53 N.Y.S. 860 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1898
This is an action for the construction of a will.
- By the second and third clause!? of the will the testator gave to Ms daughter Agnes Hawes a farm, and all the personal" property on the farm, for her use during her natural, life. And by the fourth
“ 5th. I give, devise and bequeath the rest and residue of all my property, both real and personal and wherever situated to Frank T. Staples in trust for my grandchildren, Mary Hawes, David Henry Hawes and Isaac Hawes, my adopted son Jesse Wakeman, and my daughter Agnes Hawes, to be divided and distributed ¡among them, share and share alike, on December 1, 1910.
“ 6th. I direct my said trustee to pay the income of said trust property to said David Henry Hawes, Mary Hawes, Isaac Hawes, Jesse Wakeman and Agnes Hawes semi-annually.
“ 7th. I appoint James Staples executor of this my last will.”
The testator lived and'died in the state of Connecticut, and owned certain real property in the state of Hew York, which was part of the residuary estate, and disposed of in'the fifth and sixth; clauses of the will. This action is to determine the effect of those clauses under the laws of this state.
The defendant Agnes Hawes is the only heir-at-law of the. itesr tator. The defendants Mary Hawes, David Henry Hawes and Isaac Hawes are grandchildren of the testator, and children of the . defendant Agnes Hawes. They are'all inf ants. Jesse Wakeman, the other defendant, although spoken of as an adopted son, was, in reality, .never adopted by the testator.
The contention is made on behalf of some óf the defendants, that the fifth and sixth clauses of the will are to be read and'construed separately, and thus construed, no trusts are attempted to be created by the testator. But it seems to me that such a construction would be at variance with all established rules, and, in fact, with the ordinary interpretation of language. A primary rule of construction is that the intention of the testator is to be gathered, by reading the whole of the will, .and that separate and isolated portions are not to be considered by themselves, if the whole instrument would indicate,' or lead to a different construction, but that full effect is to be given to the whole of the will. In order to constitute a trust, there should be a trustee, an estate and a beneficiary, and all three of these elements exist in the case under consideration. The trastee is not the executor of the will, and is named in this connection only as trustee. An estate, separate and distinct from that of the executor, is carved out of the estate, and vested in the trustee, to be held by .him until such, time as the estate is to be divided. ■ So it must be held that this contention is not well founded, but that by the fifth
Some considerable stress is laid upon the case of Warner v. Durant, 76 N. Y. 133, where there was a gift to- executors of specified personal property to be at once severed from the bulk of the testator’s estate for the benefit of the legatee to be paid to him at the end of five years; and in the meantime interest thereon at the rate of 7 per cent, to be paid to him. The rule in that case was that applicable to personal property only. But there the gift was severed from the rest of the estate, and some consideration was given to that’by the court; but I do' not find this case1 an authority for the
Another contention remains to be disposed of, viz., that the defendant Agnes Hawes, having accepted some of the benefits under the will, viz¿, her life estate in the farm, the personal property situated upon the farm, and a portion of the income from the estate, has elected to accept the conditions of the will, and cannot dispute the fifth and sixth clauses. I understand the rule governing election to he controlled primarily by the consideration that it would be inequitable and unjust to permit a party to accept a benefit given while repudiating the conditions upon which'it , was given, and it seems to me that this case does not present a case of añ election. The testator gave to Agnes Hawes ajife estate in the farm first ■spoken of, with the remainder to her children. By accepting this Agnes Hawes in no way prejudiced the rights of anyone. But for the willj she would have been entitled to the entire- fee of the property in question and the ownership of the personal property, she being the only heir-at-law. So- that by permitting that clause to stand, instead of receiving a benefit, it has been to her* disadvantage. But it is not necessary to place the decision upon that ground, for. the rule requires only that the devisee or legatee shall not, by any act of his, defeat the testator’s intent as expressed in a Valid instrument, if it is within the power of the donee to give it full effect.
- And in those eases, where the. heir has been put to- an election, it has been within the power of the heir to carry out the intention of the testator; but not so in the case under consideration. The testator has violated a plain provision of the statute, one which is founded not for the protection of private rights, for they may be controlled by the individual himself, but as the definition of a line of public policy. It cannot be waived by an individual, nor can acts in derogation of the statute be condoned by an individual; and whenever and wherever arising, effect must be given to the statute. So that even had Agnes Hawes desired, it was not within her power to give full effect to the intent of the testator by carrying out the trust. ' The trustee, the plaintiff in this action, is entitled to have his status defined, and he has brought this action for that purpose.
Some very broad rules have been laid down in cases where the rule of equity above stated has been enforced, viz., that it would be inequitable; but there can be had in this case no inequitable result in holding that Agnes Hawejs was entitled to take the property, if she receives no greater benefit than she would have received had the testator not made the devise and bequest to her; and her acceptance of it in no way prejudices the, right of any defendant, she simply taking a limited estate in what otherwise would have been hers absolutely. So that the rule laid down in Havens v. Sackett, 15 N. Y. 365, is applicable, viz.: The devisee or legatee is at liberty to take everything, he is entitled to, both under the will and outside of it, unless it is clearly the intention of the testator that one gift is made upon the condition that hei should not claim other rights to which he may be entitled. But as we. have seen, this cannot be construed so as to require the heir to acquiesce in an illegal disposition of property, or require1 him to surrender the property which would come by reason of the illegal provision; for to do this would be to make a new disposition of the property, not understood by the testator, and not carrying out his intention.- But the presumption being that the testator intended, in case of an illegal devise the statute would control, as soon as it is determined that the statute is illegal, the presumption isi that the testator intended that the heir should receive thq full benefit of it. It is the law which disappoints the gift and not the heir, and the heir is entitled to the benefit which the law confers.
It follows that Agnes Hawes was not bound to elect, nor is she estopped from claiming the invalidity of the fifth and sixth clauses of the will.
And the deductions made are: That the trust attempted to be created was invalid; that by the provisions of the will, the estate was not vested in the beneficiaries, and that the power of alienation was illegally suspended.
That these features, the creation of the trust and the vesting of the -estate in the trustee until 1910, were an indispensable part of the scheme of the testator in the disposition of his property, and upon its failure the disposition attempted fell. And hence, that there was no valid disposition of the property by the will, under the fifth and sixth clauses thereof.
Judgment may be submitted accordingly.