62 N.J. Eq. 532 | New York Court of Chancery | 1901
Under the will of Charles S. Macknet, who died in 1872, his executors held in trust for testator’s widow, during her life, a house and lot, No. 38 East Kinney street, Newark, and certain specified bonds and stocks, amounting, at par value, to about ten thousand dollars. The widow died on February 27th, 1900, and questions are now raised as to the parties entitled to this real and personal estate after her death. As to the real estate, the third, item of the will devises and bequeaths this house and lot to his executors in trust, substantially as follows—first, for the use of his wife during her natural life, or her widowhood, and, after his wife’s decease or marriage, to his daughter Hattie for life, and, at her death, to convey to her children, or, if desirable for their interest, to sell and divide the proceeds of sale. This item of the will then directs: '
“But if the said Hattie shall die without issue her surviving, then I direct my executors to sell the said house and lot and distribute the proceeds thereof among my heirs, according to the laws of the State of New Jersey.”
The heirs-at-law of the testator, at the time of his death, were his son, Theodore, and his daughters, Caroline and Hattie. Caroline (now Mrs. Woolworth) is one of the defendants, but Theodore died during the lifetime of his mother, and his daughter, Eliza (now Mrs. Dorsett), one of the defendants, is the sole survivor of his stock. Mrs. Woolworth and Mrs. Dorsett claim that the “heirs” of the testator who are to take the proceeds of -the sale of the lands directed to be made at the widow’s death are the heirs of the testator who were living at the time of the widow’s death, and that, as the two heirs living at this period, they are entitled to the whole proceeds of sale. The administrator cum testamento annexo of the widow, on behalf of her residuary devisees and legatees, claims, on the other hand, that the heirs of the testator are to be determined at the death of the testator, and that Hattie was entitled, under the will, to one-third, as one of these heirs, and her assigns are entitled to one-third of the proceeds of the sale, when made. As the surviving executor has not yet sold the house and lot, it would be premature to decide upon the disposition of the proceeds of sale, and the executor is not entitled to the direction of the court upon this disposition until the proceeds of sale are on hand ready to distribute, and the persons then entitled to, or claiming, the fund are in court.
The personal estate involved is ready for distribution, and as to this the executor is entitled to directions. As to the personal estate the question arises under the fifth item of the will, in which the primary bequests and the limitation over are made in a somewhat different form. This fifth item bequeaths to the executors certain bonds and stocks, specified (about ten thousand dollars par value), in trust—first, to collect the interests, &c., and therefrom pay expenses of maintenances, taxes, &e., of the house of which the use was given to his wife and daughter Hattie (being the house mentioned in the third item), and second, to
“and after her death to set off the said bonds and stocks to my daughter Hattie, or her heirs. If the said Hattie shall die without issue her surviving, or children of such issue, then said bonds and stocks shall revert to my estate and be distributed among my heirs, in the manner provided by the laws of New Jersey respecting intestate estates.”
As to these stocks and bonds the now living heirs of the testator, Mrs. Woolworth and Mrs. Dorset!, claim the entire amount, upon the same grounds as their claim to the entire proceeds of sale under the third item is based.
It is claimed, on the other hand, by the assignees of Hattie’s interest, that the daughter Hattie, under this bequest, upon the death of the testator, became entitled to an absolute vested estate in the fund, subject only to the life interest of her mother, and that the clause directing payment over on her death without issue surviving, referred only to her death in the lifetime of the testator. Having survived the testator, it is claimed that she was entitled to the absolute estate, and that the bequest to testator’s heirs, being substitutionary only, cannot take effect. It is, moreover, insisted that this construction of the character of the bequest was settled by a decree made on a bill filed by the executors during Hattie’s lifetime, and to which she was a party. Macknet v. Macknet's Heirs, 9 C. E. Gr. 277 (Chancellor Runyon, 1873). In this case the question was as to the effect of the widow’s refusal to accept the provisions of the will, in lieu of dower, on the different bequests and devises of the will. But the question now raised as to the nature and effect of the bequest made on the death of Hattie without issue, during the lifetime of the mother, was not directly involved or expressly considered in the case, neither could it have been conclusively determined in advance and in the absence of the parties or claimants necessary to determine the question. Ashhurst v. Lippincolt, 11 Dick. Ch. Rep. 840, 842 (Errors and Appeals, 1898). Nor, on examining the decree made in reference to her interest in the bonds and stocks, does it appear to determine the point now involved. By the decree the executors were not directed to pay over the
This is, -in my judgment, the plain and natural construction of the effect of this bequest to Hattie or her heirs of the principal of the fund after the death of her mother. If this be the true construction of this bequest to the heirs of Hattie, which is clearly substitutionary, there would seem to be no basis for the claim that the bequest made by the subsequent independent clause, “on the death of Hattie without issue her surviving,” is a second substitutionary clause, following a primary gift to both Hattie and her heirs, in which the period for the substitution to take effect was limited to the death of the testator. The bequest on failure'of issue was not a substitution, but was rather a limitation over, which took effect on the death of Hattie without issue surviving. Such limitation over was valid, and took effect whether Hattie’s interest was vested on testator’s death or contingent on her surviving her mother, for, if vested, it was subject to be divested by a valid limitation over on a definite failure of issue. Rowe v. White, 1 C. E. Gr. 411 (Chancellor Green, 1863); Neilson v. Bishop, 18 Stew. Eq. 473, 476 (Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet, 1889). A conclusion that Hattie’s estate was vested on her father’s death does not therefore determine the question now at issue, which relates to the persons taking under the limitation over. Hattie not being, in my judgment, entitled, as surviving her father, to
Another argument strenuously urged for the restriction of the class of heirs to those of testator’s heirs living at the widow’s death, or time of distribution, is that the gift over to the heirs was contingent and not vested, and that, until the widow’s death, there was a contingency as to the heirs who were to take^ and therefore only the heirs who were then living could take under the limitation. The opinions of the New York court of appeals in several cases are cited as supporting this claim. Delaney v. McCormack, supra; Matter of Crane, 164 N. Y. 71, 74 (1900). But, in my judgment, the assumption that there is, in such cases, a contingency as to the persons who are to take, begs the very question to be solved. The contingency, as fixed in express words by the will in this case, was a contingency dependent only upon an event, viz., the death of Hattie without issue. The question as to the persons to whom the limitation over of the principal was made by the testator, on the happening of that contingent event, and whether there was any contingency or uncertainty as to these persons, or any of them, depends upon the manner in which the testator had described or designated the persons who are to take upon the contingency happening. If this designation of the persons to take under the limitation is made nominatim, then there is no contingency as to the persons to take, and the contingency being only as to the event or time of enjoyment, the interest under the limitation over is vested from the testator’s
I conclude that the persons who were to take this personal estate as “heirs” of the testator were those who answered the description of his next of kin at his death, being his son, Theodore, and his daughters, Caroline and Hattie, and that the fund is to be distributed equally in three shares among these persons, or those who have succeeded to their respective rights in personal estate.