Greyston v. Clark

48 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 125, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 4
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 125 (Greyston v. Clark) 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
Greyston v. Clark, 48 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 125, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 4 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Peckham, J.:

This action is brought to obtain a construction of the will of one Francis Connors, deceased. It is objected that the court has no jurisdiction to construe the will, because there is no personal estate which was not fully administered before the bringing of the action, and there is no trust relating to any real estate owned by the testator in his lifetime.

It appears, however, by the admission of the counsel for McElrone, who appeals from the judgment herein and seeks to have it reversed, that his client received personal property from the widow of the testator, which property once belonged to him, and which personal property was not disposed of by the widow for her support or maintenance. And the counsel maintains his right to appeal and to ask for a reversal of the judgment because his client, having received this personal property from the widow in her lifetime, stands in danger of being called to account for it if the widow had no right to dispose of it, but for her support or maintenance.

This shows that in one aspect of the case, and upon one construction of the will, there is personal property unadministered and in the hands of a third party, which it might be the duty of the administrator of the estate of Francis Connors to collect and pay over as trustee to the person designated in the will. In such event it is proper to bring an action for the construction of the will of an individual, in order to advise the executor or administrator what disposition to make of the personal estate, and jurisdiction being acquired for that purpose it remains for all others. (Wager v. Wager, 89 N. Y., 161, and cases cited.)

The jurisdiction does not depend upon which way the question may be decided, but upon the existence of the question, and hence it exists, even though it should be decided that the gift of the personal property to Catharine McElrone, by the widow in her lifetime,was valid and that thus in reality there was no personal property upon which to administer. By the decision at Special Term the [129]*129right of the widow to dispose of the property coming to her from her-husband, for any purpose other than for her support and maintenance, was denied. We think, therefore, that the court has jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the action, which must be decided upon the construction of the will of Francis Connors.

The Court of Appeals has held that in regard to a will which took effect prior to the adoption of the Revised Statutes, a provision in such will disposing of real property to A, in such terms as to convey a fee, and with power to dispose of it in his lifetime, was inconsistent with a further provision, that in case A did not dispose of it during his life, that then the estate should go to B, and it was held that the limitation over was void. (See Van Horne v. Campbell, 100 N. Y., 287.)

The rule adopted by the common law was the simple and arbitrary one of holding it illegal to allow a remainder or other legal estate to be limited after a fee. (Van Horne v. Campbell, supra, opinion of Andrews, J., at page 291.) Such being the rule adopted, with or without reason, nothing need be said about its propriety. But when it was subsequently attempted to evade or avoid, to some extent, such hard and fast rule, for the purpose of supporting the intention of a testator, as evidenced in his last will, the courts, while establishing the validity of a fee limited upon a fee, refused even then to admit the validity of what may be called the remainder fee, if the devisee of the prior fee had been especially invested with the power of disposition during his lifetime, and the remainder fee was limited to take effect only upon the failure of the prior owner to exercise his power. This result was brought about by reason of what the courts called the repugnancy of the limitation over as against the prior disposition of the fee and the power of disposition connected therewith. It is, of course, true that any condition is repugnant to an absolute and unqualified fee, but the plain answer in such a case is that it is not an absolute and unqualified fee that is created, but a qualified and conditional one, and why such a limitation over, founded upon such a condition, should not be sustained, is very illogically stated, as it seems to me, by saying that the limitation over is repugnant to a fee. It is repugnant to a fee, but as a fee was not absolutely and unqualifiedly given, but only a conditional one, as therein stated, no repugnancy existed, for no such fee existed [130]*130as to create the repugnancy, provided due effect were given to all the words used by the testator in the creation of the estate.

However such, nevertheless, was the English rule which was adopted by our courts, as is shown in Van Horne’s case (supra), and the plain intention of the testator was prevented from taking effect, because it violated a wholly artificial and technical rule, founded, as 1 think, neither upon any public policy or sound reasoning. The modern idea is much stronger than the past in the direction of carrying out the plain intention of the testator if it can be done without violating some plain rule of law or an express statute. Before the adoption of the Revised Statutes, such a rule existed as against a will like the one before the court, and unless those statutes have altered the rule, the limitation over must, in this case, be held void. The question then is, has the rule been abrogated by the Revised Statutes ? I think it has. (See 1 R. S., 725, §§ 32, 33; 3 R. S. [7th ed.], 2178, same sections.)

The thirty-second section provides for not defeating or barring -expectant estates, and the next section provides that the preceding -one “ shall not be construed to prevent an expectant estate from being defeated in any manner or by any act or means which the party creating such estate shall in the creation thereof have provided for or authorized, nor shall an expectant estate thus liable to be defeated be on that ground adjudged void in its creationP

Can such a possibility of enjoying an estate, as rests with the individual entitled to it only on the failure of the precedent owner •to dispose of it, be called an expectant estate, and is it saved by the -sections above quoted ? Such an interest in property answers the ■definition given of an expectant estate by the Revised Statutes.

It is a future estate limited to commence in possession at a future -day on the determination by lapse of time or otherwise of a precedent estate created at the same time. It is also' a contingent future ■estate, for the event upon which it is limited to take effect remains uncertain, and may never occur. It seems to me that it falls properly within these definitions, although the contingency upon which it is limited to take effect rests in the will or volition of the first taker.- The only effect of such a limitation is, I think, to render the happening of the contingency more remote, but still not to alter iits character as a contingency upon the happening of which the [131]*131estate is to vest. And I am the more inclined to take this view of the case as the result is to bring us a step nearer towards carrying out the intention of the testator, while it does not run counter to a statute or any rule of law or public policy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 125, 4 N.Y. St. Rep. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greyston-v-clark-nysupct-1886.