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City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Miller

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
May 24, 1938
15 N.E.2d 553 (N.Y. 1938)

Summary

In City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Miller (278 N.Y. 134, supra, FINCH, J.) there was involved a trust set up by an actress who feared her own extravagance. It provided for the return of the principal to her if she lived long enough.

Summary of this case from Richardson v. Richardson

Opinion

Argued April 19, 1938

Decided May 24, 1938

Appeal from the Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department.

Leslie Kirsch, Joseph Glass and Walter A. Lynch for Chester L. O'Brien, appellant. Joseph P. Brennan, Jr., for Edwin D. Reynolds, appellant. Edward M. Cameron, Jr., and Isaac J. Quesenberry for plaintiff, respondent. Samuel W. Tannenbaum and Harry A. Tifford for Ado T. Miller, defendant-respondent. William Caverly for W. Laurence Whittemore, defendant-respondent.

Gerald B. O'Neill and Robert C. Thomson, Jr., for William M. Chadbourne, as executor of Marilyn M. O'Brien, deceased, defendant-respondent.


This is an appeal by defendants-appellants from a final judgment of the Supreme Court, based on an interlocutory judgment, for the construction of an inter vivos trust agreement. The appeal brings up for review the determination and order of the Appellate Division unanimously affirming said interlocutory judgment. Appellant O'Brien has excepted from his appeals so much of the interlocutory and final judgments as determined that he has duly elected to take the share of the estate of his deceased wife which, as her surviving spouse, he is entitled to receive pursuant to section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 13).

Appellant Reynolds has excepted from his appeal so much of the interlocutory and final judgments as determined that the creditors of the settlor may invade the trust fund to the extent that the assets of the estate are insufficient to discharge their claims. In brief, the question involved is whether the remainder of the trust funds in the hands of the plaintiff, as trustee under an inter vivos trust which terminated upon the death of the settlor, goes to her estate to be administered by her executor under her will or to her next of kin according to the laws of New York regarding intestacy, under the terms of the inter vivos trust, or to the testamentary trustee under the will, having regard to the rights of creditors in the last two contingencies.

The facts, in so far as necessary to present the questions, are, briefly, as follows: On April 23, 1931, Mrs. O'Brien, then unmarried and known as Marilyn Miller, executed a will. She then possessed an estate having a net worth of half a million dollars. When she died five years later her estate, exclusive of some $63,000 then held by plaintiff under the inter vivos trust, had $31,000 in assets against the claims of creditors of $34,000.

By her will, after directing that her debts and funeral expenses and testamentary charges be paid, she bequeathed to her two sisters and to her niece certain personal effects. To her father, the appellant Reynolds, she bequeathed $25,000. To Robert Montgomery and John Sweeney, her sisters' husbands, she bequeathed $1 each. To Carrie Carter, the mother of her deceased first husband, she bequeathed $15,000. To Woodlawn Cemetery she bequeathed $5,000 in trust to apply the income to improve and maintain her own mausoleum. All the rest, residue and remainder of her estate she bequeathed to the executors and trustees, therein named, in trust, to receive and collect the income, and to pay the same to her mother in the sum of $150 per week, and such additional sums from time to time "as my Executors and Trustees shall, in their uncontrolled discretion, consider necessary for her comfortable maintenance and support, so long as she shall live; such payments to be made out of the income of said trust fund, and out of the principal thereof to the extent, if any, that such income shall be insufficient for the purpose." Upon the death of the mother, any balance of income and the principal of the trust fund then remaining was given to the two sisters or to their issue if they be not living. At the time of the making of the will and for the two preceding years Marilyn Miller had received as income for her services an annual sum of approximately $260,000.

On October 1, 1934, approximately three and one-half years after the execution of her will, Marilyn Miller married as her third husband Chester Leo O'Brien. For the next two years Mrs. O'Brien spent approximately $144,000 in living expenses for herself and her husband and gave to her husband in addition some $65,000. On July 26, 1935, apparently fearful of her own extravagance, Mrs. O'Brien, then a resident of the borough of Manhattan, city of New York, gave to plaintiff City Bank Farmers Trust Company, as trustee, some $82,000 with which to purchase approximately $78,000 of United States government securities under an inter vivos trust providing that the trustee should pay to the settlor the sum of $500 weekly so long as the net income and the principal shall provide funds for that purpose and leave over in the hands of the trustee the sum of at least $5,000. When the principal of the trust fund is reduced to $5,000 or less by reason of these payments, or for any other reason, the trust shall cease and the then principal shall be distributed to the settlor. On the death of Mrs. O'Brien the trustee is to dispose of any remaining principal as she shall by her last will and testament appoint, or, in default of such appointment, to the parties who would be her distributees under the laws of the State of New York. The trustee could only reinvest the principal in securities of the government of the United States. The trust agreement also contained provisions permitting additions to the trust. None was ever made. The original investment of $78,000 principal amount of United States Treasury notes was never changed, except such sales were made as were necessary to pay to Mrs. O'Brien the $500 weekly out of the principal. At the time of her death such payments had reduced the principal to the extent of more than $16,000. Appellant O'Brien, as the surviving spouse of Mrs. O'Brien, duly elected to take the share of her estate which he was entitled to receive pursuant to section 18 of the Decedent Estate Law.

From the terms of the trust agreement alone it must be determined whether the settlor intended to reserve a reversion in herself or to make a gift in remainder to her distributees. ( Whittemore v. Equitable Trust Co., 250 N.Y. 298.) If it be determined that a proper construction of this instrument shows a reversion in the settlor and not a remainder to others, then we need consider no further the other proposed questions. It has already been noted that no one, at least until the exercise of the power of appointment, had any interest in the trust agreement except the settlor. Principal and income was to be paid in a weekly sum to the settlor. When the principal of the trust was reduced to $5,000 or below, the entire remainder was to be paid to the settlor. In default of the exercise of the power of appointment, what remained of principal and interest under the trust agreement was to go to the next of kin as provided by the laws relating to intestacy of the State where the settlor resided. Whether or not a power of appointment should be exercised, and, if so, for whose benefit it should be exercised, depended solely upon the will of the settlor. If the latter had determined to revoke this trust under section 23 of the Personal Property Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 41), no other consent would have been required than that of the settlor, because no one else had any interest as a beneficiary under the trust. The intent as expressed in the trust agreement was that the property was to be returned to the donor if she lived long enough. If not, then it should go to her legatees or next of kin. In either event it would go as her property. In case of intestacy, those who would take would take as next of kin and not by purchase. In such case no remainder was created but a reversion only. ( Doctor v. Hughes, 225 N.Y. 305; Berlenbach v. Chemical Bank Trust Co., 235 App. Div. 170; affd., 260 N.Y. 539.)

Respondents urge that the foregoing cases relate to the revocability of a trust during the lifetime of a settlor, and contend that the death of the settlor affects the question of construction as to whether a reversion or a remainder was created. Whether construed during the lifetime or at the time of death has no effect on whether the trust agreement sets up a remainder or a reversion. During the lifetime of the settlor no one had any interest in the trust agreement except the settlor, and at the instant of her death, being a reversion, it would pass as part of her estate. The nature of the estate created by the trust deed is determined once and for all at the moment of the legal inception of the trust deed. Whether this deed is construed during the lifetime or after the death of the settlor, the nature of the estate created by the intent of the settlor, as measured by the language of the trust deed, remains the same. No valid distinction exists between the case at bar and the authorities cited.

It is further urged that because the settlor directed that any residue of principal existing at her death, in default of appointment by her last will and testament should pass according to the laws of intestacy of the State of New York, causes us to hold that a remainder and not a reversion has been created. At the time of the inception of this trust deed the settlor was a resident of the State of New York. Hence the provision respecting the disposition of the balance after the cessation of her life estate merely provided for the same disposition as would have occurred had she not used the words she did. In so doing she merely reserved in herself the balance of her estate after the life estate ceased. There was thus created no more than a reversion. ( Doctor v. Hughes, supra.) The respondents rely on Schoellkopf v. Marine Trust Co. ( 267 N.Y. 358). That case, however, is not an authority for respondents. There the settlor directed that the income and principal be paid to such of his heirs under the laws of the State of New York as would be living, not at the time of his death, but at the time of distribution, upon the expiration of the lives of the two grandchildren whose lives he employed to measure the duration of the trust. If these grandchildren had lived until the time of the expiration of the two lives which were employed to measure the trust, they would have taken under the definition of the word "heirs" as it was used in the Schoellkopf trust.

In the case at bar the settlor provided for distribution at her death according to the laws of her domicile, and did not intend to vary the ordinary line of intestate succession. ( Doctor v. Hughes and Whittemore v. Equitable Trust Co., supra.) The direction to the trustee to dispose of any remaining principal or income on the death of the settlor in one of two ways only, namely, in accordance with her will or the laws of intestacy, was merely a superficial expression of a duty imposed upon the trustee by law. The same disposition would have occurred had not those directions been contained in the trust agreement.

It follows that the trust agreement gave rise to a reversion and not a remainder subject to a power of appointment. The fund held by the plaintiff, therefore, passes to the executors of Mrs. O'Brien, subject to the right of election of her surviving spouse and the administration of the fund in accordance with her will.

The orders and judgments, in so far as appealed from, should be reversed and judgment directed in favor of the appellants in accordance with this opinion, without costs.

CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, O'BRIEN, HUBBS, LOUGHRAN and RIPPEY, JJ., concur.

Ordered accordingly.


Summaries of

City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Miller

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
May 24, 1938
15 N.E.2d 553 (N.Y. 1938)

In City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Miller (278 N.Y. 134, supra, FINCH, J.) there was involved a trust set up by an actress who feared her own extravagance. It provided for the return of the principal to her if she lived long enough.

Summary of this case from Richardson v. Richardson

In City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Miller (278 N.Y. 134, 143-145), the trust instrument directed that on the settlor's death the principal should be disposed of as she appointed by will and in default of appointment to her distributees.

Summary of this case from Matter of Lewis

In City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Miller (278 N.Y. 134) the question presented for decision was whether deceased had created a remainder or reserved a reversion in an inter vivos trust indenture which deceased had executed.

Summary of this case from Matter of O'Brien
Case details for

City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Miller

Case Details

Full title:CITY BANK FARMERS TRUST COMPANY, as Trustee, Respondent, against ADO T…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: May 24, 1938

Citations

15 N.E.2d 553 (N.Y. 1938)
15 N.E.2d 553

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