127 Misc. 647 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1926
On the 14th day of May, 1899, Asa W. S. Rix and Julia O’Brien were mariied in the city of Saratoga Springs. At the time of the marriage Mr. Rix was engaged in conducting a retail store for the sale of “ Yankee Notions.” Then, and for many years prior thereto, Mrs. Rix was a clerk in this store and she continued as clerk and manager after the marriage and until the death of her husband. She never received any salary for her services after marriage
In November, 1919, Mr. Rix died, leaving surviving his wife, and the plaintiffs in this action, who are his heirs at law and next of kin. He left a will which was probated in the Surrogate’s Court of Saratoga county on the 10th day of January, 1920, in which he named his widow as executrix. She qualified as such and letters testamentary thereon were issued to her and she entered upon the performance of her duties and continued to so act until her death which occurred on the 14th of December, 1925. She took possession of the personal property of her husband as executrix ' of his will. She never accounted and was never discharged. By the provisions of his will Mr. Rix made some general and specific legacies and disposed of his residuary estate in these words: “ All the rest, residue and remainder of my property and estate, both real and personal, and every name and nature, I give, devise and bequeath unto my beloved wife, Julia Rix, to be her absolute property, provided, however, that upon the death or remarriage of my said wife, whatever of property or estate she may have received from me and which shall remain at that time undisposed of, I give, devise and bequeath unto my heirs-at-law and next-of-kin, in shares as provided by the laws of descent and statutes of distribution of the State of New York.”
At the time of his death the testator owned certain real estate, also certain personal property consisting of merchandise and store fixtures, and in addition thereto certain other securities numbered consecutively from 1 to 29, inclusive, and described in Schedule C attached to the complaint. Subsequently to her appointment as such executrix, thé widow made an inventory of the husband’s estate. She continued the business formerly conducted by her
The securities numbered 11 to 19, inclusive, and 21 to 29, inclusive, in Schedule C, were found among the papers of Mrs. Bix after her death. A certificate, No. 46, for 100 shares of Colorado and Southern Bailway Company, first preferred stock, and listed as No. 20 in Schedule C, was left by Mr. Bix, was registered in his name and was never transferred, but was continued by his executrix in his name to the time of her death and the dividends thereon were paid to and received and receipted for by her as such executrix. This certificate was also found among her papers. With regard to securities numbered 1 to 10, inclusive, in the schedule referred to, consisting of Liberty bonds and five stock certificates, the same were administered by the executrix as the property of her husband’s estate. The certificates of stock were registered in his name until the 13th of November, 1925, and were never transferred prior to that date, and the interest and dividends thereon were paid to and received and receipted for by the widow as executrix. The income therefrom was, during her fife, reported by her for Federal "and State income tax purposes as the property of her husband’s estate separate from and in addition to the deduction in respect to her personal income and her separate property.
It is claimed by the defense that Mrs. Bix, in her lifetime, made a valid and completed gift of the securities 1 to 10, inclusive, in Schedule C, to the defendant Violet Putnam. The facts in connection with that are that on November 13, 1925, Mr. Lewis C. Varney, who had been the attorney of the Asa W. S. Bix Estate since November 26, 1919, and who acted as the attorney for Julia Bix up to the time of her death, received a telephone call from the
The widow did not remarry. She left a will dated November 13, 1925, and probated in the Surrogate’s Court of Saratoga county on December 28, 1925, in which the defendant Julia V. Putnam was named as executrix and by the terms of which, Violet Putnam, an infant, unrelated to the husband, a daughter of a deceased nephew of the testatrix and her only living relative, was made the residuary legatee.
The controversy here arises over the construction of the 7th clause of Mr. Rix’s will. For clarity and convenience, the property which be left may be divided into four classes, namely;
1. Certain real estate which is not involved here, but is the
2. A stock of merchandise and fixtures. Mrs. Rix continued the business formerly conducted by her husband with this stock, substituting new stock in place of the old with the proceeds of that sold. This left two classes of stock upon the death of Mrs. Rix.
(a) A small portion of the original Asa W. S. Rix stock which had not been disposed of at the time of her death, and the fixtures.
(b) The new stock substituted in place of the old, with the proceeds of that sold.
3. The securities numbered 11 to 29, inclusive, in Schedule C, left by Mr. Rix, and remaining upon the death of Mrs. Rix concededly undisposed of.
4. The securities numbered 1 to 10, inclusive, in Schedule C, which it is claimed Mrs. Rix gave to Violet Putnam.
The first question involves the construction of the 7th clause of the will of Asa W. S. Rix. The meaning of that clause has already been considered and determined in the partition suit (Vincent v. Rix, 127 Misc. 639) where it was held that the effect of the will was to give the widow a life estate with an absolute power of disposition during her lifetime with remainder over of such part as she might not dispose of, to the persons named in that instrument. The reasoning in that case as to the disposition of the real estate applies with equal force to the personal property. The defendants make the same contention here which they made in the partition action and that is, that Julia Rix took an absolute estate in her husband’s property; that the limitation over was void for repugnancy and that in any event the power of disposal included the power to will the property, which she did, to the defendant Violet Putnam.
As to the real estate and personal property left by Asa W. S. Rix and not disposed of by his widow in her lifetime, including a small portion of the original Asa W. S. Rix stock, the fixtures, and the securities numbered 11 to 29, inclusive, found intact among her papers after her death, there can be no doubt that the widow took but a fife estate therein and that those items of property now belong to his heirs and next of kin. (Seaward v. Davis, 198 N. Y. 415; Matter of Ithaca Trust Co., 220 id. 437; Matter of Cager, 111 id. 343; Matter of French, 52 Hun, 303.)
As to the title to the new stock of merchandise, it is clear that the widow conducted the business as executrix. Her trust relation to the estate of her husband never ceased. Apparently from her
The only remaining question relates to securities numbered 1 to 10 which, it is claimed, Mrs. Rix gave to Violet Putnam. A difficult question arises in connection with the life estate given to Mrs. Rix. That estate is accompanied by an implied power of disposition. What is the extent of that power and for what purposes may it be exercised? Does the power of disposal given to the life tenant empower her to give the property away in her lifetime without consideration, and without any use or benefit to herself? Counsel have called my attention to no parallel case in this State decisive of this question. I have been unable to find any. What did Asa W. S. Rix mean by the use of the words “ whatever property or estate she may have received from me and which shall remain at that time undisposed off ” His intention must be gathered from the four corners of the will. The doctrine is elementary that it is the duty of the courts in construing wills to ascertain and declare the intention of the testator, that is, actual, personal and individual intention, not a mere presumptive intention. A will should be construed liberally so as to effectuate the intention. The court should take into consideration the situation of the testator and the facts and circumstances surrounding him at the time of execution, the condition of his family, the amount and character of his property. There are no arbitrary rules in the construction of. the language employed. Substance rather than form must be regarded. The whole scheme of the will should be kept in mind and each part construed so as to form one consistent whole. The rules of construction adopted and adhered to are invoked as aids to the cardinal principle of determining the intentions of the testator.
In the case at bar a life estate only is devised and the life tenant given the power of disposal with a limitation over of such property as is undisposed of There is no express power of disposition in the will, but such a power is necessarily implied from the language used. Here, the testator evidently contemplated a diminution of
In Trustees Presbyterian Church v. Mize (181 Ky. 567) Mrs. Mize devised to her husband the residue of her property in the following" language: “ The remainder of my property both real and personal of every kind and description, I give and bequeath to my beloved husband, C. C. Mize, to have and to enjoy same during his natural life, and at his death should there be anything left, it is my wish that it shall go to the Presbyterian Church of the city of Somerset, same to be used as the church may direct.”
The court, in construing this, held that the husband took a fife estate in the property and was entitled to its income; that his fife estate was coupled with the power of disposition of it, or such part as might be reasonably necessary to provide him a comfortable maintenance during his natural fife and that the church had a vested right to whatever portion of the estate may remain undisposed of at his death. In the course of the opinion there the court said: “ If anything remained above what was necessary to be consumed for his reasonable support during his life, she intended that the church should receive it as the devisee, in remainder. He cannot waste the estate nor give it away, nor dispose of it, except for his own necessary use. That is the meaning of the implied power of disposal. He has a right to the entire income
In Bevans v. Murray (251 Ill. 603) the will under consideration gave all the estate of the testatrix to her husband, “to be by him used and disposed of during his natural life precisely the same as I might do were I hying, hereby giving to my said husband full power to sell, exchange, mortgage, invest and reinvest the same in the same manner as I might do if hying, and to use so much of the income and principal thereof as he may desire,” with remainder over of any of the estate undisposed of by the husband at the time of his decease. It was held that the authority to use so much of the income and principal as he might desire vested in the husband a large discretionary power as to the purposes for which he could use the proceeds of any sale of real estate. Under this authority, the court held he had the right, in addition to providing for his necessary support and maintenance, to provide means for his own pleasure and enjoyment, and, if he saw fit, to employ someone to reheve him of .the management of the estate so devised. But the court held that the provisions were clearly made for his own personal benefit and advantage, and did not authorize him to give away any part of the property or change the residuary legatees, and hence held invalid a deed which purported so to do. The court, however, upheld the validity of a deed whereby the husband conveyed an undivided one-third interest to another in consideration of services to be rendered, money advanced to the husband by,’ and debts assumed by the grantee.
In Goodrich v. Henderson (221 Mass. 234) it appeared that a testatrix provided for the payment, from the income of the balance of her estate, of $25 a month to her two aunts jointly, during their natural lives, or to the survivor of them, and then gave the residue of her estate to her husband, for his fife, empowering him to use the principal of the estate for any purpose which he might deem expedient. On his death, so much as might remain of the residue was to be divided equally among the testatrix’s children. It was held that the husband was entitled under the will to the income of the residue of the property during his life, with a power of spending and consuming the principal, subject to the charge, amounting to $300 a year, in favor of the two aunts of the .testatrix, until the death of the survivor of them. Until the death of both aunts, it was held, the husband could not exercise his power of spending and consuming the principal so that
Under a will giving a life interest, with a power of disposition of part or all of the property for the particular purpose of the support and maintenance of the life tenant, with a gift over, to others, subject to the exercise of that power, and the application of the principal to that purpose, the life tenant cannot dispose of the property by gift inter vivas. (Baldwin v. Morford, 117 Iowa, 72.) In that case by the language of the will under consideration, the testator’s widow was authorized “ to have and to hold, enjoy and use, during her natural life, with full power to sell and convey for the purpose of paying said debts, and for her own support, comfort, and maintenance, without let or hindrance from anyone whatever, and in her own discretion,” the testator’s property. It was held that this power to dispose of the property did not include authority to the widow to dispose of the estate in whole or in part by gift, and that the purchase by her of a certain lot in the name of another was, in effect, a gift' to him of the purchase price, and void.
In Richards v. Morrison (101 Maine, 424) it appeared that a will gave the residue of the testator’s estate in trust, and directed the trustees “ pending the settlement of my [his] estate and until final division,” to pay to his wife ten twenty-sevenths portion of the income “ during her lifetime, or until final settlement of my [his] estate,” for her sole use and benefit, and after disposing of the balance of income to other parties he provided that “ upon final settlement of my estate or distribution thereof, my trustees shall convey and deliver to my wife ten twenty-sevenths parts of this my residuary estate, and she may herself select such portion from any parcels of my residuary estate at the appraised value thereof. It is my will that my wife have the entire use and income, during her lifetime, of all said portion of my residuary estate; and in addition thereto, I do authorize and empower her to sell and convey by her own grant or deed any of said estate, real or personal, which she may in the exercise of her own discretion, elect to sell and convey for her sole use and benefit, without license of probate court.” Then followed a gift over to other parties of what “ at her death shall remain unused, unexpended or unsold and unconveyed by her.” The court held that the widow was given a fife estate with a power of sale for a limited purpose to wit, “ for her sole use -and benefit,” of any of the property but that she was not authorized to bestow it by gift.
In Stocker v. Foster (178 Mass. 591) it appeared that a testatrix devised all of her estate to her husband during his natural life, with full power and authority to sell and dispose of any or every portion thereof whenever, in his judgment, he might deem it conducive to his comfort. The court held that the life tenant was authorized to sell the estate for a valuable consideration only, and only when he, in good faith, deemed such sale or disposal to be conducive to his comfort by enabling him, by means of such consideration, to supply his present or prospective need; and that the words “ sell and dispose ” meant a disposition by sale, and not by gift. • The court said: “ All along, the language used by the testatrix seems clearly to, refer to such comfort as can be attained by the application of the proceeds of the property to the reasonable needs of the life of the donee of the power, and not to that peace of mind which arises from a knowledge that the property has been so disposed of as to contribute to the enjoyment and support of others. The comfort experienced by the philanthropist in giving away his property, whether to relatives, friends or strangers, does not seem to us to be the kind of comfort which the testatrix had in mind when she was engaged in making this will.” Hence, the court held that a transaction between the husband and another which the lower court characterized as “ a colorable transaction, made without consideration, and carried out for the purpose of transferring the property in question so that it might descend to his children regardless of the will,” was not a valid execution of the power.
In Farlin v. Sanborn (161 Mich. 615) it appeared that the material portions of a will devised all the testator’s estate to his wife, for and during her natural life, with full power and authority to use and dispose of the same for her use, support and comfort, as to her should seem best, giving her full power to sell and convey all or any of the real estate, at her option, as fully as he himself would
In Gibson v. Gibson (239 Mo. 490) it appeared that a will contained the following clause: “I will and bequeath to my wife Sarah Jane Gibson all of my property, real, personal and mixed, wherever the same may be situated, with the power to sell, control, manage and dispose of in the same way that I might do if living; but it is my wish and desire, and I so will that at her death, by will, or before if she so elect, that she shall divide among or settle upon my children and my grandchild the said property devised and bequeathed to her, and increase or proceeds of the same, in the following manner.” The court held that the widow took, under the will, a life estate by clear implication, with full power of disposal for value, but that she had no power to give away the property or any part of it, except that she might, if she so chose, divide the whole property among the children and grandchild, as provided in the will, before her death. The court further held that she had the right to consume such parts of the principal as might be reasonably necessary, for her support in accordance with her station in life. To the same effect are Gardner v. Whitford (23 R. I. 396); Park’s Admr. v. American Home Missionary Society (62 Vt. 19); Murray v. Kluck (87 Wis. 566); Hardy v. Mayhew (158 Cal. 95); Adams v. Prather (176 id. 33; 167 Pac. 534); Brookover v. Branyan (185 Ind. 1); Anderson v. Hall (80 Ky. 91); Davison v. Safe Deposit & T. Co. (103 Md. 479); Lehnard v. Specht (180 Ill. 208); Trigg v. Trigg ([Mo.] 192 S. W. 1011). (See, also, Wortman v. Robinson, 44 Hun, 357; Matter of Briggs, 101 Misc. 191; mod. and affd., 180 App. Div. 752; 223 N. Y. 677; Peck v. Smith, 183 App. Div. 336; revd., on other grounds, 227 N. Y. 228; Terry v. Rector, etc., St. Stephen’s Church, 79 App. Div. 527.)
From what has been said I am satisfied that Mrs. Rix was without authority to make a gift of these securities to Violet Putnam; that the attempted gift is invalid for lack of power; and that all the personal property in Schedule C, together with the stock and fixtures, belongs to the plaintiffs and that they are entitled to a decree directing its delivery to them.
In view of the conclusion which I have reached it is unnecessary to discuss the question as to whether there was a completed gift. Want of power in the giver renders the gift void.
Judgment is hereby directed accordingly.