other rendered in an action brought by Thaddeus K. Miller against Janet Rudd, as executrix and individually, et al., for the partition of certain of the real property of which the testator died seized as tenant in common with said Miller, and which formed a part of the trust estate. Genevieve Rudd was a party to both these actions ; and it is urged that these judgments, oné or both, ar eres adjudicata of the questions involved in this appeal. If they are, or either of them is, held to operate as an adjudication conclusive as a bar to the construction of the will which we have reached, they must be regarded as effective and controlling as though the construction of the will vested in Genevieve an absolute indefeasible estate.
So far as the judgment in the action for an accounting is con
It is quite clear that the report and judgment in this action were entirely correct. Genevieve was alive and a party to the action. The judgment adjudicated upon her then existing right; and as she was the. survivor within the meaning of the will, she took a present interest in the income which was the subject of the action. Her right thereto continued during her life, and both by the terms of the will and the adjudication of the judgment she became entitled to have and receive the whole of the share of the income which had accrued to her at the time of her death. This sum the defendant Cornell, as administratrix, was entitled to have and receive ; and the judgment in the present action makes proper provision for her in this respect. It is clear, therefore, that this judgment cannot constitute a bar, or be regarded as an adjudication upon any subject involved in the present action, except so far as it relates to income which accrued at the date of the death of Genevieve.
■ So far as the judgment in the action for partition is concerned,: we reach a like conclusion as upon the effect of the judgment in. the
The action was in partition, and the lands and premises to which it related were a part of the corpus of the trust estate. AIT of the parties interested in the estate were made parties to the action.' It would seem that at that time the only parties who held title tó the premises were the trustees under the will, and any adjudication which disposed of the corpus of the estate, it would seem,.ought properly to have adjudicated such interest as being lodged in them, as in fact it was until the time for distribution arrived. The report of the referee in that action, however, found in the 18th finding that the defendant Genevieve M. Rudd “ is entitled to receive from the said trustees a two-fifteenth share or interest of the income, rents and profits from said undivided half part of the premises described in the complaint, and a remainder in fee of a two-fifteenth part of the same, such interest in said income and such remainder being subject to be increased by the death of said Janet Rudd, or the death, without leaving issue, of any one or more of the children of the said George Rudd, deceased, prior to the death of said survivor Althea Rudd.” The judgment followed the finding of the referee, and so far as it relates to the present question is in the following language : “ That the defendant Genevieve M. Rudd is entitled to receive from the said trustees, a two-fifteenths share or interest of the income, rents and profits from said undivided half part of the premises described in the complaint, and a remainder in fee of a two-fifteenth part of the same, such interest in said income and such remainder being subject to be increased by the death of said Janet Rudd, or the death, without leaving issue, of any one or more of the children, of the said George Rudd, deceased, prior to the death of said survivor Althea Rudd.”
. It is provided in the Real Property Law (Laws of 1896, chap; 547, § 21) that “ an estate of inheritance continues to be termed a fee simple, or fee, and when not defeasible or conditional, a fee simple absolute, or an absolute fee.” Giving force and effect to this language, it seems, clear that the estate of Genevieve, in accurate language, could be stated to be a fee simple, or fee, even though it was a vested estate subject to be divested by death before the termination of the particular estate. The fact, therefore, that the word “remainder” precedes the words “in fee” in the judgment adds no force whatever to the tenure of her estate. It was simply descriptive of what that estate was, and in this, respect was entirely accurate, as it was an estate in remainder and also in fee; but as it was subject to be defeated, it did not attain ■ to the higher estate of a fee simple absolute, or an absolute fee, and the judgment does not assume so to declare by any language used therein. Further provisions of the statutes add force to that which we have quoted. By section 26 of the Real Property Law estates in expectancy are defined to be future estates and reversions; and. by section 47 of the same law it is provided when expectant estates are defeated,
It is evident, therefore, that however the estate of Genevieve be regarded, whether as creating an interest in the land partitioned, or in the proceeds of the. same, there is nothing contained in the statutes which either enlarges or diminishes the estate which she took under the will, and the language of the judgment neither enlarged nor diminished such estate as defined by the statutes and provided in the will. By no process of reasoning can the words “ remainder in fee” used in the judgment be construed to mean a fee simple absolute, or an absolute fee, and force be given to the statutes defining such estate. Consequently, her estate being vested subject to be divested, and the legal title to the property being in the trustees, she obtained no rights by the judgment in partition, or by any provision of law, under which she could change or enlarge her estate as given by the provisions of the will. The estate created by the will and defined by the judgment and the statutes was at all times subject to be defeated; it was to take effect in the future, and was, therefore, an estate in expectancy. As the will provided the condition under which it could ripen into a fee simple absolute, and be defeated if the condition failed, it was a defeasible estate; and the condition upon which it depended for further enlargement having failed, it ceased, absolutely to exist, and nothing contained in the provisions, of either judgment sought to be invoked in this action has saved it, and nothing therein in the slightest conflicts with or affects the construction which we have placed upon the will.
If these views are correct, it follows that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs to all parties payable out of the estate.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to all parties payable out of the estate.