55 N.Y.S. 272 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1898
The purpose of this suit is to pass the accounts of the plaintiff as a trustee under the last will of Giles Bushnell, deceased, and of a former trustee under the same will; and also-to obtain a judicial construction of the will in question. At the trial, the counsel for the respective parties stipulated that Giles Bushnell, the testator, died in 1862, leaving a will which was proved September 2, 1862, and a copy of which is attached to the-complaint; that' Anna Bushnell, the testator’s wife, died July 26, 1868; that Anna Maria Bushnell, the testator’s daughter, died April 9, 1897; that 'Henry, William and Ira Bushnell, brothers-of the testator, are dead; that John A. Bushnell, son of William Bushnell, a brother of the testator, died July 16, 1874, leaving issue him surviving, viz.: Horace B. and John Adams Bushnell,. defendants herein; that Emanuel Bushnell, son of William Bushnell, died December 13, 1897, leaving issue him surviving, viz.: John Archibald and Virginia A. Bushnell, Mary Anne Fox and' Eleanor L. Dixon, defendants herein; that, after letters testa- ■ mentary had been issued to Chalkley J. Wills and John Drinker, and after they had died, James V. Kirby was duly substituted as. trustee under the will, and acted as such until his death, on July 9, 1897; and that, on July 19, 1897, the plaintiff was appointed trustee under the will in the place of James V. Kirby, deceased. The counsel further stipulated that all questions touching the ac- ■ counts be held in abeyance, until the decision of the court construing the ninth clause of the will in question. The thirteenth-
William Bushnell, the testator’s brother, left no children living at the death of Anna Maria Bushnell, the testator’s daughter, and the only children of the testator’s brothers living at her death were James M. Bushnell and Henrietta W. Bushnell, children of Henry Bushnell, and Henry W. Bushnell, Charles B. Bushnell, Mary E. Plumb and Sarah M. Bushnell, children of Ira Bushnell. These parties claim the entire estate. The other claimants to the estate are all grandnephews or grandnieces of the testator, except Giles F. Bushnell, who is a grandson of the testator. The grandnephews and grandnieces are the descendants of either Henry Bushnell, Ira Bushnell or William Bushnell, brothers of the testator.
The decision of this case has been somewhat delayed, and the labor incident thereto materially increased by the necessity of examining eighty reported cases, which the counsel in the case have, collectively, cited in their briefs. Upon referring to these authorities, many of them have been found either to be cumulative to a particular point, or to relate to venerable principles which have long since passed out of the field of doubt or controversy, All the counsel on either side are agreed that the local point in the case is the true construction of that clause of the will in question which is numbered “ Ninthly.” It reads as follows, viz.:
“ Ninthly. All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate I give, devise and bequeath to my said trustees, in trust, nevertheless, to uphold and manage the same, pay taxes, assessments, insurance and repairs, and collect the interests, rents, issues and profits thereof, and pay and apply the same semi-annually to the use, comfort, maintenance and support of my said wife and my said daughter, during their lives and the life of the survivor of them, and, on the death of the. survivor of them, I give and devise to, and direct my said*271 trustees to divide and distribute the same to and among the then living children of my said brothers Henry, "William and Ira Bushnell, equally share and share alike.”
The supreme law of wills being the intention of the testator, the first question in logical order and importance is: What disposition did the testator intend to make of his estate? Looking to the instrument itself, the character of the testator and his family relations and circumstances, so far as they are to be gathered from the will, we find in the testator a man of business experience and training, who had acquired what forty years ago, when he made his will, would have been regarded as a very considerable fortune. His immediate family appears to have consisted of himself, his wife, a son and a daughter. The last he described as his “ unfortunate and afflicted daughter.” The whole structure of the will evinces a clear conception and a well-developed plan regarding the disposition which the testator ought, and intended, to make of his estate. After devising to his wife the house and lot in Madison street, Hew York, in lieu of dower, the testator, by the fourth clause of'his will, devised to trustees the premises Hos. 65 and 67 East Twenty-ninth street, Hew York city, in trust, to receive the rents, issues and profits thereof and apply them to the support of his daughter, Anna Maria Bushnell, for her life, and, after her death, to pay the rents, etc., to his wife for life. Upon the death of his wife, he gave the property in question to his grandchildren who might be living at the time of the death of the survivor of his wife and daughter. In the event of the failure of grandchildren, the testator directed Iris executors to sell the houses and lots, which were the subjects of the trust, and divide the proceeds equally between the children of his brothers Henry, William and Ira, “ living at that time; that is, •at the time of the death of the survivor of my said wife and daughter.” This last sentence quoted from the will, indicates a clear intention, emphasized by an id est, to limit the testator’s bounty, so far as his brothers’ children were concerned, to such of them as ■should be living at the time of the death of the survivor of his wife •and daughter. Considering that the testator personally knew his brothers’ children, as his nephews and nieces, and that they had a place in his affections and in his interest, it would not be at all remarkable if he did not allow his interest and affections to extend beyond them and to embrace their descendants, at that time probably not yet in being. At the point where grandnephews and grandnieces ■come in to claim a share in the affections of a greatuncle, the tie
In behalf of the grandnephews and grandnieces, it is argued that because the testator apparently expected that his widow would survive his daughter, he intended that the interest of the brothers’ children in his estate should vest at the time of the death of the widow, and not at the death of the survivor of the widow and daughter. But this is a construction which does violence to certain features of the will, which demand attention. The affliction of the daughter, which I infer was mental as well as physical, certainly made her welfare uppermost in his thought, and his chief concern. It was natural that he should anticipate the daughter’s death before that of her mother, but he was too sensible and far sighted a man to rest upon this probability so far as to neglect provision for a different issue in their lives. What he believed and expected, regarding the duration of his widow’s life was one thing, and what he intended in another and possible event, namely, the death of his* widow before that of his daughter, is quite another thing. This is apparent from his repeated use of the expression, “ or the survivor of them,” in connection with the estates in remainder, created by the will. But, assuming the testator’s intention to have been that the interest of his brothers’ children in his estate should vest at the death of the widow, whether that occurred before or after the death of his daughter, the ninth clause would have to be so construed as to defeat the manifest purpose exhibited throughout the entire instrument, to provide for both the wife and the daughter during their respective lives. For, while the trust expressed in that clause is, to quote from the will, for the “ use, comfort, maintenance and support of my said wife and my said daughter during their
Counsel for the grandnephews and grandnieces have urged, with much ability and learning, that the sense of the word “ children,” used in the will when reference is made to the children of the testator’s brothers, should be enlarged so as to include their descendants. This extension of the word “ children ” has been made in cases where the manifest intention of the testator required it to be done, in order to effectuate that intention; and, in some instances, to prevent disinheritance of testator’s lineal descendants. But this is not such a case. I conceive the intention of the testator was not to include, but to exclude, his brothers descendants beyond the degree of children. His duty to his brothers’ descendants, if he owed them any, and probably his interest in them, ceased at the point where they appeared as the grandchildren of his brothers. The rule is familiar that, in a will, the word “ children ” must be understood in its primary sense; and, as nothing appears here to indicate that the testator used r,he word in any other than its common signification, it must be held in this case not to include the grandchildren of the testator’s brothers. See Palmer v. Horn, 84 N. Y. 516. Whether an estate is vested or contingent is, primarily, of course, a question of the intent of the testator, as disclosed in the will. The intention of the testator, to my mind, was to constitute the children of his brothers, living at the time of the death of the survivor of his wife and
The principle which, to my apprehension, determines the true construction of the will in question is that “ where final division and distribution are directed to be made among a class, the benefits of the will must be confined to those persons who come within the appropriate category at the time when the distribution or division is directed to be made.” The title vests, and is contingent, upon survivorship. “ Futurity is annexed to the substance of the gift.” This principle has been enunciated in a line of authorities in this state, the latest of which are Matter of Baer, 147 N. Y. 348, 353, 354, and Matter of Allen, 151 id. 243.
To enlarge upon the subject would only be to quote, more fully than I have already done, from the language of the courts. I am constrained by the authority of Matter of Tienken, 131 N. Y. 391, 404, 408, to hold that no equitable conversion of the residuary estate took place.
Let a decision and a decree, in conformity with these views, be presented for settlement on notice to all parties.