38 A.D. 403 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This action was brought by the trustees under the will of Lorillard Spencer, deceased, for a construction of certain parts of said will and for an accounting. The-only questions raised on this appeal are the rights of Sarah G. Spencer, the widow of the testator, under the trust created in her favor, and the claim of J. Frederic Kernochan, as administrator of James P. Kernoehan, a deceased trustee under the willj to commissions. •
The trust in favor of Mrs. Spencer was created -by the following •clause of the will: “Second. If my beloved wife, Sarah Griswold Spencer, survives me, I direct and empower my said executors.forthwith, upon my decease, to set apart a certain portion of my real ■estate which shall be amply -sufficient, in their judgment, to yield at all times a yearly net income of, twenty-five thousand ($25,000) dollars in gold, which said portion I hereby give and devise to my said executors, in trust, however, to let, lease, manage and improve and receive -the rents, issues and profits thereof, and to pay the net income thereof up to twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) per annum in gold, or its equivalent, to my said beloved wife during her life in equal quarterly payments against her receipt in duplicate,
It goes without saying that the provision made to a widow in lieu of dower is to be construed most favorably to her. Such a provision is not a mere gratuity, nor only dependent on moral claims for its support. It is given for a valid consideration, the release of dower. In the present case, too, it is apparent that the dominant. intention of the testator was that the widow should receive $25,000. in gold annually. Therefore, the court, to carry out the intention of the testator and the rule of law, should construe this provision of the will beneficially to the widow so far as possible; But while we may resolve every doubtful question or ambiguous expression in favor of the. widow, there is a limit beyond which
The determination of the other question, as to the right or duty of the trustees to retain the surplus of good years to guard against a deficiency in the income of bad years, is involved in more doubt. The direction .of. the will is not to pay the annual rents and profits of each year up to the sum of $25,000 to the widow, but to pay her the net income up to $25,000 a year during her life, payment to he made quarterly. The intent of the testator was that during her life
The facts relating to the claim of the late Mr. Kernochan for commissions are briefly these: Annually he, with his associates, the other trustees, rendered to the beneficiaries an account of the incomes of their respective trusts for the year, and paid over to them the whole net income as it appeared by those accounts. The learned referee allowed the estate of Mr. Kernochan one-half commissions •on the personalty included in the corpus of the trusts, but denied to him commissions on the annual income received and paid over except •during the portion of the year in which Mr. Kernochan died. He held that the deceased trustee, by failing to retain his commissions and by paying over the whole- income to his cest/ui que trust, had waived all claims to commissions on that income. The learned
(Hancox v. Meeker, 95 N. Y. 528.)
A further claim is made by the counsel for the deceased trustee that he is entitled to full commissions on some $60,000 of personalty ■ which was applied to the improvement of the real estate in the trust. He concedes the general rule that a mere change in the investment of the corpus of the trust estate is not a paying out so as to entitle the trustee to commission on such investment. ' He contends, however ^ that a different rule applies here, because the personalty has been applied to the improvement of the real estate. He argues
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs to all parties to be paid out of the estate.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to all parties payable out of the estate.