Hard v. Leurendus

23 N.E. 177, 117 N.Y. 606, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 601, 72 Sickels 606, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 951
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 177 (Hard v. Leurendus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hard v. Leurendus, 23 N.E. 177, 117 N.Y. 606, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 601, 72 Sickels 606, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 951 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The first observation we make is with respect to the bringing of this action in the Supreme Court. There was no reason for resorting to another forum than that established by the statute for the final ■ settlement of an executor’s *612 accounts. No objection appears to have been taken on the-record. If it had been made, a grave jurisdictional question would have been presented. We do not wish to be understood, however, as assenting to this procedure. These proceedings belong, by law, to Surrogates’ Courts, which were constituted to take jurisdiction of them, and the powers of which are appropriate and adequate for the purpose.

One of the questions brought up by this record arises upon the appeal of Zipporah Wilcox, and it relates to the effect of a codicil upon her rights as a residuary legatee under the will of Isaac Ashley. It revoked a bequest made in the will toller and substituted, in lieu thereof, a gift of a different value. Testator had made various bequests of money and of different, kinds of property in the earlier clauses of his will, and by the-fifth, a residuary clause, gave his residuary estate to the same parties, in the same ratio and proportion as are given and specified in the foregoing bequests.” For the purpose of' establishing such proportions, he valued the real estate, comprised in the bequests, at certain stated sums. The effect was-to create, for the purpose of a division of the residuary estate under that clause, sixty-four parts. Mrs. Wilcox, by the second clause, was given the use of a farm for fife, with remainder to her children, etc., and, as that farm was valued at $15,000, her share as a residuary legatee would have been fifteen sixty-fourths. But the testator subsequently made a-codicil, the second clause of which reads as follows :

Second. I did by said last will give to Zipporah E. Wilcox, of Greece, Monroe county, H. Y., the use of my farm in said town of Greece, during her life, and at her death did thereby give the said farm in fee to the children of said Zipporah E. Wilcox, then living, in equal shares. I do now hereby revoke said bequests, as well the one to the children of said Zipporah, living at her death, as one to said Zipporah herself, and in lieu and instead of said bequests I do hereby give the said Zipporah E. Wilcox and her heirs eight thousand dollars, payable as soon as conveniently may be after my death,, but not until the same and the other legacies by the said will,. *613 not herein revoked, can be paid by avails of the sale and disposition of my real estate without sacrifice in the sale thereof.” This provision was held below to operate as a complete destruction of Mrs. Wilcox’s right to share in the residue. It was there deemed to evidence a radical change of intention, and that, as the residuary bequest was dependent upon the preceding bequest, with the revocation of that particular bequest, the gift of a share of the residue fell. I cannot agree in that view, for it seems to me to deny effect and operation to a most important principle of construction in such cases. I refer to that which demands that a will and a codicil shall be taken and construed together, in connection with each other, as parts of one and the same instrument, and that the dispositions of a will shall not be disturbed further than to the extent necessary to give effect to the codicil. This has long been the settled rule upon which courts have acted. (Willet v. Sandford, 1 Vesey, Sr. 186; Westcott v. Cady, 5 Johns. Ch. 334; Pierpont v. Patrick, 53 N. Y. 591; 1 Jarman on Wills, 176.) That- principle derives its strength, however, not from authority so much, as from its own inherent force. The individual may execute any number of codicils, but all of the writings together constitue the will. The intent of the testator is then to be ascertained by a consideration of the whole, and the original testament is only affected, so far as there is any repugnancy in a codicil. A codicil is intended to add to, modify, or revoke, the prior will in the respects which may appear,and it cannot have any other operation than may be necessary to give effect to its provisions as the later expression of the testator’s will. It follows that it could not operate as a revocation of previous testamentary dispositions; unless by some plain direction, or by force of the clear import of language in some inconsistent or repugnant provision. Here the clause of the codicil in question does not in terms revoke anything but the bequest of the farm; but it substitutes for that which is thus revoked a gift of a sum of money. The language “ in lieu and instead of said bequests ” seems to me to be entitled to considerable significance, and to warrant our reading the *614 original will without other change in that regard than the-mere substitution of the gift of $8,000 in money for the gift of the farm. The use of the words “ and her heirs ” in the codicil, ip. connection with the gift of the money, should not. be deemed to introduce any serious difficulty. By' the will a farm was devised to Mrs. Wilcox for her life, and at her death “ to her children, then living, in equal shares.” It is very clear, from the reading of the codicil which repeats, that precise language, that the testator' took and used the-word heirs ” in the sense of children,” and meant them to-take the same interest in the substituted gift as they had in the gift which was revoked. The use of the word heirs was unnecessary to an absolute gift of the money to Mrs. Wilcox, and everything points to its employment to cover the-children as before ; hence its technical purport must yield to-the strong evidences of the testator’s meaning.

The disposition of the residuary estate by the testator was-its division among those certain persons to whom legacies, had been previously given, and in that proportion to each which the stated value of his or her legacy bore to the aggregate value of all of those legacies. The subsequent execution of' a codicil only affected that disposition by lessening the amount of the legacy to Mrs. Wilcox from $15,000 to $8,000. That, did not strike her out as one of the persons denominated by the residuary clause as a residuary legatee. It left her in; but in lieu of the farm gave her a sum of money representing-less in value than the farm was .valued at. This change,, effected by the codicil, operated to introduce a new divisor in the distribution of the residuary estate. In other words, in reading the will we take in the codicil, and, in place of the gift, in the second clause of a farm valued at $15,000, we read a substituted gift of $8,000, and the disposition of the residuary estate proceeds upon precisely the same principle. I think, in that way, the clear and obvious purpose of the testator is given effect. His will spoke from the time of his death, and then it was evidenced by the will and the codicil taken together. How is it affected by the codicil % He has not directed a. *615 revocation of the residuary disposition made by the will, and as that included Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 177, 117 N.Y. 606, 28 N.Y. St. Rep. 601, 72 Sickels 606, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hard-v-leurendus-ny-1890.