Griffen v. Ford

1 Bosw. 123, 1857 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedApril 25, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1 Bosw. 123 (Griffen v. Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffen v. Ford, 1 Bosw. 123, 1857 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

By the Court. Duer, J.

An attentive examination of the interesting questions which this case involves, has compelled our assent to nearly every proposition for which the learned Counsel for the plaintiff contended, and we are therefore under the necessity of assenting to bis conclusion, that the plaintiff was fully entitled to the judgment she has obtained.

The first question relates to the validity of the will of her father, from which she derives her title, and who, it is admitted, died seized of the house and lot in controversy.

We strongly incline to think that this is a question which the defendant, Ford, was not at liberty to raise. In his answer and upon the trial, as well as upon the argument before us, he has insisted upon the validity of the lease to Hodges, as a proper execution of the power to lease given by the will. It is from the will, therefore, that he derives the title he has asserted, and it may well be doubted whether he was not estopped from denying the legality either of its execution or its provisions. But, as this objection was not taken by the counsel for the plaintiff, upon the hearing, we do not think we should be justified in now saying that, had it been raised, it would have been allowed to prevail. It is our invariable rule, never to decide a cause upon a point not argued by counsel, unless it has been submitted without argument and without points. We proceed, then, to the main question, whether the trust created [137]*137by the will suspended the power of alienation, as to the property it embraced, beyond the period limited by the statute. And if we are to look merely at the -terms of the will, it cannot be denied, that even upon the plaintiff’s construction, the devise in trust was wholly void. By its terms, it suspended the power of alienation during the Eves of those children whom it named, and had all these been Eving when the testator died, there would have been a clear suspension of the power of alienation beyond the statutory period. Two, only, of the children, however, were then living; and in applying the statutory rule to the provisions of a will, it is certain, that Eves in being at the death of the testator, are alone to be considered. (Lang v. Ropke, 5 Sand. S. C. R. 375.)

The question, then, is, whether the devise to the trustees is so framed as to involve a suspense of the power of aEenation, for any period beyond the Eves of the two children who survived the testator, the plaintiff and her brother; for, if it was the intention of the testator, as coHected from his whole wEl, that the estate of the trustees should then cease, and the property become alienable, the objection that the trust creates what in judgment of law is a perpetuity, is plainly groundless; and no other objection to its legality has been, nor, as we think, can be stated.

We are far from saying, although the conclusion at which we have" arrived is favorable to the plaintiff, that this question is free from difficulty; for it cannot be denied that the provisions of the will are somewhat perplexed, and involve a seeming contradiction. The devise to the trustees embraces all the property, real and personal, of the testator, and especially his two houses and lots in Nassau street; and the trustees are to have and hold the same, during the natural Eves of his children, upon trusts that, rejecting superfluous words, may be stated as follows:—

1. As to the two houses and lots: that the trustees, as long as they shall continue to receive the rents and profits thereof, shall see that the same are kept in necessary repair, and, if thought expedient, be insured against damage by fire, the expenses of such repairs and insurance to be borne by the persons beneficially interested under the provisions of his will.

2. After defraying these expenses, to apply out of the rents and profits not only of the said tenements, but of his whole estate, [138]*138so much as may be necessary towards the proper support and maintenance of his wife Sally.

3. In case of the marriage of Ms wife, to pay to her out of the rents and profits aforesaid, in half-yearly payments, an annuity of one hundred dollars. This provision for his wife to be in lieu of her dower, and if she shall insist upon her dower, then she is to take no benefit under his will.

4. To distribute, and pay yearly, the rest and residue of the aforesaid rents and profits so long as the trustees continue to receive those of the two houses and lots, to his three children, naming them, share and share alike; in case of the death of either, without issue, Ms or her share to go to the survivors, but if either shall die leaving issue, the children to take the share of the parent so dying.

5. After the death of his wife, to pay the whole of the aforesaid rents and profits, deducting the expenses, costs, and charges before mentioned, to his children and their heirs, share and share alike.

6. The will then directs, after some special provisions relative to the payment of the share of his daughter, the plaintiff; that the trustees, from and after the death of all the children, shall stand seized and possessed of all his real estate, including the two houses and lots¡ in trust for the benefit and to the use and uses of such heirs of his children as shall then be living, and shall execute and deliver conveyances of the said real estate to the persons then entitled under the will.

Although in this analysis of the trusts of the will, the provisions are given in a very condensed form, we are satisfied that none have been omitted that have the slightest bearing upon the question to be decided. We proceed then to the observations, that a full exposition of the meaning and legal effect of the trusts of the will, as we have stated them, seem to require.

If the question stood alone upon the words in the habendum clause, “ to have and hold the same during the natural lives of my children,” it would be wholly free from doubt, since it cannot be denied that these words limit the duration of the estate of the trustees to that of the lives of the two children living at the death of the testator. To language so explicit, no other construction can be- given. It is this construction, therefore, that [139]*139we are bound to adopt, unless we shall find that it is plainly overruled by subsequent and inconsistent provisions in the will.

The first trust of the will following the habendum clause, as we have seen, is confined to the rents, issues, and profits of the two houses and lots, and is to last no longer than the trustees shall continue to receive them, and these last words seem to imply that the estate of the trustees in the houses and lots was meant to terminate before the trust embracing the residue of the property devised: an inference which is strengthened by the repetition of the words in a subsequent clause.

The second trust relates to the provision made for the support and maintenance of the wife of the testator. Whether this provision, from its nature, and by its necessary legal effect, operated to suspend the power of alienation during the life of the wife, as well as during the fives of the children, and in relation to all the property, including the two houses and lots that the devise in trust embraces, is a question that we shall hereafter and separately consider. It is enough now to say, that there are no express words, inconsistent with those in the habendum, by which the estate of the trustees is made to cease upon the death of the children.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Bosw. 123, 1857 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffen-v-ford-nysuperctnyc-1857.