Beebe v. . Estabrook

79 N.Y. 246, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 1018
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 16, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 79 N.Y. 246 (Beebe v. . Estabrook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beebe v. . Estabrook, 79 N.Y. 246, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 1018 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

This action is brought for an accounting- and distribution of the estate of Hobart Estabrook, deceased, who died intestate on the 18th day of May, 1872, leaving his widow him surviving and five sons and a grandchild, the daughter of a deceased daughter of the intestate, and a great-granddaughter the daughter of a deceased grandchild whose mother, also a daughter of the intestate had died in his lifetime, his only descendants. The intestate left no real estate, but personal property only. Prior to his death ho had given various sums to his children. He gave to each of them on their marriage the sum of $500, and in 1867 he gave to each of his sons the sum of $2,000 and in 1872, a few weeks before his death, an additional sum of $3,000.

It is found by the referee that the several sums given by the intestate to the sons were advanced to them respectively as a portion of his estate with a view to their settlement in life and were chargeable to them in the final settlement of the estate as a part of their distributive shares, not only as between themselves, but also as between them and the descendants of their deceased sisters. This presents the principal question in this case, viz.: whether advancements made by a father in his life-time to his children are, on the final distribution of his estate in case of intestacy, when the estate consists exclusively of personal property, to be taken into account in determining the distributive shares of grandchildren or other descendants of children of the intestate who had died before him, or, in other words, are such descendants entitled to claim the benefit of advancements made-by the intestate to his children in the settlement of his estate.

*249 This question depends upon the construction of the statute' in respect to advancements. The right to charge advancements made by an intestate to his children against their distributive shares in his estate depends upon positive law, and the statute regulates the right and prescribes-the circumstances and limitations under which the rjo-hi O exists. The seventy-sixth section of the statute of distributions (2 R. S., 97) is as follows: “If any child of such deceased person shall have been advanced by the deceased by settlement or portion of real or personal estate, the value thereof shall be reckoned with that part of the surplus of the personal estate which shall remain to be distributed among the children, and if such advancements shall be equal or superior to the amount which, according to the preceding rules, would be distributed to such child as his share of such, surplus and advancement, then such child and his descendants shall bo excluded from any share in the distribution of such surplus.” The seventy-seventh section declares that if such advancement shall not be equal to such amount, such child or his descendants shall be entitled to receive so much as shall be sufficient to make all the shares of all the children in such surplus and advancement to be equal as near as can be estimated. The seventy-eighth section declares that the maintaining or educating, or the giving of money to a child without a view to a portion or settlement in' life, shall not be deemed an advancement, and that the two preceding sections shall not apply to any case where there shall be any real estate of the intestate to descend to his heirs.

O

This case is • governed by these provisions of the statute. The argument that a grandchild cannot, in the distribution of the estate of an intestate have the benefit of advancements made by him to his immediate children, is founded upon the language of section seventy-six, that such advancements are to be reckoned with that part of the surplus of the personal estate “which shall remain to be distributed among the children,” audit is claimed that the word children is to bo taken in its popular sense as referring to the immediate offspring; *250 of the intestate, and that it is only as between the immediate children of the intestate that the question of advancements can be considered in making distribution. We are of opinion that this is not the true sense of the statute, and that the word children in the section quoted is used to designate all the descendants of the intestate entitled to share in the distribution.

The seventy-sixth section was a revision of the prior statute upon the same subject (1 R. L., 313, § 16), and the prior statute was nearly a litoral transcript from the English statute 22 and 23 Car., II. The revisers changed the phraseology of the statute of 1813, but they say in their note that they did not intend to make any alteration in principle. The sixteenth section of the act of 1813 clearly gives to grandchildren the benefit of advancements made by the intestate to his immediate children. It declares that distribution of the personal estate of the intestate (deducting debts, etc.) shall be made amongst the wife and children, or children’s children, one-third to the wife of the intestate, “ and all the residue by equal portions to and amongst the •children of such person dying intestate and such persons as legally represent such children (in case any of said children be then dead) other than such child or .children who shall have any estate by settlement or shall be advanced by the intestate in his life-time by portion or portions equal to the share which shall by such distribution be allotted to the other children to whom such distribution shall be made,” and if the advancement is not equal to such share, provision is made for making up the deficiency. It will be seen that by this statute both children and the representatives of children were to have the benefit of advancements. In Smith v. Smith (5 Ves., 721), the question was raised by a son of a younger son of the intestate whether the eldest son was chargeable with a certain sum laid out by the intestate in repairs of houses -which descended to the eldest son as heir. The court decided that the money so laid out could not be considered an advancement, but it was not suggested that ■the grandson could not raise the question.

*251 Construing the seventy-sixth section of our statute in view of the prior law and of the declared intention of the revisers that there was no intention to change it in principle, we should not expect to find a change so material as that which is contended for by the appellants. But there are strong and, we think, conclusive reasons to bo drawn from a consideration of the general spirit and design of our statutory system for the distribution of the estates of intestates, and of cognate provisions of the statute, against the construction of the seventy-sixth section which the appellants claim. The general principle pervading the statute of distribution and descents is that there shall be equality between the children of the intestate and the descendants of deceased children per stirpes. If the daughters of the intestate had survived him, there could have been no question of their right to an account of advancements made by him to the sons, and the principle of equality of distribution would seem to require that their descendants should stand in their place. The word children may be construed in a collective sense as embracing descendants when the sense and reason of a statute or of a deed or other instrument justifies it. (4 Kent, 419; Provitt

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.Y. 246, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beebe-v-estabrook-ny-1879.