Gray v. Woodward

60 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 466
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 60 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 466 (Gray v. Woodward) 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
Gray v. Woodward, 60 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 466 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.:

This is an appeal from a final decree of the Surrogate’s Court upon a settlement of the account of the executors of Noah S. Hunt, deceased. In order to make the decree it was necessary for the surrogate to determine what persons were entitled to share in the residuary estate of the testator under the twelfth clause of the will. Fie construed that clause in such a way as to exclude the children of the testator’s deceased niece, Mary Jane Gray, from any participation in the distribution of the residuum; and the only question to be determined on this appeal is, whether such construction is correct.

Hnder the will the principal recipients of the testator’s bounty are various nephews and nieces. One nephew receives an absolute legacy of $7,000 (4th clause); three nieces receive absolute legacies of $7,000 each (5th clause); one nephew receives a life estate in

[468]*468$5,000 (Ttli clause); another a life estate in $2,000 (9th clause); and a niece a life estate in $2,000 (8th clause). By the second clause of the will the sum of $20,000 is bequeathed to one nephew, and the sum of $80,000 in equal shares to three nephews and two nieces of the testator, subject to certain life interests in favor of the testator’s sister Sarah and her husband. By the third clause the sum of $7,000 apiece is bequeathed to two other nephews and two other nieces, subject likewise to a certain life interest in behalf of the testator’s sister Mary. By the sixth clause the testator bequeaths to four other nephews the sum of $5,000 each, subject to a life interest in favor of his sister Harriet. The tenth clause is similar in its general form to the second, third and sixth clauses, and is the first one in which the appellants Alice, Thomas and Frederick Gray are mentioned. The portion material to be considered on this appeal is in the following words: “I give and bequeath unto Alice, Thomas and Frederick, the three children of my deceased niece, Mary Jane Gray,, late wife of the Rev. Thomas M. Gray, each the sum of $2,000, provided always, nevertheless, and it is my will that if my sister Jane Noe shall survive me, then in that case at least one-half part and more, if she shall need or require it, of the interest or income of the legacies given to her said grandchildren, Alice, Thomas and Frederick Gray, shall be paid by my executors, their survivors or survivor, to my said sister Jane, or be applied to her use during the residue of the term of her natural life, and that the residue if any of such interest or income of such legacies, respectively, be paid to the said children of my deceased niece Mary Jane Gray, respectively, to whom the principal thereof is hereinbefore given.”

That part of the twelfth clause which we are called upon to construe is in the following words:

All the rest, residue and remainder of my estates and property of every name, nature and description, including the principal sums to be invested for the payment of interest or income thereof, unto my nephews James H. Cory and Samuel H. Clark and my niece Sarah Jane Bradford, as they shall severally, by the death of either of them, fall into my said residuary estate, I do gime, devise and bequeath unto rny nephews and nieces hereinbefore named, except the said James H. Cory, Samuel H. Clark and Sarah Jane Bradford, in such proportionate shares as the legacies herein-[469]*469before given and bequeathed to them, respectively, shall bear to each other.”

The question presented for decision is, whether the devise and bequest “unto my nephews and nieces hereinbefore named” includes Alice Gray, the grand-niece, of the testator, and Thomas and Frederick, grand-nephews, who are named in the tenth clause of the will and therein described as “ the three children of my deceased niece Mary Jane Gray, late wife of the Rev. Thomas M. Gray.”

The contention of the learned counsel for the appellant, m substance, is, that from the whole scheme of the will it is apparent that the testator regarded and intended to treat the three Gray children, representing in the mind of the testator their deceased mother, who was his niece; and that his purpose was to give them the proportionate share which, if she had been living, he would have given to her •under the -residuary clause. The argument is that if his niece,Mary Jane Gray, had been alive when he made his will, he would have given her $6,000 instead of giving her children $2,000 each, as he does by the tenth clause ; and, of course, if he had given this niece $6,000 or any other sum under that clause, she would be entitled to share proportionately in the residuary estate. As to this argument, it may be observed that, inasmuch as there appear to have been nephews and nieces of the testator who received nothing at all under his will, it can hardly be assumed with any certainty that Mrs. Gray would have been a legatee if she had been living at the time the will was made. Cases are by no means uncommon where gifts are given to children towards whose parents the donor is by no means friendly. We do not intend to intimate that such was the fact here, but mention it only to show how purely speculative seems the assumption that the appellants are to be regarded as the representatives of their mother as legatees under the tenth clause of the will. In order to hold with the appellants that the phrase “ nephews and nieces hereinbefore named ” included the grand-nieces and grand-nephews, we should have to go further than any reported case to which we have been referred or which we have been able to find, has yet gone in extending the meaning of the words nephew and niece beyond their ordinary and natural signification.

Unquestionably these words, taken in the sense in which they are [470]*470generally used, mean the children of a brother or sister. (Crook v. Whitley, 7 De Gex, M. & G., 490, 494.) Mr. Jarman, whose work on Wills may be said now to have reached the rank of a legal classic, says that great-nephews and great-nieces are not included in a gift to nephews and nieces nor a great grand-nephew in a gift to grandnephews. (2 Jarman on Wills, 152.) In Falkner v. Butler (Ambler’s Rep., 514), which was decided in 1765, the master of the rolls Sir Thomas Sewell, held that a testamentary power to a wife to appoint among nephews and nieces could not be extended to great-nephews and great-nieces. In the case of Cromer v. Pinckney (3 Barb. Oh., 466, 475), Chancellor Walworth stated the general rule to be that the words nephews and nieces, in their primary and ordinary sense, mean the immediate descendants of the brothers and sisters of the person named, and do not include grand-nephews and grand-nieces or more remote descendants. It is only where grandnephews and grand-nieces have been classed by the testator in other parts of the will with his nephews and nieces that they have been held entitled to take under a gift to nieces and nephews. Thus in the case cited the testator excepted John Oromer by name, who was only a grand-nephew, from a class of nephews and nieces to whom he gave legacies of $500 apiece. He also gave a similar legacy to those whom he described as children of his nephew, John Cromer, thus clearly showing, as the chancellor says, that

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