2 N.Y. 505 | NY | 1864
The main question arising under this very illiterate will is,” whether the testator’s granddaughter, Almira Bloodgood, afterwards Terpening, whose executor now prosecutes this action, took any estate or interest under the will. In respect to the legacy of $40, it is given in plain and explicit terms to the testator’s daughter, Caty Bloodgood, the mother of Almira; one-half of it to lie
I am for affirming the judgment of the supreme court.
It is difficult, from the terms of the will; to ascertain the precise intention of the testator, in respect to the devise and bequest to his daughter Caty Bloodgood. But I am unable to see how, in any view of the case, this granddaughter of the testator can have acquired any vested right or interest, either in the legacy of $40, or in the lands devised or the proceeds thereof. Nothing is given to her in terms; and, from the entire scope and terms of the will, I am entirely satisfied that she was only indirectly and incidentally the object of the testator’s bounty. Both the bequest and the devise are directly to the testator’s daughter Caty Bloodgood. The terms are, “unto Caty Blood good the sum of $40, to be paid at the times aforesaid”— which were, one-half in one year and a-half, and the othei half in two years and a-half. It is then added, “and which I order my executors to dispose of as they shall see best for the heirs of said Caty Bloodgood.” It is plain, from other parts of the instrument, that it was not designed by the testator that this sum should be invested for the children of Caty, as in the case of the children of his deceased daughter Hannah Myers. In regard to that bequest, the directions to invest until the children should come to the age of twenty-one, are explicit. The one in question was t® be disposed of by the executors, when paid, in a manner .most beneficial, in their judgment, to the heirs or children of Caty Bloodgood. The legal right and title were nevertheless in Mrs. Bloodgood, as it was given to her, and to no one else, but, to be disbursed by the executors, in such
The construction given to the will in this case, by the referee and the supreme court, was correct, and the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, for the reasons given by Mr. Justice Bacon in that court.
All the judges concurring, judgment affirmed.