Cammann v. . Bailey

103 N.E. 824, 210 N.Y. 19, 11 Mills Surr. 466, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 744
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 16, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 103 N.E. 824 (Cammann v. . Bailey) 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
Cammann v. . Bailey, 103 N.E. 824, 210 N.Y. 19, 11 Mills Surr. 466, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 744 (N.Y. 1913).

Opinions

Chase, J.

This action is brought to obtain a construction of the will of Edmund' S. Bailey, who died November 4, 1908, leaving a widow and four children, two sons and two daughters, by a previous marriage. Such children were his only heirs at law and next of kin. His son, Edmund Smith Bailey, died January 5, 1912, at the age of twenty-three years, leaving a widow but no descendants. He left a will which has been duly probated as a will of real and personal property, and pursuant to which the defendant, the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, has been duly appointed executor and trustee thereunder. By the will of Edmund S. Bailey he gave to his son, Edmund Smith Bailey, certain specific gifts, also, “in special consideration of his bearing my (testator’s) name, five shares of the capital stock of the Home Insurance Company, which are to be kept by my executors until he reaches twenty-one years of age, when the same shall be transferred to him together with all income that may have been collected thereon from the time of my decease. ” He further provided: “ And whereas my late wife’s aunt, Mrs. Jane V. C. Cooper died some years since leaving a will by which she made certain provisions for the three elder of my children and no provision for my youngest child, Edmund S. Bailey, whereby should my property be equally divided among my children he would not be so well off pecuniarily as the others owing to the said provision made for them by Mrs. Cooper; now, in order to remedy such inequality I provide that before division of my residuary real estate into shares under the Ninth clause of this will my trustees shall set apart therefrom for the benefit of my son, Edmund S. Bailey, the sum or value in their opinion of Twenty thousand ($20,000) dol *24 lars, and after the division of the balance of the said residuary estate into as many equal shares as I leave children or descendants of children under the said Ninth clause, the said $20,000 so first set apart shall be added to the aliquot share of my son Edmund S. in the balance of said residuary estate and be held for his benefit and belong to him subject to the provisions as to the income and principal of my residuary estate and the trust shares therein hereinafter contained.”

He further provided that Seventh. All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real and personal, I give, devise and bequeath to my executors hereinafter named as trustees, nevertheless for the uses and purposes following: Except as hereinafter modified by instructions to and discretions conferred upon them, I direct them to convert all my said residuary estate, real and personal, into cash as soon as and when they may deem best and reinvest the proceeds in improved real estate situated in the City of New York in the Borough of Manhattan indicating as my preference. * * * And in case I shall at my decease have investments in any of the foregoing securities, bonds or stocks I empower and advise my executors and trustees to retain the same as trust investments. And I direct that my said residuary estate shall be held and managed by my said trustees during the life of my wife should she survive me and from the net income thereof they shall pay to her quarterly the sum of Five thousand dollars ($5,000), intending hereby to provide for her an income at the rate of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) per annum; and during the life of my wife from any balance of the net income received from the said residuary estate after fulfillment of the aforesaid provisions for my wife my trustees shall pay over to my son Edmund Smith Bailey or apply to his use so long as he shall remain a minor, the proportion of such balance of residuary income earned by $20,000 thereof, and shall divide the balance yet remaining of such income into as *25 many equal shares as I shall leave me surviving children or descendants of children including the said Edmund S. Bailey and shall apply such shares of income to the use of those of my children or descendants who shall be’ infants and pay over to those of them who shall have reached majority the shares of income set apart for them the descendants of any deceased child of mine to take the share which their parent (my child) would have taken if living.”

He further provided: “Ninth. After the death of my wife I direct that my whole residuary estate including the 74th street house given to her for her life or its proceeds if sold shall be divided by my trustees subject to the provision for the increase of the share therein of my said son Edmund S. Bailey hereinbefore contained into as many equal shares as I shall leave children or descendants of children, one share for the benefit of each child and one for the benefit of the descendants taken together of any ( such deceased child and the said shares shall be held and managed by my trustees and the income from each share during the infancy of the persons for whom it is held shall be applied by my trustees under this will for the benefit of such person and as each of said beneficiaries reaches the age of twenty-one years he or she shall be paid thereafter the net income of the trust share held for him or her; unless such person was born after my death in which case he or she shall be paid the principal of the trust share held for him or her to the time of attaining majority. Upon the attaining of the age of thirty years by either of my sons the principal of the share until that time held for such son shall after the death of my wife be paid over, transferred or conveyed to him. Should either of my sons or daughters at any time die before me leaving lawful issue surviving such issue shall take the same share of principal and the same share of income the parent my son or daughter would have taken under this will if living.”

*26 It is provided that the shares of the residuary estate held in trust for the daughters of the testator shall be so held during their lives, respectively, and at the death of the daughters, respectively, “The same shall go to her issue if any in equal shares per stirpes, but in case she shall leave no issue, then the trust share to that time held for her shall go to the Children’s Aid Society incorporated in the year 1855 under the laws of the State of New York, to be used for the purposes of said Society, more especially for the support of the Industrial Schools.”

It was found by the trial court and it is not disputed “that every legacy or other provision or claim in favor of any person not a party to this action has been paid or otherwise satisfied.” And “ that since the death of the. testator, Edmund S. Bailey, the income on his residuary estate has amounted to upward of $60,000 a year. The trustees have paid $20,000 a year to testator’s widow and up to the time of Edmund Smith Bailey’s death on January 5, 1912, had from time to time distributed the balance of the income equally between testator’s four children * * * except that Edmund Smith Bailey had been paid in addition to his one-quarter share the proportionate amount of the income earned by the sum of $20,000.”

The Special Term by interlocutory judgment adjudged in substance that under the will of Edmund S. Bailey his son, Edmund Smith Bailey, took a vested interest upon the death of Edmund S.

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Bluebook (online)
103 N.E. 824, 210 N.Y. 19, 11 Mills Surr. 466, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cammann-v-bailey-ny-1913.