46 N.Y.S. 18 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The plaintiff, a judgment creditor of the defendant Post, alleging-that she has a surplus income, seeks to charge it with the payment of three judgments against her, amounting in the aggregate to-$610, executions upon which have been returned unsatisfied. The income of the defendant is a specific annuity from a trust fund-created by the will of her.father, James Brady, deceased, of date August 4, 1879, Avhereby he gave the residue of his estate to the other defendants, William H. Hazzard, William Bradley and John B. De Cue, executors and trustees, to receive the rents, issues and profits thereof, and, from the income, to pay to his daughter, the defendant, $10,000 per annum in quarterly payments during her life, and the further sum not exceeding $2,000 annually, to pay house rent.
She married in 1876, and with her husband continued to live with her father until two or three years prior to his death. He died in
It appears that the defendant Post has two sons whose ages, at the time of the trial, were upwards of seventeen and nineteen years; that she is their guardian, and that the income of each of them is $3,000 annually for their support, thus making the aggregate annual income of her and her sons, $18,000. It is apparent that there may he some difficulty, in making proof of facts which show the amount requisite to the suitable support and maintenance of a family. This is dependent upon the manner of living and the reasonable habits of its members, in view of their station in life. And, therefore, it is competent, as hearing upon the inquiry, to prove the manner of maintenance and living of the recipient of an income of a trust fund previously, as well as subsequently, to the time of becoming the beneficiary, On the part of the plaintiff, one of the executors and trustees of the will, called as a witness,, testified that since 1849 he had been, and was, the head of a family; .that he had known the testator many years, going back to a time prior to his marriage; that he had been gt his house frequently, had seen the style in which it was supported, and the manner in which things were sustained; that “ Mr. Brady was a fair, plain, ordinary liver; a man whom I never knew to go to any parties or splurges — anything of that kind; he lived along quietly, nicely and neatly; ” that the witness
Another witness called by the plaintiff testified substantially to the same effect, subject to a like exception. The testimony of those witnesses constituted the only evidence directly on the subject as to the sum requisite to the maintenance of the family of her father of which she, with her husband and children, had been a member, up to within three years preceding his death. In support of his contention that such exceptions were well taken, the defendant’s counsel relies mainly upon Tolles v. Wood (99 N. Y. 616, more fully reported in 16 Abb. N. C. 1). There, as here, a creditor of the beneficiary of the income of a trust fund sought to obtain an adjudication that there was a surplus available for application upon his judgment. In that case a witness, who was a single gentleman, living in New York, a member of the-clubs and social circle to which the defendant belonged, and acquainted with him and his manner of living, was asked by the-defendant’s counsel the question: “ What in your judgment would be a proper sum for the proper support and maintenance of Mr. Wilmer S. Wood (defendant), in the manner and life in which he has been in the habit of living, and associating with the friends whom he does associate with, so far as you know in your judgment ? ” The view of Chief Judge Huger was -that the answer was properly excluded because the evidence called for was not as to a fact, but related to a mere matter of opinion, and was also cumulative, and that the extent to which such evidence should be allowed is held to be in the discretion of the'trial court, with which the appellate tribunal will not interfere unless there is a clear abuse of the discretion by the exclusion of the evidence. And after
There was no error in the reception of the evidence. The action is one in equity, where the rigid rules of the admissibility of evidence applicable to actions at law do not, with the same effect, apply upon review.
And the omission of the defendant to furnish any evidence at her command on the subject may properly have had some significance in the view of the trial court in giving to the evidence introduced by the plaintiff the effect permitted, although not required by it in support of the conclusion reached by that court. It does not. appear whether or not the husband of the defendant has, since his marriage, been engaged in any business, or whether he has to any extent discharged his obligation arising from that relation to support his family. That question, therefore, has no consideration. It, however, does appear that the two children have allowed to them from the estate of their grandfather, deceased,, a supporting fund annually of $3,000 each, and that when at home a charge for the , board of each of them is made upon such fund by the defendant of $120
We think the conclusion was permitted from the evidence that the annual income of the defendant furnished, a surplus properly applicable to the payment of the plaintiffs judgments against her. The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.