72 N.J. Eq. 626 | New York Court of Chancery | 1907
The bill in this case seeks an injunction restraining the defendant from prosecuting her action at law for the recovery of the accrued portion of a bequest which appears in the last will and testament of her husband, in the following words:
“I hereby instruct, authorize and empower my executor, hereinafter named, as soon as it is convenient after my decease, to invest a sufficient sum or sums of money of my estate, with good and sufficient security, approved by the orphans court of the county in which this will is probated, which will bear twelve hundred ($1,200) dollars interest annually; and this sum of twelve hundred ($1,200) dollars I give and bequeath to my wife, Arabella Wheaton, during her natural life, and if she again does not marry, which sum of twelve hundred ($1,200) dollars is to be paid annually to my said wife, by my executor, in payments quarterly of three hundred ($300) dollars each, and upon her decease, or upon her again marrying, or upon my decease, if I should survive my said wife, I give and bequeath the sum or sums of money which my executor is authorized to invest for the use of my wife to my daughter, May Steelman, if she be living.”
After the death of the testator this defendant filed a caveat against the probate of the will, and in proceedings had thereon in the orphans court the will was admitted to probate. From this decree she appealed to the prerogative court and to the court of errors and appeals, the result in each of the appellate courts being an affirmance of the decree of the orphans court. During
The defendant now moves to strike from the files the bill of complaint, alleging as a reason therefor a want of equity. Whether this motion should be allowed depends upon the interpretation to be given the bequeathing clause. The defendant insists that a proper construction of the will, as set up in the bill, does not warrant the granting of an injunctive order, and therefore the bill should be dismissed, this motion being, under our practice, a substitute for a demurrer. The complainant resists the motion on several grounds, the first being that, on a motion of this character, the notice should be as specific as is required in case of a demurrer, and that a notice to strike out, for want of equity, a bill filed by an executor for affirmative relief dependent upon the construction of the will under which he is acting, does not satisfy rule 209, which calls upon every demur-rant to distinctly specify the grounds of a demurrer. The retention of complainant’s bill depends upon the character of the bequest; if there is an annuity, the defendant has only received
The second ground urged by the coanplainant in resisting this application is that the legacy is aaot an annuity payable from the death of the testator, but is a gift of the ioaterest or incoane of a suan to be invested, making it an ordinary legacy, the income froan which begins to run in favor of the legatee, only after the expiration of the year following testator’s death, aaad as the adaniaiistrator pendente Hie has treated it as an aianuity and paid the defendant accordingly, she has received $1,200 more than she should, and ought not to be allowed to press her action at law until she has accounted therefor, or the coanplainant has received sufficient incoane, and returned it to the corpus of the estate, to liquidate the overpayanent.
Whether this beqraest is an annuity is the only question to be considered oar this branch of the case. In Booth v. Ammerman, 4 Bradf. Surr. 129, an annuity is well described as follows: “An annuity is a stated sum per annum, payable annually unless otherwise directed. It is aaot incoane or profits, nor indeterminate in amount, varying according to the incoane or profits,
In Craig v. Craig, 3 Barb. Ch. 76, the gift to a wife was :
“I also give to her an annuity of $1,600 per year, to be paid to her in semi-annual payments, the principal of such annuity to be invested in such manner as she may reasonably require.”
In construing this language the court held that the annuity for the widow began to accrue at the testator’s death.
In Merritt v. Merritt, 43 N. J. Eq. (16 Stew.) 11, the will ordered the executors to invest sufficient money to produce an annual income of $1,000 for testator’s son, to be paid in equal weekly payments. The amount invested proving insufficient, through changes in interest rates, to produce the required annual income, the deficiency was decreed to be paid by the residuary legatees, the court saying: “It was obviously the intention of the testator to provide and secure, out of his estate, an annuity of $1,000.”
In Welsh v. Brown, 43 N. J. Law (14 Vr.) 37, 43, Chief-Justice Depue said: “The distinction between an annuity pure and simple, which is to be paid at all events out of testator’s estate, at the expense of the residuary legatee, and the interest or income for life of a certain sum set apart by the testator for that purpose, and given over in gross to another after the death of the life tenant, has been quite uniformly adhered to,” citing with approval, from Baker v. Baker, 6 H. L. Cas. 623, the following portion of Lord Cranworth’s opinion: “In all these cases arising upon the construction of wills the real question is whether that which is given is given as an annuity or is given
Turning to the will under consideration, there is no gift of the interest of a capital sum which is to be set apart. It is a gift of a sum which is annually to be paid out of testator’s estate, and is not subject to any diminution resulting from a change in the rate of interest, the payment of taxes, or a failure from any reason of a particular fund to produce the amount.
The only case to which I have been referred as holding a contrary doctrine is that of Cogswell, Executor, v. Cogswell, 2 Edw. Ch. 231, but there the gift was to his executors in trust to set apart a sufficient sum to produce an annual income of $1,000,
“and from time to time, as the same shall become payable, to permit my wife to take such interest moneys, in the whole amounting to the annual interest of one thousand dollars.”
In interpreting this language the court held that “the gross sum to be set apart to produce the yearly income of one thousand dollars is considered in the light of a legacy, payable by law at the end of the year.” It will be observed that in this case the testator fixes the time of payment of the gift to be when the interest or income arising from the investment provided for “shall become payable,” and the court was of opinion that it was the plain meaning of the will that the widow was only entitled to such dividends as were declared after the expiration of the first year, and that as the gift depended upon the proceeds of an investment, to be made in stock, the executor might take one year for the purpose of making the investment, in analogy to the time allowed by law for paying legacies. I apprehend that in determining this cause Yice-Chancellor MeCoun was influenced by the fact that it was not considered an absolute gift of $1,000, to be paid in annual or at other fixed periods, but rather of interest moneys upon investments to be made, to be paid to the wife as the income from such investments became payable, for the authority upon which he relied in reaching his determina
“But if the disposition be of a sum of money, and the interest of it is given as an annuity to B for life, the first payment will not accrue before the expiration of the second year after the death of the testator,”
and the learned author undoubtedly means that the disposition shall be of a fixed sum upon which the interest is given, and not of a fixed amount to be paid without regard to the amount of the fund required to produce it. If the case just referred to is an authority sustaining a rule that the gift of a fixed sum, to be paid annually, is an ordinary legacy and not an annuity, because the executor is to invest a sufficient portion of the estate to provide for the annuity, without any direction as to the amount of the investment, then it is contrary to the weight of authority on this subject.
It was insisted on the argument that as the will directed the executor to invest a sufficient sum to raise the $1,200 annually, the executor was not required to make the investment until the expiration of one year from testator’s death. The answer to this contention is that the executor is only authorized to do what the law requires and permits him to do. He is alwa3rs justified in setting apart immediately a fund sufficient to indemnify him against the payment of the annuity.
A further contention of the complainant is that, granting the bequest to be an annuity, nevertheless the defendant was improperly paid all that she received, because her opposition to the probate of the will was “unwarranted, dilatory and vexatious,” and that by reason of such conduct the executor was prevented from making the investments required to provide the annuity. I am unable to discover any equitable reason for refusing to the defendant what she is entitled to under the will simply because she contested its probate to an unsuccessful issue. The estate was in the hands of an officer appointed by the court. The pre
Whether the administrator pendente Hie was justified in paying legacies is a question which cannot be determined in this suit. That is a matter of administration. The funds were placed in his hands by the orphans court to be administered by him as the law directs, and any improper misapplication of the funds committed to his charge must be adjusted in the settlement of his accounts in that court. If this defendant was entitled to the money it would have to be paid to her by the present executor, and the fact that it may have been paid to her by the administrator pendente lite works no injury to the parties interested therein which calls upon a court of equity to interfere, for such an administrator, even if he pays a legacy which the character of his appointment does not authorize him to do, will nevertheless be allowed such payment in his accounting, provided the party who received it was entitled to it, and the estate able and liable to make the same after all prior charges are provided for.
The result which I have reached is that the bill of complaint presents no equity as against this defendant, and the motion should prevail.