Bailey v. Buffalo Loan, Trust & Safe Deposit Co.

75 Misc. 23, 132 N.Y.S. 513
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 75 Misc. 23 (Bailey v. Buffalo Loan, Trust & Safe Deposit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Buffalo Loan, Trust & Safe Deposit Co., 75 Misc. 23, 132 N.Y.S. 513 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Brown, J".

The fourth paragraph of the last will -and testament of Daniel E. Bailey, deceased, reads as follows:

“ Fourth. I direct that bonds of the Toledo Consolidated Street Railroad to the amount of sixty thousand dollars be deposited in trust with the Buffalo Loan, Trust and.Safe Deposit Company, of Buffalo, E. Y., as trustees, and in case at the time of my decease I should not be possessed of the above bonds, then the same amount in cash or other good securities be placed in the hands of said Buffalo Loan, Trust and Safe Deposit Company, as a trust fund, the income of which, after paying the expenses of such trust, I direct to be paid as follows: Fifty dollars per month to my brother, Alanson C. Bailey, of Toledo, Ohio, during his natural life; thirty dollars per month to Mrs. Mary A'. Swain, of Buffalo, E. Y., during her natural life,' and the remainder of sai¿l income to my son, Harlow W. Bailey, during his natural life, or until the trust shall terminate, as hereinafter stated. And in the case of the death of either my said brother, Alanson C. Bailey, or .Mrs. Mary A. Swain, then their proportions of said income shall be paid to my son, Harlow W. Bailey, and in case of the death of my said son, Harlow W. Bailey, then I direct that his. share of said income shall be added to the principal sum of said trust.

“ The principal of said trust fund of sixty thousand dollars I direct to be held in trust by the said Buffalo Loan, Trust and Safe Deposit Company for the- children of my said son, Harlow W. Bailey, and I direct that each child of my said son, Harlow W. Bailey, shall have and receive his [26]*26or her proportion of said trust fund upon his or her arriving at the age of twenty-one years, and then' to take such proportion of said principal sum as the number of children then living and minors, shall bear toward the principal sum then undivided, so that if there be three children living when the oldest becomes twenty-one years of age, such oldest child shall receive one-third of said principal sum of said trust fund, and if another child shall be'born after the oldest child has become twenty-one years of age, and shall have received his or her proportion of said trust fund, then the second child shall, upon becoming twenty-one years of age, have and receive one-third of the remaining principal of said trust fund.

“And in case there be no children of my said son, Harlow-W. Bailey, living at the time of my decease, or in case the children then living shall die before arriving at the age of twenty-one years, then I direct that the trust hereby created shall continue for twenty-five years from the date of this will, and if at that time there be no children of my said son, Harlow W. Bailey, living, I direct that the trust hereby created shall cease and be determined, and I hereby direct that the principal of said trust fund shall then be paid to my said son, Harlow W. Bailey, and the- same shall be his property absolutely, and forever, and if at that time my said son, Harlow 'W. Bailey, shall not be living, then I direct that the principal of said trust fund shall be divided and paid -over, share and share alike to the heirs of my said sister, Caroline E. Blair, of Madison, Ohio. But if there be a child of my said son, Harlow W. B'ailey, living twenty-five years from the date of this will, though bom after my decease, then said trust hereby created shall continue for the benefit of such child.”

The plaintiff attacks the validity of the foregoing clause, contending that by its terms the absolute ownership of the fund is suspended for a period beyond the ektent of two lives in being at the death of the testator, in violation of section 11 of the Personal Property Law.

It is plain that the testator intended that the absolute ownership of the trust fund should he suspended until the. [27]*27children of Harlow W. Bailey living at the death of the testator and those bom thereafter, should respectively reach ■the age of twenty-one years. Ho such child was to receive a share until it reached its majority, and its share could only be determined by the number of minor children then living. The shark of each child depended upon the contingency of its reaching the age of twenty-one, and the amount of such share depended upon the further contingency as to the number of minor children then living. If it could be said that the trust fund vested in the children of Harlow W. Bailey upon the death of the testator and the payment of a certain-share was to be postponed until each child reached its majors ity, a legal, vested remainder would have been created; but the clause provides that each child shall have his proportion of said trust fund upon his arriving at the age of twenty-one, such share being such proportion as the number of minor children then living shall bear toward the principal; so that, if there be three children living when the eldest becomes twenty-one, such oldest child shall receive one-third, and, if another child be then born, then the second child, upon reaching twenty-one, shall receive one-third of the balance. It is plain that, upon the death of Harlow W. Bailey, the interest of each of his children in 'the trust fund is simply a contingent one, depending upon his reaching his majority. It is equally plain that, upon the death of HarloW W. Bailey, it will be unknown whether any of his children will ever be vested with the title to the fund. Harlow W. Bailey had one child living at the death of the testator and now has three others, bom after testator’s death. The daughter of Harlow W. Bailey, living at testator’s death, did not take the trust fund. She had no interest in it whatever, except as based upon the contingency that she should live to attain her majority. It was not a vested interest, subject to the rights of after-bom brothers or sisters; it was a contingent interest that would be defeated by her death during her minority. It is not a bequest to the children of Harlow W". Bailey, when they shall come of age. It is not a bequest to any specified child, to be paid to it on reaching its majority. It is a bequest to only such children as live to be [28]*28twenty-one.. The law undoubtedly is that, where nothing is interposed between the infant and his enjoyment of the possession of the estate except his own minority, he has -a vested estate, subject to be defeated by the condition subsequent of his -dying under age. Manice v. Manice, 43 N. Y. 380. But, before this trust fund could vest in the one child of. Harlow W. .Bailey living .at testator’s death, there must happen the contingency of no children' being born to Harlow W. Bailey, and that contingency must have been known not to happen at testator’s death. The declared trust provides that •the trust fund is to be paid over to all children as they reach twenty-one, and no provision is made for the share of a child that dies during its minority. In fact, a minor child has no share. A vested remainder in an infant will pass to the infant’s heirs. Ho one would claim that any share in this trust fund would pass to the heirs of any of the children of Harlow W. B.ailey dying during their minority. Ho- provision is made showing that testator ever intended that, upon the death of the minor child of Harlow W. Bailey living at testator’s death, any share of the trust fund would go to its heirs. Upon the'death of such minor child, it simply drops out of all calculations and consideration as to the disposition of the fund. The youngest of his children may be vested with the entire trust fund, depending upon the death of her three brothers and sisters, and also depending upon her reaching her majority.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Misc. 23, 132 N.Y.S. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-buffalo-loan-trust-safe-deposit-co-nysupct-1911.