Clark v. Cammann

14 A.D. 127, 43 N.Y.S. 575
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 14 A.D. 127 (Clark v. Cammann) 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
Clark v. Cammann, 14 A.D. 127, 43 N.Y.S. 575 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Rumsey, J.:

During the year 1853 Thomas L. Clark of the city of Hew York died, leaving a last- will and testament, by which certain trusts were created, of which the plaintiff subsequently became the trustee. He has brought this action, after the death of the beneficiaries of the trusty asking that the court determine who are entitled to the fund now in his hands, and that it adjudge a distribution of - that fund according to that determination. The action requires at the hands of the court a construction of that portion of the will creating the trust.

[129]*129By the clause of the will in question the testator devised all his real and personal estate to his trustees with directions to convert the real, estate into personalty and to invest the proceeds and pay the income: of the estate to his wife for her life, and after her death the will pro- • vided that, “as to ten thousand dollars of the principal monies to be invested as aforesaid, mv said executors and trustees shall stand pos- . sessed of the same in trust to apply the interest thereof to the use: of my niece Mary Ann, the wife of my executor, George D. H„ Gillespie, for and during, her natural life so as she may not, anticipate the same, and from and immediately after her decease upon trust to pay over and divide the said principal sum of $10,000 unto and among all her children, share and share alike, andto their lawful representatives forever, as tenants in common, per capita, the issue of any such child who may be then dead to take his or her deceased parent’s share.” At the death of the testator Mrs. Gillespie had two sons. Both of them, however, died in her lifetime, neither-having had children, so that at the time of the death of Mrs. Gillespie, in 1894, she had living neither any children nor the issue of' any children. The testator’s widow died in 1872. This being the: state of affairs, the trustee brought this action.

At the hearing before the referee four different sets of people: appeared and claimed to be entitled to this fund of $10,000. One claim was made by those who were either next of kin of the: deceased widow of Mrs. Gillespie’s son or legatees under the will off the deceased father of Mrs. Gillespie’s children. They claimed that, the gift vested in the children at the death of Mr. Clark, and these-claimants as representing them were entitled to the whole principal ' sum of $10,000.

Another claim was made by those who insisted that they were the-next of kin of the children and were entitled to have this money paid to them by virtue of that portion of the will quoted above,, which directed, as they said, that it should be paid to the lawful representatives of the children.

- The remaining claimants were the next of kin or the personal representatives of the next of kin of the testator, and they claimed that this gift to the children never vested, but that it was a lapsed legacy and went to the next of kin of the testator. The dispute [130]*130between those two sets of claimants was whether the legacy should be regarded as having lapsed at the death of the testator or at the •death of Mrs. Gillespie in 1894. If it lapsed as of the death of the "testator, it went, of comm, to all those who'at , that time were •entitled to his personal estate under the Statute of Distributions. If, on the contrary, it was to be regarded as having lapsed at the time of the death of Mrs. Gillespie in 1894, then it was claimed that the •fund went only to that person who at that time< answered the •description of the next of kin of the testator.

Between these four classes of claims the referee decided that the .gift to the children did not vest, but was contingent upon their surviving their mother; that, as at the death of Mrs. Gillespie there were neither -children nor issue of children, the gift failed, and that, being a lapsed legacy, it was property undisposed of by the will, •and went to those who were the next of kin of the testator at -the time of his death. Whether that conclusion of the referee was collect is the question presented by this appeal.

This question is to be decided solely upon consideration of that qiortion of the will of Thomas L. Clark quoted above. An examination of it shows that the trustees held all the property as one fund for the benefit of the wife of Mr. Clark during her life, and "the fund of $10,000 for the benefit of Mrs. Gillespie only came into existence after the death of Mrs. Clark, the wife of the testator, ■and its existence was dependent upon the survival of Mrs. Clark by Mrs. Gillespie. When, however, it appeared that Mrs. Gillespie had survived her mother, this fund of $10,000 was set apart for her benefit. During her life the trustees were required to pay -the. income of it to her. The will did not give the fund, after her •death, directly to anybody. The provision of the will was that it was to be paid over to and divided among all her children, and that the issue of any child who was .dead was to take his or her deceased parent’s share. That necessarily implies that the children or .the descendants of the children of Mrs. Gillespie were to be the objects of the testator’s bounty. This bounty they were to receive, not by virtue of a direct gift from the testator, but through the medium of a power in trust vested in a trustee, to be executed after the death of their mother, so that the executors and trustees might devote' the income of the estate until the death of Mrs. Gillespie, to such pur[131]*131poses as the direction of ' the testator had required. The distribution, therefore, was postponed as a necessary part of the scheme of the will, and, as has been said, futurity is annexed to the substance of the gift.” The case is, therefore, within that class of cases which establish the principle that where final division and distribution is to be made among a class, the benefits of the will must be confined to those persons who are included within the class at the date when the ■distribution or division is directed to be made. In such cases the gift is contingent upon the survivorship, and that survivorship at the time of the distribution is an essential condition to the vesting of an interest in the subject of the gift. (Delafield v. Shipman, 103 N. Y. 463; In the Matter of Baer, 147 id. 348; Matter of Allen, 151 id. 243.) This conclusion disposes of the claims of these defendants who insist that they are entitled to take this fund, because it vested in the children of Mrs. Gillespie-under the will.

-But another class of claimants insist that they are entitled to this fund because the testator directed that it should be paid “ to all her ■children, share and share alike, and to their lawful representatives forever.” These claimants contend that the words “ lawful representatives ” should be construed to mean next of kin, and that the •direction to pay to the lawful representatives of the children should be held to. be a substituted gift to the next of kin in case there were no children living at the time when distribution was to be made. An examination of the will shows that the testator provided for the ■contingency which might take place if Mrs. Gillespie’s children ¡should die before her, because he directed that the fund should be distributed among the children and the issue of such children as ■should be dead, the words of the will being that “ the issue of any such child who may be then dead to take his or her deceased parent’s share.” The testator thus provided for the death of either ■of Mrs. Gillespie’s children, leaving issue.

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Bluebook (online)
14 A.D. 127, 43 N.Y.S. 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-cammann-nyappdiv-1897.