Administrators of Ackerman v. of Vreeland

14 N.J. Eq. 23
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 N.J. Eq. 23 (Administrators of Ackerman v. of Vreeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Administrators of Ackerman v. of Vreeland, 14 N.J. Eq. 23 (N.J. Ct. App. 1861).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The bill is filed by the administrators of Afie Ackerman to recover certain property to which it is alleged that she was entitled under the will of her father, John Kip. The clauses of the will under which the controversy arises are as follow:

I- give and bequeath to my loving wife Gartze all my personal estate as long as she remains my widow, except those hereafter excepted; but in, case of her death or- remarriage, I will that all my moneys due on bond of note be equally divided between my three daughters, Annantye, Caty, and Afie, share and share alike, and the rest of my [25]*25personal estate I give and bequeath to all my children, share and share alike, as follows: one quarter part to my son John, and one quarter to Annantye, and one to Caty, and the other quarter to Afie.” And after a devise of certain real estate to the three daughters in fee, equally to be divided between them, the will directs as follows: My will is, that if either of my daughters die without issue, or their child or children die before they have issue, that tlieir part of my real and personal estate bequeathed to them be equally divided be-^ tween the surviving children, share and share alike.” Annantye, one of the daughters of the testator, after receiving her portion of the estate, died without issue, leaving her brother and two sisters surviving, and leaving also surviving her husband, Hermanus Vreeland, who died on the 25th of December, 1847. The complainants seek to recover the share of the personal estate and of the rents of the real estate which, upon the death of Annantye, vested by the terms of the will in her sister Afie, and for which it is claimed that the estate of her husband, Hermanus Vreeland, is liable.

In regard to the real estate, the terms of the devise leave no room for controversy. Each of the daughters took an estate subject to being divested upon her dying without issue. Upon the death of Annantye Without issue, one-third of the real estate devised to lief vested in her sister Afie, and she became entitled to the rents and profits.

As to the personal estate, the limitation over upon the death of either of the testator’s daughters is good. A limitaion over of personal property after a gift for life, or contingent on the death of the first legatee without issue, is good. Westcott v. Cady, 5 Johns. Ch. R. 334; 2 Kent’s Com. 352; 2 Roper on Leg. 1546; 1 Jarman on Wills 793.

The limitation over upon the death of the grandchildren then unborn without issue, is invalid. Any limitation of personal property, which by possibility may continue longer than for a life or lives in being, and twenty-one years after, is invalid. 2 Roper 1546-7.

[26]*26The first limitation over is good, though the second is invalid'; and upon the happening of the first contingency, the gift vests absolutely in the legatee. When there is a limitation over to take effect ill either of two events, one of which is too remote and the other not, if the latter happen, the limitation will take effect. Loughead v. Phelps, 2 W. Black. 704; Winter v. Wraith, 13 Simons 52.

The limitation over by the testator of the legacies to his daughters, upon their respective death, to his surviving children, was a Valid gift. Upon the death of Annantye without issue, her share Vested equally in her surviving brother and two sisters: Afie became entitled to one equal third.

By the will of the testator, his Avidow was entitled to the personal estate during her life or widowhood. On her death or marriage, the moneys due on bond or note were to be equally divided between the three daughters, and the rest of the personal estate equally between the son and three daughters. Annantye therefore, on the death of her mother, became entitled to one-third of the money due on bond, and to one-fourth of the other personal property bequeathed to the widow: The testator died in 1806. The inventory of his personal estate, made on the 19th of November, 1806, amounted to £3950 10s. lid., equal, as charged in the bill, to $9876.35. Of this sum £2248 18s; 9d., equal to $5622.34, consisted of notes and bonds due the testator; The notes and bonds, together with so much of the personal property as was bequeathed to the widow, passed into her hands, and was either lost, consumed, or retained by her until her death. She survived her husband nearly sixteen years, and died in 1822. The inventory of her estate, filed on the 22d of March, 1822, exclusive of a claim against her son, amounted to $8948.31. Of this sum $8038.36 consisted of the principal due on bonds and notes, so that the bonds and notes in the widow’s possession exceeded, by over $2000, the bonds and notes received from her husband’s estate. It is fair to assume, from this exhibit, and in the absence of all evidence [27]*27to tlie contrary, that no loss had. been sustained on the sum received by the widow from the estate of the testator; that the entire principal bequeathed to her remained in her hands unimpaired at her death; and that tlie sum of $5622.34, the amount of the bonds and notes belonging to the testator’s estate, was thereupon transferred to his daughters, . Of this sum Annantye was entitled to one-third, or $1874,11,

It is also claimed that the one-fourth of the balance of the personal estate of the testator, amounting to $3161.37, and to which, by the terms of the will, Annantye was entitled upon the death of the mother, must be presumed to have been received by her. The claim, to its full extent, is inadmissible, Only a part of the personal estate was bequeathed to the widow, and the limitation over applied only to the part so bequeathed to her. The legacies to the son were not included in the limitation over to the daughters.

Of the goods and chattels bequeathed to the widow, a portion consisted o.f family stores, grain, hay, and straw, and articles of' a like character, which must have been consumed by use. Another portion consisted of household furniture. The testator had given to the widow a residence for life in the homestead. Many of the articles so bequeathed were necessary for her comfortable subsistence, and would seem to have been probably intended by the testator for her use. If so, the value of the articles consumed and the diminution in value of those not consumed should (it would seem) be deducted from the value of the property bequeathed. This exception however, even as to articles which are consumed by use, obtains only where the articles are specifically bequeathed. If chattels or personal property of any description bo not given specifically, but generally as goods and chattels or as a residue of personal estate, they must be converted into money, the interest only enjoyed by the tenant for life, and the principal reserved for the remainderman. How v. Earl of Dartmouth, 7 Vesey 137; 2 Kent’s Com. 353 ; Lewis on Perpetuities 100; Benn v. Dixon, 10 Simons 636; Chambers v. Chambers, 15 Simons 183; Randall v. [28]*28Russell, 3 Mer. 193; Covenhoven v. Shuler, 2 Raige 122; Clark v. Clark, 8 Paige 152; Cairns v. Chaubert, 9 Paige 163.

The rule prevails, unless there be in the will an indication of a contrary intention. Collins v. Collins, 2 Mylne & Keen 703 ;

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.J. Eq. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/administrators-of-ackerman-v-of-vreeland-njch-1861.