Fidelity Union Trust Co. v. Berenblum

221 A.2d 758, 91 N.J. Super. 551
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 6, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 221 A.2d 758 (Fidelity Union Trust Co. v. Berenblum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Union Trust Co. v. Berenblum, 221 A.2d 758, 91 N.J. Super. 551 (N.J. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

91 N.J. Super. 551 (1966)
221 A.2d 758

FIDELITY UNION TRUST COMPANY, ETC., ET AL., PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS,
v.
MARGARET BERENBLUM, INDIVIDUALLY, DEFENDANT-APPELLANT, AND HARRY POTOLSKY, ET AL., DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued January 3, 1966.
Supplemental Memoranda filed January 5 and 6, May 4 and 11, 1966.
Decided August 4, 1966.

*554 Before Judges GOLDMANN, FOLEY and COLLESTER.

Mr. Martin Roth argued the cause for plaintiffs-appellants.

Mr. Harry Schaffer argued the cause for defendant-appellant.

Mr. Saul J. Zucker argued on behalf of Kristeller, Zucker, Lowenstein & Cohen, for defendants-respondents.

The opinion of the court was delivered by COLLESTER, J.A.D.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Chancery Division in a will construction case. The four executors and trustees of the estate of Harry Berenblum, deceased, brought an action seeking instructions, inter alia, concerning the proper distribution of assets of decedent's estate. Margaret Berenblum (hereafter referred to as defendant-appellant), widow of the decedent, is one of the executors. Defendants are the descendants of testator's sister Rachel Potolsky and his brother Isaac Berenblum. Both Rachel and Isaac predeceased the testator. Defendants filed a counterclaim for a judgment, alleging that negotiable bonds having a face value of $168,000, which Margaret Berenblum had claimed as her own, were part of the assets of decedent's estate. They sought an order directing the executors to take appropriate legal action to recover the same. At the pretrial conference all parties agreed that one of the issues to be tried was whether the decedent made an inter vivos gift of the bonds to his widow.

The findings and conclusions of the trial judge in the proceedings below are fully set forth in his opinion reported at 83 N.J. Super. 65 (Ch. Div. 1964). A brief recital of the facts necessary for consideration of this appeal will suffice.

*555 Harry Berenblum died on May 26, 1960 leaving a will dated April 30, 1936. The will created a trust of his residuary estate. It directed that the trust income be paid during the lifetime of his widow, as follows: one-half to the widow, one-fourth to testator's sister Chamka Levenson, one-eighth to another sister Rachel Potolsky, and one-eighth to his brother Isaac Berenblum. The will further provided that upon the widow's death the corpus of the trust should be distributed, 40% to Chamka, 30% to Rachel and 30% to Isaac.

As stated above, both Rachel and Isaac predeceased the testator. However, each left descendants who have survived. The parties do not dispute the finding of the trial judge that Chamka also predeceased the testator, leaving no issue.

The case involves the construction of the anti-lapse statutes, N.J.S. 3A:3-13 and 14. Section 13 provides that when a named devisee or legatee within a specified class dies and leaves descendants who survive the testator, the gift to the named devisee or legatee shall not lapse but shall vest in the descendants. Section 14 provides as follows:

"When a residuary devise or bequest shall be made to 2 or more persons by the will of any testator dying after July 3, 1947, unless a contrary intention shall appear by the will, the share of any such residuary devisees or legatees dying before the testator and not saved from lapse by section 3A:3-13 of this title, or not capable of taking effect because of any other circumstance or cause, shall go to and be vested in the remaining residuary devisee or legatee, if any there be, and if more than 1, then to the remaining residuary devisees or legatees in proportion to their respective shares in said residue."

The widow claimed that the gift of 40% of the corpus to Chamka lapsed upon Chamka's death without issue, and that it passed to her as intestate property because she is decedent's sole heir at law and next of kin. She asserted that no descendant of Rachel or Isaac could be regarded as a "remaining residuary devisee" in whom Chamka's interest would vest under section 14. She also claimed that she is entitled to *556 all the income provided for Chamka in the will because she is the sole surviving residuary legatee.

The trial judge held that section 13 applied to the gifts provided in the will for Rachel and Isaac; that such gifts did not lapse, but vested in the descendants of the named donees. He further held that the gift of income and corpus to Chamka in the residuary trust did not pass as intestate property, but was saved from lapse under section 14. He ruled that the issue of Rachel and Isaac would take the entire corpus of the trust property per stirpes upon the death of testator's widow, and that the income Chamka would have received if living should be distributed under the terms of the statute "in proportion to their respective shares in said residue," to wit: two-thirds of Chamka's 25% interest in the income would be added to the widow's share, one-sixth of said interest would be added to the share to be paid to Rachel's issue, and one-sixth of said interest would go to Isaac's issue.

The trial judge further found that the negotiable bonds claimed by the widow were part of decedent's estate. He allowed counsel fees to the parties involved in the litigation, including an additional fee of $10,000 for defendants-respondents' counsel for their services in producing the fund in court of $150,000, the market value of the bonds, to be administered as an asset of the estate.

Margaret Berenblum appeals from that part of the judgment which provided for the distribution of Chamka's interest in the trust corpus and income, and from the award of the additional counsel fee. Fidelity Union Trust Company and Margaret Berenblum, two of the executors of the estate, also appeal from the award of the additional counsel fee.

Defendant-appellant Margaret Berenblum, the decedent's widow, contends that the trial judge erred in his conclusions. She argues that N.J.S. 3A:3-14 is in derogation of the common law and must be strictly construed; that a literal reading of the statute indicates it applies only when a residuary devisee or legatee named in the will survives the *557 testator. She says the trial judge failed to interpret the language of the statute as it was written and, by giving it a liberal construction, read into the statute an unexpressed presumed intention of the Legislature to cover a factual situation never contemplated by it.

While it is true that N.J.S. 3A:3-14 is in derogation of the common law, we do not agree with defendant-appellant that it must therefore be strictly construed. Since adoption of the first anti-lapse statute in 1824 (L. 1824, p. 174), the Legislature has continued to enact laws designed to remedy the inequities caused by lapse of testamentary dispositions. Such laws are remedial and should be accorded a liberal construction.

Moreover, we are not persuaded by defendant-appellant's argument that a literal reading of the statute restricts its application to situations where a named residuary devisee or legatee must have survived the testator. It is not the words of the statute, but its internal sense that makes the law. The reason of the statute, i.e., the motive which led to the making of it, is one of the most certain means of establishing the true sense of the words.

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Bluebook (online)
221 A.2d 758, 91 N.J. Super. 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-union-trust-co-v-berenblum-njsuperctappdiv-2004.