Crowe v. Hogeboom

219 A.D. 131
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 219 A.D. 131 (Crowe v. Hogeboom) 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
Crowe v. Hogeboom, 219 A.D. 131 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Van Kirk, J.

This is an accounting by the executrix of a deceased executor. Linda C. Hogeboom died October 2, 1918. She named her husband, Dr. Hogeboom, as the executor of her will. Dr. Hogeboom married again in October, 1919. He died July 30, 1924, leaving a will in which he named his second wife, Maude F., his executrix. In October, 1924, under section 257 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, she filed a petition and presented ail account for the acts of Dr. Hogeboom as executor of the will of Linda C. All the parties interested were cited, including the appellant Emmet S. Crowe, brother of Linda C. Hogeboom, whom she had named in her will to succeed Dr. Hogeboom as executor. Objections to the accounting were filed by these appellants and upon this appeal they seek to have certain items, credited to the accounting party, disallowed.

The accounting party was credited with $6,559.35, for moneys used from the principal of the estate of Linda C. by Dr. Hogeboom for his maintenance and support, and with $1,213, for funeral expenses and physicians’ bills of Dr. Hogeboom. The right to these credits depends upon the construction of the 5th clause of the will of Linda C. Hogeboom, which is as follows: I give the use of all the rest, residue and remainder of my property, both real and personal, of whatsoever name and nature, unless hereinafter differently disposed of, to my husband William L. Hogeboom, for and during his natural life, he to have only the income thereof, unless he shall need it for his support and maintenance, when he [133]*133shall have the right to use so much of the principal which together with the income thereof shall be necessary for his comfortable maintenance and support, and in such case, I direct that his funeral expenses be paid from and out of my estate.” Upon bis death she gives some small bequests to relatives and all the remainder to her two brothers. She had no nearer relatives. In the 7th clause she gives to her husband power to sell her real estate and to invest and reinvest her personal property, “ but no such power shall give him any more control over the proceeds thereof, than is hereinbefore given.” Authorities are unnecessary to establish that, in construing a will, its words and expressions should be given their usual and ordinary meaning and the testator’s intent determined therefrom in the light- of the existing circumstances and conditions at the time the will was made.

At the time the will of Linda C. was made and at the time of her death Dr. Hogeboom was a practicing physician in the city of Troy. He had a small estate, largely invested in securities, which at the time of his death amounted to about $23,000. Linda C. had an estate of about $27,000. So far as appears in the record Dr. Hogeboom and Linda C. lived comfortably upon the income from his practice and from their investments.

We think the testatrix intended to and did give to Dr. Hogeboom the income from her estate during his life, and all the rest and remainder thereof to those of her own blood. Along with this expressed intent she inserts a modification, conditioned upon her husband’s possible future needs. The time might come when he would not earn and when his own estate would be exhausted; against the consequence of such need she provided as follows: He is to “ have only the income ” of her estate “ unless he shall need it for his support and maintenance, when he shall have the right to use so much of the principal ” as shall be necessary for that purpose. Dr. Hogeboom’s acts disclose his understanding of the intent of his wife. He used no part of the principal until the last few months, less than five, of his life. Before these months his earning power had failed and the income from his small estate and that of his wife was insufficient for his maintenance and support. When that condition arose, he did not immediately use from the principal of his wife’s estate. He sold two of his own securities, one of $3,500, and one of $1,300, and expended the proceeds for living expenses. But near the end he changed his attitude and used from the principal as above stated. This, though mistaken, was natural. His own estate was small; the income from it would not maintain his second wife. She was his sole legatee; she possessed no property. She was a trained nurse and was rendering to him [134]*134the services which only a trained nurse could. Her devotion and loyalty to him naturally would make a strong pull upon his feelings and he yielded. While these latter considerations explain the doctor’s change of attitude, they do not help us in determining the' intention of the first wife. In her mind there was no thought of allowing her estate to be used in order to save the doctor’s estate; and this is what really has resulted from the decision in this case. The property of the testatrix has been taken from her blood relatives and has been transferred, not by herself but by another, to the second wife. This the language of the will does not permit; it does not permit the doctor to use'from the principal for his reasonable comfort and support, except on the happening of one condition; that is; that he needs it; not needs the comfort and support, but needs the money for comfort and support. That need the testatrix did not contemplate would arise until the doctor’s property had been exhausted. That view is confirmed by the fact that she provided even for payment of his funeral expenses only in case his estate would not furnish the necessary funds.

The surrogate in this case felt obliged to follow the decision in Rezzemini v. Brooks (236 N. Y. 184). But.that case is not an authority controlling here. In that case, as well as in Holden v. Strong (116 N. Y. 471), which the Court of Appeals cited as controlling, a fund was set apart in trust; the bequest was of full maintenance and support from this fund. No condition of “ need or of any kind was attached; the maintenance and support was to be furnished first from the income and second from the principal to the extent that the income would not furnish them. The. Coúrt of Appeals commented upon the fact that the testatrix did not provide that the principal should be paid to the remaindermen, but only “so much thereof as may then remain,” and says: “The presence of the words [those quoted], however, does not entitle the remaindermen to any estate in the property of the testatrix save only in the event that upon the death of the life beneficiary a part of the principal then remains undisposed of.” And the court, said that the beneficiary was to have his income from this trust fund regardless of what private funds he might have.

Since there were sufficient means in the estate of Dr. Hogeboom to provide (1) for his comfortable maintenance and support and (2) for his funeral expenses and doctors’ bills, the decree must be modified by striking out the two items credited to the accounting executrix for those purposes. Neither the ante-nuptial agreement nor the transfers of his property to his second wife shortly before his death, can defeat her intent or change the disposition of his first wife’s estate.

[135]*135The other credit items objected to are allowances to attorneys and for commissions. We have considered the two items, which we shall call the claims, which involve the construction of the will, the principal question in the case, out of order. It is now necessary to consider the relation of the petitioner to the estate and the order of events. The petitioner acted under section 257 of the Surrogate’s Court Act (Laws of 1920, chap. 928) as it existed prior to the amendment of 1926 (Laws of 1926, chap. 669).

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Bluebook (online)
219 A.D. 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowe-v-hogeboom-nyappdiv-1927.