Fowler v. Depau

26 Barb. 224, 1857 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 170
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 26 Barb. 224 (Fowler v. Depau) 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
Fowler v. Depau, 26 Barb. 224, 1857 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 170 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

By the Court, Mitchell, P. J.

Francis Depau in the year 1833 made his will, and died in 1836. He left two sons [232]*232(Francis and Lewis A.) and five daughters. The testator gave to each of the sons an annuity so long as he should remain unmarried. At the date of the will both of the sons were unmarried, but Lewis A. married before the death of the testator, and Francis A. after the testator’s death. The testator gave Ms residuary real and personal estate to Ms five daughters for life, and then over as hereafter mentioned; but provided that if either or both of his sons should many, he or they and Ms or their issue should come in and share in all respects as his daughters and their issue. Both sons did marry. This caused the residuary estate to be divisible into seven instead of five shares. The testator authorized and empowered” his executors and the survivor of them to sell his house and lot, 358 Broadway, with the concurrence of his wife, and the rest of his real estate without her concurrence. He also appointed them the trustees of his daughters and grandchildren during their respective lives,” but without any express declaration as to what the trusts should be. The sixth clause contains the said devise and bequest of the rest, residue -and remainder of the testator’s real and personal estate. Construing it as admitting the two sons, it gives said estate to the seven children to hold during their respective lives, in equal portions. This gave to each an undivided one-seventh part for life. Then it provides for two contingencies, in the alternative, (one of which must occur,) and makes different dispositions of Ms property accordingly; one in case a child dies leaving issue surviving her; the other in case the child leaves no issue surviving her or Mm. Upon the decease of a child leaving issue surviving, he gives to such issue the principal and the fee of the share in which the parent of such issue had a life estate. TMs was a remainder upon a life estate—a remainder in fee upon a life estate in one undivided seventh part. Hext he provides for another contingency. This issue might die before attaining the age of 21 years. The testator accordingly declares that if the issue of any child should die before attaining the age of 21 years and without leaving issue surviving him, Ms or her [233]*233share should go to his or her surviving brothers and sisters in equal portions, and the issue of such as may be then deceased, per stirpes. This is a contingent remainder in fee created on a prior remainder in fee, to take effect in the event that the persons to whom the first remainder is limited shall die under the age of 21 years.” It is thus expressly sanctioned by the 16th section of 1 R. S. 724, which authorizes such a contingent remainder, and makes it an exception to the rule forbidding the suspension of the absolute power of alienation for a longer period than during the continuance of not more- than two lives in being at the creation of the estate.

The whole of the provisions of the will in the first alternative contemplated by the testator- are thus seen to be valid. The other provision—made upon another contingency, on the other alternative—-forms no connecting or concatenous part of the first: it does not provide for part of the same chain of events, nor form part of the estates to be created in the succession of events first provided for. It provides for an event contrary to that for which the first provides. The two cannot therefore be united as if forming part of one estate, and thus defeat each other. That second provision is, in case any child of his should die without leaving issue surviving him or her, then neither of the preceding remainders is to arise, for they were to the children or grandchildren of the testator’s child who left issue; this for the testator’s child who should leave no issue. In this last event the remainder in the share allotted to the testator’s daughter, (she dying without issue,) is to form part of the testator’s residuary estate and to belong to the surviving brothers and sisters of such deceased one and their issue, in the manner and proportion herein already specified. This would vest the one-seventh, on the death of the testator’s child, in her brothers and sisters equally for life if they were living, and remainder to their issue in fee, with a contingent remainder over if such issue died under 21 years of age. In this case the power of alienation would be suspended as to one-seventh part during the [234]*234life of the testator’s child; next, (taking the strongest case against the validity of the devise, as is necessary, and supposing, therefore, all the other children of the testator to be then living,) a separate one-sixth part of said one-seventh part would pass to each of the six surviving children of the testator, for life, remainder in fee as to each separate one-forty-second part of the estate, to the issue of the said second taker for life, with a contingent remainder over as to the same one-forty-second part, to the surviving brothers and sisters of any one of the issue dying under 21 years of age. The power of alienation then would be suspended as to each one-forty-second part during the life of the first taker of the one-seventh, and during the life of the next taker for life, and then the remainder would vest in fee in the issue of the second taker for life, with a contingent remainder over in fee to take effect in the event that the persons, to whom the remainder is limited, shall die under 21 years of age. In other words, the power of alienation as to each one forty-second part is suspended only during two lives in being at the creation of the estate, and on the contingency of the first remainderman dying under 21 years of age. ■ This is expressly authorized, as before shown. It may seem an objection, that the first one-seventh is thus divided into six parts, and that a like contingency thus attaches to each one-sixth of that one-seventh ; and it may seem that thus the estate is made to depend on six lives. This can seem so only by not distinguishing between the land and the estate. Each separate one-seventh, immediately on the death of the first taker in the case supposed, becomes divided into six equal parts, a separate one-sixth passing to each of the six individuals, so that no one of the other five has any interest in it. It would be entirely different if the shares were joint, with a joint interest as joint tenants and not as tenants in common. The testator has thus cut up his estate into 42 equal parts, and given six of those equal parts to each child for life, and then, in the event supposed, one of each of the last six equal parts [235]*235iio each of the second takers. This he might have done, and he has done it, in more general language.

It is supposed, however, that if one child should die without issue and her estate be divided into six equal part's, and one of her brothers and sisters should afterwards die without issue, not only his one-seventh would fall into the residue and be divided as the share of the previous decedent was, but that also the one-forty-second part of the testator’s estate which the second taker acquired from the previous decedent would pass in the same way.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Barb. 224, 1857 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-depau-nysupct-1857.