Becker v. Becker

13 A.D. 342, 43 N.Y.S. 17
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 13 A.D. 342 (Becker v. Becker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Becker v. Becker, 13 A.D. 342, 43 N.Y.S. 17 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinions

Patterson, J.:

This is an appeal from a judgment entered at Special Term giving construction to a certain clause of the last will and testament of one Gottlieb Becker, and declaring and adjudging that a trust created by the said will is invalid and void. The trust referred to is provided for in the third clause of the will.' The testator, after directing the payment of debts and funeral expenses, and appointing [344]*344executors and trustees, gave, devised and bequeathed all my property and estate, both real and personal, of which I ain now' seized or possessed, or of which I may be hereafter seized.or possessed, to my before-named executors and trustees, and the survivor of them in trust, however, to possess themselves of the same, and to take, collect and receive the rents, issues, profits and income thereof,'and.after paying all taxes, assessments, Croton water rents, interests, costs of insurance, repairs, and all other necessary expenses which may be imposed upon my real estate and be necessary to keep the same in proper and running order, and to apply the same to-the proper maintenance, support and education of my minor children, and to paying off the mortgages which are now liens on my real estate.” By the fourth clause of the will the whole estate is left to the. testator’s five children, “ to be divided between them by my said executors and trustees, equally, share and share alike, as soon as the youngest of my said children shall have arrived at the age of twenty-one years.” The testator died in February, 1891. The-will was executed in November, 1886, and was admitted to probate in March, 1891. The five children named in the will survived their father (two of them being minors), the youngest, a daughter, about thirteen years of age when the testator died. The estate passing under the will consisted of a small amount of money in bank and two houses and lots in the city of New York, upon one of which there was an outstanding mortgage.

The first point urged in opposition to the will is that the absolute power of alienation is unlawfully suspended, in that the trust estate is not made dependent upon a life or lives-in being, but upon a term of years, viz.: So many as'would be comprised between the age of the testator’s youngest child, being, a minor at the time of his death, and the attainment of majority by that minor child. But the rule in cases of the constitution of trust terms of this character is, that unless a contrary intention is clearly made to appear from the will, the court will, in support of an otherwise "-valid trust, imply an alternative and make the trust terminable at tlie attainment of majority of the minor upon whose life the suspension iS limited, or the earlier death of that minor. As was said by Dube, J., in Lang v. Ropke (5 Sandf. 369), “a devise to trustees to receive and apply the rents and profits during a minority, is not an absolute term of years corre[345]*345spending with the possible duration of the minority, but is determined by the death of the minor before he attains his age. This construction of such a limitation was adopted both by the chancellor and the Court of Errors in Hawley v. James (5 Paige, 463; 16 Wend. 60) and * * * must now be considered as the settled law of the State.” Here the testator has plainly provided that the whole estate shall be divided among the remaindermen when his youngest child reaches majority, and the rule, referred to applies.

But it is further urgedj and the court below adopted the view, that the trust for the application of rents, issues and profits of land to the payment of mortgages is one constituted for an unlawful purpose, is, therefore, invalid, and is so intimately and inseparably connected with that created for the lawful object of the support and maintenance of minor children, that it cannot be cut off from the valid purpose, but the whole trust must fail. Assuming for the moment that the provision as to the application of (rents is invalid, it is not so interwoven with the valid trust purpose that it may not be severed therefrom and the trust for that valid purpose be sustained. Where the trust term does not exceed in duration the permission of the statute, the unlawful trust purpose may be disregarded and the intention of the testator as to the lawful purpose be made effectual (Savage v. Burnham, 17 N. Y. 573; Manice v. Manice, 43 id. 303; Schettler v. Smith, 41 id. 328; Tiers v. Tiers, 98 id. 568; Kennedy v. Hoy, 105 id. 134; Cross v. U. S. Trust Co., 131 id. 339), unless the entire scheme of the trust is such that the intention as found of the testator would be defeated by the rejection of any part of the trust as he constituted it. (Tilden, v. Greene, 130 N. Y. 29; Knox v. Jones, 47 id. 389; Benedict v. Webb, 98 id. 460; Kennedy v. Hoy, supra.) It seems to be quite clear that the dominant purpose of this testator was to provide for the support and maintenance of his minor childen even to the extent of having all the net income of his estate applied to that object if necessary. That is shown by the limitation' of the trust term. The application of rents to the payment of mortgages outstanding on the land is not connected with that controlling purpose. The one object is in nowise dependent on the other. What[346]*346ever may have been the disposition of the courts heretofore by narrow constructions to bring trust provisions within the condemnation of the statute, we are admonished that the tendency now is “ in the direction of liberality in construing the statute, and while there has been no abatement by the courts of the- strictness with which limitations are construed which trcmsgress the rule of perpetuity, arrangements within that limit and disposi-' tians by way of trust are sustained if they can fairly be brought within the spirit of the statute, although not within its literal language.” (Cochrane v. Schell, 140 N. Y. 532.) The admitted valid part of this trust is within both the spirit .and the letter of the statute. It was constituted for the chief purpose, the testator had in mind, and may be carried out without reference to. the other branch of the trust. And this valid purpose thus declared may be made effectual notwithstanding a part only of the rents, issues and profits, may be required for the support and maintenance of the minor Children. That was held in the case last cited with respect to a trust to pay annuities out of rents, where those annuities were in amount but a fractional part of the gross rents of the trust property, and an implied direction for an accumulation of the residue of those rents was to be inferred. The syllabus . of the case (140 N. Y. 516) succinctly states what the court held, viz., that “ where such a trust is constituted, duly limited in point of duration, the title to the whole estate vests in the trustee during the trust term, although the valid trust purpose will not absorb the whole income, and, connected with the-lawful purpose, is an express or implied direction for an unlawful accumulation, except, at most, when the valid purpose is nominal only, being inserted as a mere cover for the unlaw? fui accumulation.” And it was further held that the surplus income belonged to, and was distributable among, those entitled to the next eventual estate.

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Bluebook (online)
13 A.D. 342, 43 N.Y.S. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-becker-nyappdiv-1897.