Adrain v. Koch

91 A. 123, 83 N.J. Eq. 484, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 68
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 4, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 91 A. 123 (Adrain v. Koch) 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
Adrain v. Koch, 91 A. 123, 83 N.J. Eq. 484, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 68 (N.J. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Howell, V. C.

This is a bill for the construction of the will of William Rowland, late of Somerset county, who died on July 30th, 1911, leaving a will bearing date December 7th, 1910, which was admitted to probate and on which letters testamentary were issued to the complainants as executors and trustees.

Mr. Rowland left him surviving his widow Jane, his two children Mrs. Adrain and Mrs. Riva; and his grandchildren William, Charles and John, sons of the testator’s deceased son William; the two children of his daughter Mrs. Riva and the two children of Ms daughter Mrs. Adrain; the Adrain children being Robert Adrain, Jr., and Jean Livingston Koch. There were also living at the time of the testator’s death William Dorman, who was the son of Jean Livingston Koch by her first hus[486]*486band; also ber present husband, and an infant son of her second marriage. These parties were also all in esse at the time of the execution of the will in question. The widow died in 1911.

In the early part of 1884 proceedings were taken by the testator and his wife for the adoption by them of Jean Livingston Koch, their granddaughter. These proceedings resulted in a decree made by the orphans court of Somerset county on June iHth, 1884, whereby the adoption by Mr. and Mrs. Rowland of their grandchild as their child was accomplished. I may say at this point that some question was made at the hearing as to the legality of these proceedings. There is no allegation of their invalidity in, anjr of the pleadings. I have examined them' with considerable care and find as a matter of law that they are regular in form and in accordance with the statute, and that they therefore cannot be attacked collaterally. The results of these proceedings was embodied in a decree which seems to satisfy all the requirements of the statute and to put the validity of the adoption beyond question.

, The widow of the testator was by the terms of the will entitled to tire income from the residuary estate for the term of her natural life. Upon the falling in of her life estate the income of the residue became divisible, The trustees being in doubt as to the proper construction of the residuary clause of the will, now lay the same before the court and seek its direction as to the manner in which the distribution shall be made.

The residuary clause of the will provides that upon the death of the widow the residue shall go to the executors upon the trust

“to invest the same and keep the same invested and pay over the semiannual income thereof unto my children living at the death of my said wife, and the lawful issue of any deceased child of mine who may have died in her life time leaving lawful issue her surviving per stirpes and not per capita, until such time as my youngest grandchild living at the time of my death shall attain the age of twenty-one years, or until the death of my said youngest grandchild; upon my said youngest grandchild living at the time of my death attaining the age of twenty-one years, or in the event of the death of my said youngest grandchild before he or she attains the age of twenty-one years, then and in that event I give, devise and bequeath my said residuary estate, or so much thereof as shall then remain, unto my children living at the death of my said wife, and the lawful issue of any deceased child of mine who may have died in her life time leaving lawful issue her surviving per stirpes and not per capita.”

[487]*487Under this clause two questions arise — first, whether J ean Livingston Koch, the adopted child of the testator, takes a share in the residuary fund as one of “my children living at the death of my said wife” by virtue of the decree of adoption, and second, whether the trustees are to administer the income accruing to the minor grandchildren of the testator in pursuance of the terms of the will, or whether such administration devolves upon their general guardian, and likewise whether interest runs on the legacies to the grandchildren from the date of the testator’s death.

The remarks of Lord Halsbury in the house of lords in the case of Inderwick v. Tatchell (1903), A. C. 120, 72 L. J. Ch. 393, apply with peculiar force to this case. He said: “I confess I approach the interpretation of a will with the greatest possible hesitation as to adopting any supposed fixed rule for its construction. If I can read the language of the instrument in its ordinary and natural sense I do not want any rule of construction, and, if I cannot, then I think one must read the whole instrument as well as one can, and conclude what really its effect is intended to be by looking at the instrument as a whole. By the hypothesis it does not speak for itself, but you must-arrive at some interpretation which will make it speak and make it speak intelligibly. I go so far with the contention, of the appellants here, * * * that if the testator had contemplated the particular event that has happened in this case he would have provided for it; but with that single observation I am not at liberty because air event has happened which I think has not been provided for to conjecture what the testator would have provided if he had thought of it beforehand. I am not at liberty to disregard the application of the ordinary rule of construction of every document, namely, that you must look at the whole document, and, if you ean, you must read the words according to their natural and reasonable meaning.” A comparison of particular clauses of this will leads only to confusion. Its construction requires a broad general view and a careful reading of the whole instrument in order to determine the meaning of the particular clauses. The general scheme of the whole instrument must be examined and its -meaning deter[488]*488mined therefrom and thereby. The general plan of the will so far as relates to descendants of the testator appears to consider them in two classes determined by their nearness in blood to himself. Manifestly these classes are “children” and “grandchildren,” using the words in their natural sense and not in the artificial sense that comes from the decree of adoption above referred to. In the first of these classes he puts lus two natural daughters, Mrs. Adrain and Mrs. Biva. To those who belong in this class he gives first a money legacy of $12,000; second, her provides for each of them a trust fund of $100,000, giving the income of the fund to them for life, with remainders to their issue, and cross-remainders if there should be no issue. It is significant if the testator at the time of the execution of his will had in mind «the artificial relation which had been created between him and his granddaughter Jean Livingston Koch, that he did not make the same provision for her that he made for his two natural children, and at once the question arises whether the testator intended that his adopted daughter should belong to the class known as his “children,” or whether he intended that she should take her natural place in the next „ ‘class. The will seems to answer that question. The second class of beneficiaries includes the seven grandchildren, Mrs. Adrain’s two children Bcbert Adrain, Jr., and Jean L. Koch; William B. Bowland’s three children, William, Charles and John-; and the two Biva children, for each of whom he made substantially the same provision. The variations relate only to the Adrain family. Bobert Adrain’s devise is absolute. Jean Livingston Koch’s bequest is for life, with remainder to the child of her first marriage. To his other grandchildren, viz., the children of William B. Bowland and of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
91 A. 123, 83 N.J. Eq. 484, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adrain-v-koch-njch-1914.