41 N.Y.S. 662 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
This suit was instituted by a trustee of a testamentary trust, having in his possession securities of considerable value, constituting a part of the trust estate. The purpose for which the trust was primarily established and created having been accomplished, its capital, which consists of personal property only, is in condition to be distributed to or among those who may be entitled thereto, freed from the trust. Various defendants having advanced adverse claims to the funds or securities in his hands, the plaintiff filed his bill, praying that judicial construction be given to the will of the testator, and that the rights of the claimants of the fund represented by the securities referred to be settled and determined by the court. The controversy, as it comes before us, is between those parties, cross.service of their answershaving been duly made, as is required in such cases. The contest arises under a foreign will, and is to be disposed of by the ascertainment and application of rules of foreign law. There are no claims of creditors involved in any way. Under such circumstances the reasonable and proper course to pursue would appear to be to remit the whole matter of the construction of the will and the distribution of the trust estate to the courts of the country having jurisdiction, of the subject-matter and of the administration of the estate, and where that estate must be finally settled and accounted for (Parsons v. Lyman, 20 N. Y. 104; Despard v. Churchill, 53 id. 198); but in this case the property in the plaintiff’s hands is claimed by residents of the State of New York, who. assert title thereto under the will of the testator, and it is urged that the property being within this jurisdiction, and all the parties who claim as distributees being before the court, the resident claimants should not be subjected to the expense, delay and uncertainty of judicial proceedings in a foreign land, but that their rights, if any exist, should be protected and enforced in this action. ' Recognizing
The case comes up on appeal from a judgment entered at Special Term, by which construction was given to certain clauses of the w-ill-of James Shaw Taylor, a British subject and a resident of England, who died in that country in 1862. The will was duly admitted to probate by the court Imdng jurisdiction in England, but it was never offered for probate in the State of New York. The testator appointed George W. Taylor, Abel H. Shaw and another person, executors of his will and trustees of the trusts therein created. George W. Taylor and Shaw duly qualified and received grant of probate or letters testamentary. The third person never qualified. SliaAV died in 1866, and George W. Taylor in 1879. They had authority by the will of their testator, James Shaw Taylor, to appoint trustees to succeed them. Shaw did not exercise that poAver, and George W. Taylor continued as sole trustee until his death. He left a aaüII and appointed the present plaintiff, Simonson, and J ohn T. Lord, executors thereof. This will was duly proven both in New York and in England. Lord qualified as executor in England and Simonson in New York. By a provision of this will, but not otherwise, the trusts under the will of James Shaw Taylor devolved upon Simonson and Lord as trustees. The securities now in the plaintiff’s possession were situated in New York, and Mr. Lord, on his own petition and under authority of a decree of this court, Avas discharged from the trust and the securities Avere thereafter- left in the sole possession and management of Mr.’ Simonson. Sometime in 1883, the High Court of Justice in England, in the Chancery Division, upon application duly made, appointed William S. Barton, Robert Heap and Edward Atkinson, trustees of the real and personal estate of James Shaw Taylor, in. substitution for the original trustees named in the will of that gentleman. Barton and Heap died in 1891; Atkinson, having power to do so, associated with himself in the trust, Robert J. Fletcher and Walter Hennop, and they are now the trustees of the estate in England, and were acting as such in February, 1892, the date at which the express trust virtually expired.
The will of James Shaw Taylor was executed in the lifetime of' his wife and in anticipation of other children being born to him. It was drawn with great care and particularity., and provided for almost every conceivable contingency, except the one that occurred, an omission which, from the general structure of the instrument and the comprehensiveness of its provisions, seems to have been not accidental or inadvertent. After granting annuities to certain persons and making provision for his wife, he gave a legacy of £2,000-sterling to his daughter “ if and when she shall attain the age of twenty-one years or previously marry.” That is the only direct gift in terms the testator made to his daughter. He devised and bequeathed all his real and personal estate to his executors in trust,, to convert the same into money, and (among other things) to invest £2,000 and hold the same in trust “ during the life of my sister Lavinia Waller, the wife of Alfred Waller of the city of New York,” and to “ pay the interest and annual income thereof and of the investments for the time being representing the same unto the said Lavinia Waller,” etc., and from and after her decease to hold “ the samé legacy and the investments-for the time being representing the same and the interest and income thereof in trust for all the children or any the child of my said sister, who, being sons or a son, shall attain the age of twenty-one years; or, being daughters or a daughter, shall attain that age or marry, and, if more than one, unequal shares.”
Concerning his estate not otherwise disposed of, the testator left
Amelia Hannah Taylor having married and died without issue, and no provision having been made by the will of her father for that contingency, the respective defendants contended in the court, below and now claim as follows, viz.:
1. Joseph B. Atkinson, the husband of the daughter of the testator, James Shaw. Taylor, and the sole residuary legatee under her will, claims to be entitled to all the personal property now in the hands of the plaintiff, on the ground that the trust created for the: benefit of the children of James Shaw Taylor vested, on his death, an absolute interest in the whole residuary estate in his daughter, qualified during her life to the receipt of the income only and subject to be defeated by the birth of children, and that upon her death without issue her estate or interest became indefeasible and passed to her husband by the terms of her will or under the provisions of the law of England, or, failing that contention, that if no absolute estate vested in the testator’s daughter and she took only a life interest in the residuary estate, then intestacy was brought about and that the-residuary estate, being personalty (the realty having been equitably converted), it passed to his next of kin, being such at 'the time of his death, viz., his daughter, through whose will, or by virtue of marital relations with whom, her husband would now take.
2. The defendants standing in the place of Mary Lord claim that the testator limited the'interest of his daughter to One for life;: that there is intestacy as to that residuary portion after her death,, and that it now belongs to those who were the next of kin of the-testator to be ascertained as of that time.
3. The children of Mrs. Waller claim that the testator’s daughter had only a life interest and that on her death without issue they took under the will by virtue of that provision which made a contingent disposition of the residuary estate similar to that relating to-the £2,000 legacy to their mother.
The learned justice at the Special Term construed the will in accordance with the contention of the descendants'of Mary Lord,.' and in his decree adjudged that the entire legal"title to the residu
We are not at difference with the court below in the conclusions at which it arrived concerning the first branch of the- claim of the defendant Joseph B. Atkinson, and for the purposes of .the decision of this appeal shall hold that his wife did not take under the will a vested interest in the principal; of the residuary .estate held in trust by the trustees. Clearly it is the law of England that, where there Is an absolute- gift out of which specific interests are subsequently created and declared, on - the failure of those specific or particular interests the absolute gift prevails. (Whittell v. Dudlin, 2 J. & W. 279; Mayer v. Townsend, 3 Beav. 443 ; Winckworth v. Winckworth, 8 id. 576 ; Gerrard v. Butler, 20 id. 541; Stephens v. Gadsden, Id. 463; Carver v. Bowles, 2 Russ. & M. 304; Cooke v. Cooke, L. R. [38 Ch. Div.] 202.) But in those and in other cases declaratory of the rule and illustrating its application there was an absolute gift in- the- first instance, or one positively indicated in unmistakable' terms. Where the gift is to be- found only in the limitations and'not in- words capable, standing alone and dissevered from a qualify lug- context, of constituting a. complete- gift-, there is. not a vested interest in the principal as a gift, (Lassence v. Tierney.,. 1 MacN. & G. 551; Gompertz v. Gompertz, 2 Phill. 107; Savage v. Tyers, L. R. [7 Ch. App.] 356;). The rule is stated by Lord- Cotten-ham thus-: “ If a testator, leave alegacy absolutely as regards, his estate,, but restricts; the inode of . the legatee’s en joyment of it to secure- cer* ,-tain Objects for -the benefit off the legatee; upon- failure of such; -objects the. absolute,gift prevails, but, if- there be no .absolute, gift, m
The question here is purely one of the intention of the testator, James Shaw Taylor. Did he intend an absolute gift to his daughter of the whole- residuary estate, to be cut down by subsequently carved out contingent interests and defeasances ; failing which the integrity of the original gift was to be preserved and the whole residuary estate to be at the disposal of the daughter as her absolute propr' erty? We are speaking now of the intention as gathered from the will and its dispository provisions and cannot search elsewhere for it. We have looked in vain through this instrument for satisfactory evidence of such an intention as that ascribed to the testator by his daughter’s husband. If it is to be found, it is not in mere words of trust for the benefit of certain cestuis que trust. The description of beneficiaries is not the whole of the gift. By the terms of the trust the benefit is expressly confined to’ income, and its bestowal can scarcely be regarded as an absolute gift of that out of which the only benefit given is to arise. It is not contained in the sentence of the trust declaring that trust for the testator’s child or children, but it would arise if at all by force of the phrase “ portion or fortune * * * of my said..daughter ” applied to the. trust estate. But these word's may well be merely those of distinguishing reference and not of
We have next to consider the claim of the defendants, the children of Mrs. Waller. Concurring. with the justice at Special Term in the view that Mrs. Atkinson took only a life interest, we also agree with him in his conclusion that the Waller children do not take under the will the residuary estate they claim. The gift over to Mrs.. Waller and her issue was to become operative in the event of the testator’s daughter not attaining the age of twenty-one years ór not marrying. There is no authority in the court to enlarge or broaden the terms of the will respecting this bequest of a remainder. The argument on behalf of the Waller children is that as the provision of the will now under consideration declares in substance that if the testator’s daughter should die before attaining full age of marrying, all the residue of his estate should go to Mrs. Waller or her" children; that “ the attainment of majority or marriage of Amelia was the one - sole thing which at that time .stood between the Waller children and this inheritance; ” that “ the only influence' which that majority or marriage could have upon-
The whole argument rests on supposition, principally that the testator intended to die fully testate and to benefit the Waller children next to his daughter. Of course intestacy will not be adjudged if the contrary can by any reasonable theory be determined, and the law favors vesting, but we are led by this argument into the very cloud region of speculation. It is inferable from the whole will that the testator did intend to die intestate as to his residuary estate in default of issue of his daughter and to leave its distribution to the law of his country. His will was drawn with great precision, evidently by an experienced and able draftsman, who did not servilely follow precedents from books of forms, but who comprehended and fully expressed what was contained in his instructions for the will, and there seems to have been a clear purpose to omit all reference to a disposition over in the event of Amelia marrying and not having children. A provision of that character would be about the first thing to suggest itself to an experienced and instructed lawyer, and we cannot import into this will, on a mere hypothetical intention, one that would give this large property to these particular claimants.
But with respect' to the judgment of the court below declaring that the residuary estate passed to the next of kin of James Shaw Taylor, to be ascertained as of the time of the death of Mrs. Amelia Hannah Atkinson, and awarding the' fund in the plaintiff’s hands to the descendants of Mary Lord and to the Waller children, the learned judge was led into an error by following what was held in Savage v. Burnham (17 N. Y. 563), but which is entirely at variance with the rule adopted and announced by the English courts and text writers. That case is a leading authority often fol-. lowed in our courts on other questions involved in it, but the point now under consideration was there altogether a subordinate one. It came up incidentally, as to a share of an estate held, in trust for the benefit of the testator’s son Thomas, which share lapsed by reason of the death of Thomas before the period of vesting and passed
The question respecting the time at which the next of kin is to be ascertained seems to have arisen in the English courts more particularly in cases in which, on the failure of particular devises or bequests, gifts over have been made specifically by the testator to the next of kin, and, as stated by Malins, V. C., in In re Morley's Trusts (25 Wkly. Rep. 825), the general rule is that the class is ascer
The judgment of the court below must be reversed and judgment entered in accordance with this opinion, and providing for an accounting by the plaintiff to be had before the referee named in the decree of the Special Term, the plaintiff to be allowed the compensation to which he is entitled by law and the costs and expenses of this action.
Van Brunt, P. J., Williams, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and judgment ordered in accordance with opinion.