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People's Trust Co. v. Flynn

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Apr 30, 1907
80 N.E. 1098 (N.Y. 1907)

Summary

In People's Trust Co. v. Flynn (188 N.Y. 385) the will was almost identical with the will in Buchanan v. Little (supra), as the testator measured the trust by the lives of his two daughters — as long as either of them lived it existed and it died with the death of the survivor.

Summary of this case from Orr v. Orr

Opinion

Argued April 8, 1907

Decided April 30, 1907

S.P. Cahill and John Delahunty for appellants.

T. Ellett Hodgskin for plaintiff, respondent.

Robert P. Orr for John Flynn, Jr., respondent.

Forbes J. Hennessy for William J. Flynn, Jr., et al., respondents. David McClure for Charles Egan, respondent.

M.F. McGoldrick for Annie D. Flynn, respondent.



The testator made his will on the 18th of February, 1897, eight months before he died. After providing for the payment of his debts and funeral expenses he made some general bequests, and among them was "the sum of one hundred dollars per annum" to his sister, Ann Flynn, "to be paid to her by my executors hereinafter named for and during the term of her natural life." The residuary clause is as follows: "I hereby give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real and personal of which I may die seized, entitled to, or possessed of, unto my said executors hereinafter named as trustees, to them, and their successors, to have and to hold the same for the following uses, intents and purposes, viz.:

"To enter into and take possession of same, to keep the real estate in repair; to pay all insurance, taxes, assessments and water rates which may accrue against said property and also other necessary expenses; to collect and receive all the rents, issues, profits and income therefrom, and out of the net annual income of my said residuary estate pay over to my wife Annie the sum of one thousand eight hundred dollars ($1,800) per annum, payable half yearly for and during the term of her natural life, which payment shall be in lieu of all dower right or interest which she might or may have in my estate; and also after the payment of the above annuity or dower interest to my wife, to divide the net residue of the income derived under said trust into five equal parts and pay over one share thereof to each of my five children, namely, Mary C., Regina, William J., John, Jr., and James, or the issue of each child or any of them who shall die leaving issue, until the death of my two daughters, Mary and Regina. If, however, any of said five children shall have predeceased me, without issue surviving them, then said net residuary income shall be equally subdivided among those living or represented. Upon the death of my two daughters Mary and Regina, I give, devise and bequeath the entire estate of which I may die seized, entitled to or possessed of to the issue of said Mary, the said Regina, William J. Flynn, John Flynn, Jr., and James Flynn, or to the issue of either of said sons, if they shall have previously died leaving issue, such issue taking the share which would have belonged to its parent in equal shares; hereby excluding my grandchild Charles Eagan, or his issue, from any participation in the division of my residuary estate."

The widow refused to accept the provisions of the will in lieu of dower, and her dower was duly admeasured by a final judgment rendered in an action brought by her in the Supreme Court for that purpose.

It is insisted on the one hand and the courts below so decided, the Appellate Division unanimously and the Special Term under the constraint of the Appellate Division, that the provision for the wife is part of the trust; that the provision for the children until the death of the two daughters is also part of the trust; that the testator did not intend that the title of the trustees should be divested until the death of the wife and the two daughters and, hence, as the duration of the trust was measured by the three lives, namely, those of the widow and the two daughters, it was void. On the other hand, it is insisted that the testator intended to give his wife an annuity chargeable upon the residuary estate and that the case is governed by our recent decision in Buchanan v. Little ( 6 App. Div. 527; 154 N.Y. 147).

The case cited impresses us as strikingly similar in its facts to the one in hand. As the will involved in that case is set forth more fully in the Appellate Division reports than in our own, we quote therefrom the residuary clause as follows:

" Second. I give, devise and bequeath all the remainder of my estate, both real and personal, to my executors hereinafter named, and the survivor of them, in trust, however, for the uses and purposes hereinafter set forth, to take the possession, care and management thereof, to let or lease the real estate and safely invest the personal estate, to collect the rents and income and to pay taxes, assessments, insurance, cost of repairs and other proper charges thereon, and pay over the net income of my said estate, as follows:

"1st. I direct my said executors to pay my beloved wife, Jane Cooper, the sum of five hundred dollars per year, each and every year during her natural life, to be paid half-yearly or quarterly, if practicable, which said sum is hereby given in lieu of dower.

"2d. I direct my said executors to pay to my sister, Rebecca Cooper, the yearly sum of four hundred dollars, each and every year during her natural life, payable quarterly.

"3d. I direct my said executors to pay all the remainder of the income of my estate, after paying the above-mentioned legacies to my wife and sister as follows: One-half of the remainder of the income of my said estate to my daughter, Sarah Jane Little (formerly Cooper), for and during her natural life, and the other half of the remainder of my said income to my daughter, Mary E. Cooper, for and during her natural life, said income to be paid half-yearly or quarterly, if practicable.

"4th. Should either of my said daughters die without lawful issue, during the life of the other, I give the share of the deceased sister in my estate to the survivor.

"5th. Should either die during the life of the other, leaving lawful issue, I direct the share of such deceased sister to be paid to her children, share and share alike.

"6th. At the death of my two daughters, Sarah Jane Little and Mary E. Cooper, I give, devise and bequeath all my property, both real and personal, to their children, one-half to the children of each daughter, share and share alike, per stirpes and not per capita. Should either of my said daughters die without leaving lawful issue, then I give all my estate to the children of the other, share and share alike. Should both of my said daughters die without leaving lawful issue, my estate shall then go to my heirs at law."

When this will came before us for construction all the judges united in holding that "there was created a valid trust dependent, as to its duration, upon the lives of the two daughters; that the annuities to the wife and sister were a charge upon the residuary estate, whether held in trust or freed therefrom by the falling in of the selected lives; and that, at the termination of the trust, the present value of the annuities should be ascertained and the amount paid over to the annuitants and the remainder of the estate distributed to the remaindermen, discharged of any lien."

Analogy is seldom so exact as that which exists between these two wills and we are unable to distinguish the case before us from the case cited. The facts are almost identical and the same principle must govern both. The testator in each measured the trust by the lives of his two daughters. As long as either of them lived the trust continued, and it died with the last survivor. In each case the executors were ordered to pay out of the net income a certain sum annually to the widow "during her natural life" in lieu of dower. In the Cooper will that sum was held to be an annuity, although the testator did not so name it, while, in the will before us, he spoke of it as the "annuity or dower interest" of his wife. Although in the earlier case there were words of direct gift to the widow in addition to the direction to pay, still there was but a naked direction to pay to the "sister, Rebecca Cooper, the yearly sum of $400 each and every year during her natural life," and thus the parallel between the facts of the two cases continues. The provision for the widow bears the same relation to the trust in the one case as in the other, but in neither was it intended to affect the duration thereof. It was made a charge upon the residuary estate, but this did not prolong the period of the trust, and when the trust ended the charge continued if the widow still survived. The trust was measured by the lives of the daughters and the corpus vested, subject to the charge when those lives fell in, while, if the widow was still living, the value of her annuity when computed and paid would discharge the lien. The estate could thus be divided as soon as the daughters died and the command of the statute in all things observed. The gift to the wife was not, as is frequently the case, a paramount object, for the property was mostly real estate, and the will gave her less than the law. Her election to take dower, however, does not affect the question presented, which is governed by what might have happened, not by what has happened. We regard further discussion of the subject as unnecessary, for the principle of stare decisis, as well as the rule requiring a construction which will preserve a will rather then destroy it, when possible, compel us to hold the trust to be valid and binding in every respect.

This conclusion makes it necessary to decide the question which this action was brought to settle, and which was the only question considered upon the first trial, namely: As the son James died after the testator, what is to become of his share of both income and corpus? Provision is made by the will for the children who survive the testator and for the issue of such as do not survive him, but no disposition is made of either income or corpus as to a child dying without issue during the existence of the trust. Thus there was a failure to provide for the contingency which happened through the death of the youngest child without issue. Neither the aged testator nor the person whom he employed to draw his will apparently thought of that possibility. There is no express gift of the share which James would have taken had he lived, and nothing from which a gift can fairly be implied. The corpus vested in the trustees until, or, to use the language of the testator, "upon the death" of his two daughters, when he devised and bequeathed "the entire estate" in remainder. The gift was to take effect in futuro, not in præsenti. He did not give as of the date of the will, but as of the date when the last of the selected lives fell in. The only gift of the remainder is "upon the death" of Mary and Regina, while the gift of the income is through the direction for the annual payment thereof. After the death of James the income could no longer be paid to him, and there was no direction to pay it to any one else, under the circumstances then existing. The testator did not intend that the residuary estate should vest in any of his heirs upon his death, subject to the execution of the trust, but only upon the death of his daughters after the trust had been executed. Until that time arrived he gave nothing except through the direction to the trustees to pay over the net annual income. When that time arrived he gave the remainder to the issue of his two daughters, naming each, and to his three sons, naming each, "or to the issue of either of said sons, if they shall have previously died leaving issue." From the age of his children as compared with his own, and from the fact that the gift in remainder was not to take effect until both his daughters died, he evidently meant by the word "previously" a death during the continuance of the trust and not during his own life. Until the trust ended he did not intend that his residuary estate should vest so that it could be sold and squandered. ( Lewisohn v. Henry, 179 N.Y. 352.)

We think, as was held by the Special Term upon the first trial ( 44 Misc. Rep. 6), that the testator died intestate, both as to the income and corpus, with reference to any child dying intestate and without issue during the period of the trust. Therefore, the grandchild, Charles Eagan, although excluded from any participation in the division of the residuary estate as made by the will, is not excluded from participating in the division of such part as must be made by the Statute of Descents and Distributions.

The judgments of the Special Term and of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the cause remitted to Special Term, with direction to enter judgment in accordance with opinion, costs to all parties payable out of the estate.

CULLEN, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, EDWARD T. BARTLETT, HAIGHT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.

Judgment accordingly.


Summaries of

People's Trust Co. v. Flynn

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Apr 30, 1907
80 N.E. 1098 (N.Y. 1907)

In People's Trust Co. v. Flynn (188 N.Y. 385) the will was almost identical with the will in Buchanan v. Little (supra), as the testator measured the trust by the lives of his two daughters — as long as either of them lived it existed and it died with the death of the survivor.

Summary of this case from Orr v. Orr
Case details for

People's Trust Co. v. Flynn

Case Details

Full title:THE PEOPLE'S TRUST COMPANY, as Substituted Trustee under the Will of JOHN…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Apr 30, 1907

Citations

80 N.E. 1098 (N.Y. 1907)
80 N.E. 1098

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