Dresser v. Travis

39 Misc. 358, 79 N.Y.S. 924
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 Misc. 358 (Dresser v. Travis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dresser v. Travis, 39 Misc. 358, 79 N.Y.S. 924 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

Clarke, J.

Action brought under section 1537 of the Code of Civil Procedure for a partition or sale of the premises described in the amended complaint by a daughter and heir-at-law of John C. Hart, deceased, alleging that an apparent devise thereof in his will is void. On May 3, 1872, John 0. Hart died seized of the premises described, leaving a will -and two codicils, admitted to probate in Westchester county, June 5, 1872, and leaving a widow and four daughters, all of age at the time of their father’s death. The widow is now dead, but the four daughters are all living. The testator, after directing the payment of all his just debts and funeral expenses, devised unto his executors the real estate in the city of Hew York owned by him, “hereinafter designated and described as parcels Hos. 1, 2, 3 and 4, and hereinafter denominated and referred to as ‘trust estate,’ and described as follows:” and thereupon follows the description of a number of different pieces of real estate, divided into four parcels. He then provided that if the title to any one or more of the said four parcels during the continuance of the trust should prove defective or become invalidated and the same be lost to and no longer form a part of his estate, then he directed his executors to divide the remaining portion of such trust estate in four equal shares, value and income of the same being considered, “ and the shares of such division shall assume and bear the designation of the original parcels 1, 2, 3 and 4, and be represented and stand in the same distinctive relation to the trust as the original parcels. * * * To have and to hold the same in trust, to let and lease the same * * * to collect the rents, issues and profits of said trust estate, and out of the first proceeds thereof to pay off,, cancel and discharge the mortgage now a lien upon said parcel Ho. 1 and such other .liens, incumbrances and indebtedness tO' which the said whole trust estate at the time of my decease may be subject and charged with.” Thereafter the residue of the rents of each of the four parcels was to be paid to each of the four' daughters during her life. Upon their respective deaths each parcel was given to her children in fee. Upon parcel Ho. 1 there was a mortgage for $22,000. The other parcels were unincumbered. At the time the will was read, on the day of the burial, all of the four daughters and the executors and trustees were present. The conversations then" and at frequent subsequent [361]*361meetings were to the effect that the mortgage and debts must be paid before the daughters could receive any income, and that they must economize, live with their mother, and hasten the payment of the mortgage and debts. To this they all agreed and acted accordingly. The executors, in all these frequent interviews, explained the situation of the estate and their progress in carrying out the will. The mortgage on parcel 1 was paid in installments out of the rents, as well as all the debts of the estate. The mortgage being $22,000, the rest of the debts so paid made a total of $55,000. There is no question but that the family fully understood and acquiesced in this appropriation of income to payment of this indebtedness. All of the debts, including the mortgage, were fully paid by the 16th day of May, 1876. The executors filed their final account December 18, 1880, which was approved by plaintiff and the other beneficiaries in writing. The trustees have regularly accounted upon regular citations to the beneficiaries. The plaintiff either approved or failed to object to any of these accounts and always received and receipted for her portions. The entire conduct of the executors and trustees from the probate of the will has been spread in exact detail upon the records of the court, the facts have always been known, and their conduct has been continuously passed upon and approved by confirmatory decrees. After this acquiescence in and approval of the provisions of the will and the execution of the trust therein created from May, 1872, this action, after the decision by the Court of Appeals of Hascall v. King, was begun on October 23, 1901. And it is true that in the twenty-nine years in which this trust had existed, unassailed, by reason of the changes in the city conditions the value of the different parcels no longer represented the fair and equitable division of his estate among his daughters that the testator accomplished at the time of his death. The will directs the accumulation of rents for the purpose of paying off a mortgage on one parcel of the realty and for the purpose of paying the debts of the decedent. Such provision is void for two reasons. It has been definitely determined in Hascall v. King (162 N. Y. 134) that the application of the income of a trust estate in the payment of mortgages is'an accumulation in violation of the letter and the spirit of the statute which prohibits the swelling of an estate by the accumulation of income except for [362]*362the benefit of minors and during their minority. 1 R. S. 726, §§ 37, 38; Real Prop. Law (Laws of 1896, chap. 547), §§ 51, 76. The provision is further objectionable because there is a suspension of the power of alienation of the “ trust estate ” not limited by lives, but until the mortgage, incumbrances, and debts shall be paid. The realty was thereby rendered inalienable during such period as' would be required to cancel these incumbrances. The absolute power of alienation may not be suspended for more than two lives in being at the creation of the trust estate. Ho suspension, however short, which is otherwise limited can be maintained. The period required to pay off the mortgage and the other debts from the ‘rents may exceed the duration of the lives of any two persons, and therefore the creation of a trust term for that period is forbidden and must be declared void. Hone v. Van Schaick, 20 Wend. 564; Tucker v. Tucker, 5 N. Y. 408; Jennings v. Jennings, 7 id. 547; Hawley v. James, 16 Wend. 61; Boynton v. Hoyt, 1 Den. 53. And it has been expressly held that a trust limited until the payment and extinction of certain ■ mortgages is void. Killam v. Allen, 52 Barb. 605; cited with approval in Underwood v. Curtis, 127 N. Y. 523, and Williams v. Lande, 74 Hun, 425. It appearing that the provision for accumulation is void, the further inquiry is necessary whether or not it is so connected with the entire trust provision as to render the whole void. It is a familiar principle that when the main object of the trust is valid and when the incidental and subsidiary provisions which are invalid may be cut therefrom without affecting the trust itself, that the general plan of the testator will be pre- ' served, but when the invalid portion cannot be separated from the valid provisions without defeating the primary object of the testator the will must fail. Kalish v. Kalish, 166 N. Y. 368; Hascall v. King, 162 id. 134; Matter of Butterfield, 133 id. 473; Cowen v. Rinaldo, 82 Hun, 479; Tilden v. Green, 130 N. Y. 29. The principal object which testator had in mind was to divide his real estate included in the “ trust estate ” into four parcels, four equal shares, value and income of the same being considered,” so that his four daughters should obtain therefrom an income which should be equal or nearly equal for their several lives. For the purpose of effectuating his plan he directed the payment of the mortgage on parcel Ho. 1 and of the debts out of [363]*363the rents of the whole trust estate. This direction is so much a part of the primary intention that without it the plan could not be put into effect, for without such payment the shares of the daughters would not be equal.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Misc. 358, 79 N.Y.S. 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dresser-v-travis-nysupct-1902.