103 Misc. 544 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1918
I have examined the brief of the learned counsel for the defendant, but it has not changed the opinion which I formed upon the trial, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover. The facts in the case seem to me to be quite plain and from them the legal as well as the logical conclusion is not difficult to reach.
" I hope this Bank-book will help you over some pressing emergency — should it ever come to you. Do not I beg of you use it in small sums but let it accumulate for the great need! is the advice of
" Tour loving Aunt
" Annie H. Bryar.
" January 16th 1910.”
It seems to me that Miss Bryar’s intention to continue William Bradford Willard as the beneficiary of the trust, notwithstanding the transfer of the account, is too clear to be affected by any statements which she may have uttered subsequently as to the ultimate use to which she hoped that the fund would be put. She had the right to withdraw the entire fund and thus destroy the tentative trust in her lifetime, if she had wished to do so; but the evidence clearly shows that such was not her intention so far as the principal of the fund was concerned. See Matter of Totten, 179 N. Y. 112. In altering the account from her own name to that of the defendant Gladys Willard she indicated no purpose to change the beneficiary for whose benefit she had made the deposit five years earlier. She merely substituted another and younger trustee in her own place, she then being in infirm health and over seventy years of age. She, however, retained control over the trust fund by retaining the custody of 'the pass-book, apparently with the full consent of the new trustee, who returned it to her after collecting the interest and paying it over to her on two occasions. Under these circumstances it would be inequitable to permit the substituted trustee to assert title to the fund either for her own benefit or that of any person other than the beneficiary originally named by the creator of the trust. The court ought not to divert the fund to any different use or into any other channel upon
Judgment for plaintiff as prayed for, but without costs.
Judgment accordingly.