Brokaw v. Executors of Brokaw

41 N.J. Eq. 215
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 N.J. Eq. 215 (Brokaw v. Executors of Brokaw) 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
Brokaw v. Executors of Brokaw, 41 N.J. Eq. 215 (N.J. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinion

Vah Fleet, V. C.

The demurrer filed in this case presents two questions for decision : first, whether, taking all the averments of the bill, which are alleged with that degree of certainty and directness which the rules of pleading require, to be true, the bill exhibits a ease which entitles the complainant to relief; and second, whether, if the bill is sufficient, the suit is not so defective for the want of necessary parties that no relief can be given to the complainant on the present record. The ground on which the complainant’s right to relief rests, as I' understand his case, is that he has acquired, by an assignment which is valid in equity, a title or right to certain funds in the hands of the defendants, which they refuse to pay to him. And this suit is brought to enforce that right.

The complainant traces his right to what he claims through Samuel S. Brokaw. He is the origin or source of whatever right the complainant possesses. Samuel S. Brokaw was the father of •Garret G. Brokaw. By the will of Garret G. Brokaw, which was admitted to probate on the 6th of March, 1877, his executors were ordered to sell all his real estate and divide the proceeds into two equal parts. One part was given to his wife absolutely. With regard to the other part, the will directs as follows:

“And the other equal one-half thereof I give and bequeath lo my executors, in trust, safely to invest the same, and pay to my father,/ from time to g [217]*217■time, whenever he shall desire the same and ask for it, so much of the interest, ■and also so much of the principal, as he, in his uncontrolled judgment, shall require for his own comfortable support and maintenance so long as he shall live;, and in case my father’s mental faculties shall become impaired, so that he shall be unable to appropriate and use the money as herein provided, then and in that ease, I direct my executors to use and expend so much of said money, principal and interest, as shall be needful and proper for his support so long as he shall live. So much of the money thus set apart for the needs of my father, as shall remain after his death, if any, I give and bequeath to all the children of my deceased brothers, Isaac Brokaw and John Brokaw, who shall be living at the time of the death of my father, share and share alike, to be equally divided to and among them per capita.”

The complainant was the nephew of Samuel S. Brokaw. The complainant, by his bill, says that Samuel S. Brokaw, in the early part of 1881, made complaint to him that he was not receiving from the executors of Garret G. Brokaw, deceased, such support, maintenance and attention as he was entitled to ■under his son’s will, and that thereupon a contract was made between Samuel S. Brokaw and himself as follows: he promised Samuel S. Brokaw he would visit him from time to time to look after his condition and comfort, and' see that he was provided for .and attended to according to the requirement of the will, and that Samuel S. Brokaw promised him (the complainant) that he would require the defendants, as the executors of his son, to ■compensate the complainant for his time and services, and such ■expenditures as he might be required to make. The bill then says that Samuel S. Brokaw, in order to provide compensation to the complainant out of the estate of Garret G. Brokaw, ■deceased, for the complainant’s time and attention already bestowed, and to be thereafter bestowed, in looking after his comfort and welfare, and to re-imburse the complainant for such small expenditures as he might be required to make, and which, to ■some extent, he had already made, drew an order on one of the defendants in the following words :

To Archibald C. Mollison, Esq., one of the executors of Garret G. Broikaw, deceased : Pay the sum of $486 to the order of Lewis I). Brokaw from the proceeds of the sale of real estate of Garret G. Brokaw, said money being) in my judgment, necessary for my support and maintenance.
“ Bound Brook, N. J., February 26th, 1881. Samuel S. Bbokaw.”

[218]*218The complainant further says that this order was delivered to him, and that, from the time of its date down to the death of Samuel S. Brokaw, which occurred in the fall of 1884, he continued to visit his uncle to see to it that he was comfortably and suitably cared for, and to attend to his wants from time to time.. He also says that the order was presented to the defendants both before and after his uncle’s death, and payment of the sum mentioned in it demanded, but that they always refused to pay, though they had funds in hand, arising from the sale of their testator’s real estate, more than sufficient to pay it. This summary presents all the material facts of the complainant’s case. The bill contains many other averments, but the others are so-manifestly immaterial, in my judgment, as to require neither discussion nor mention.

The form of the instrument which the complainant claims-effected a transfer of this fund is unquestionably sufficient to constitute a good assignment in equity. Courts of equity, in such matters, pay very little attention to form, their great desire being to give effect to the intention of the parties, and, if that can be clearly discerned, they carry it into effect regardless of the method by which it is expressed. Any order, writing or act which clearly indicates that the assignor intended to make over a fund belonging to him, amounts in equity to an assignment of the fund. Shannon v. Hoboken, 10 Stew. Eq. 123; S. C. on appeal, 10 Stew. Eq. 318. But the question here is, "Hoes the bill show that the assignor had anything to assign? The legal title to the fund in controversy was vested in the executors. The will, by plain words, gives the fund to them, with direction to invest, and to pay, from time to time, to the testator’s father,, so much of both principal and interest as he, in the exercise of an uncontrolled judgment, shall require for his own comfortable support and maintenance. The court, endeavoring to ascertain the meaning of the testator in respect to this fund, must consider each sentence of that paragraph of his will, which is above quoted at length, and then should adopt that construction which will give full effect to each of its provisions. The direction to invest the fund, and to pay, not at once, but from time to time, and not [219]*219from the principal alone, but from the interest which should accrue on the principal, as well as the fact that the payments were to be made for a continuing ■ purpose, namely, for the support of the father during his life, renders it entirely clear that it was not the testator’s intention that his father should have complete dominion over the fund, with power to call for the payment of the whole of it at once, or to transfer its custody or administration to other persons than those appointed by the will. The father’s power over the fund was limited to purposes of support. He had a right to call upon the executors to pay him, from time to time, as the exigencies of his condition might require, so much of the fund as he, in the exercise of a free judgment, might deem proper for his own support. But his requisitions were to be the result of a judgment, not a simple freak of desire, nor the calls of mere whim or caprice.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.J. Eq. 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brokaw-v-executors-of-brokaw-njch-1886.