In re the Accounting of Bank of New York

194 Misc. 803
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMay 26, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 194 Misc. 803 (In re the Accounting of Bank of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Accounting of Bank of New York, 194 Misc. 803 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1947).

Opinion

Delehanty, S.

In this accounting proceeding a construction of subdivision 10 of paragraph second of deceased’s will is necessary. That subdivision says: To the Bank of New York and Trust Company, located at No. 52 Wall Street, in the Borough of Manhattan, City of New York, the sum of Twenty-five thousand ($25,000.00) Dollars, in trust, nevertheless, to invest and reinvest the same, and to collect the rents, issues and profits thereof, and to pay over quarterly the net income derived therefrom to 1 Summerland ’, as long as it continues to be operated independently as the Summer home for children under the auspices of the Hopewell Society, No. 218 Gates Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. If ‘ Summerland ’ shall cease to be operated independently, as the Summer home for children under the auspices of the Hopewell Society, No. 218 Gates Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y., this trust shall cease, terminate and come to an end, and the principal thereof shall then be paid over to my Executors and form a part of my residuary estate.”

The quoted text is to be considered against a background of facts put into the record by agreement of the parties and summarized as follows: A special act of the Legislature in 1870 (L. 1870, eh. 472) authorized the organization in New York of a charitable corporation under the name The Society for the Aid of Friendless Women and Children ”. Deceased was a member of the board of managers of the Society which had its headquarters in Brooklyn. At its headquarters the Society cared for persons who came within the purview of its charter. Among these persons were children who were cared for in the headquarters of the corporation during the greater part of the [806]*806year and for whom a summer home called Summerland” was provided on a rented farm in New Jersey. The personnel of the corporation which looked after the children during the greater part of the year went with them to the summer home and there cared for the children just as they did during the rest of the year. Some additional children were taken into the summer home but in general the population of “ Summerland ” consisted of the children brought from the Brooklyn headquarters of the charity. Deceased was active in this summer vacation enterprise of the charity and was a member of the so-called Summerland Auxiliary of the charity. In 1904, deceased purchased the farm theretofore rented as the site of Summer-land and caused it to be conveyed to the Society. In 1920, the Society conveyed the farm to a New Jersey corporation organized by it to take title to the summer facilities of the Society. This was done because it had been found that a New York charitable corporation could not be exempted from the payment of taxes in New Jersey. The New Jersey corporation — known as “ Summerland ” — adopted by-laws which provided that its president and treasurer should be appointed by the Society and that a written report of all actions taken by the executive committee of “ Summerland ” were to be reported to the Society at the latter’s regular monthly meetings. After this transfer of the New Jersey real estate into the name of the New Jersey corporation the Society changed its name to Hopewell Society of Brooklyn. The supervisory welfare authorities of New York State objected to the nlacing of New York children in a New Jersey summer home v here the New York authorities had no power of inspection. Because of this factor and because the property in New Jersey had become salable at a profit the Hopewell Society determined that the summer facilities for the children in its care should be moved into New York State. The operation of the summer home had been financed right along by the Hopewell Society. Deceased had contributed to these costs and had herself contributed a total of $15,000 toward improvements in the way of permanent structures which had been made on the New Jersey land. In 1928, an opportunity for the sale of the New Jersey property was presented to the Society. At the same time the Society found that it could purchase a desirable piece of property in Rockland County in this State. It thereupon sold the property in New Jersey and invested some $50,000 of the proceeds in the Rockland County site. The actual sale was made by the New Jersey corporation Summerland ” but only after consent of the Hopewell Society [807]*807to the sale had been obtained. When the move to New York was under consideration it was discovered that the name “ Summerland ” had been pre-empted and so the New Jersey corporation Summerland ” changed its name to “ Hopewell Summerland ’ \ Thereafter the summer facilities were operated in New York under the name Hopewell Summerland ” and, as before, under the general supervision of the Hopewell Society of Brooklyn. By March, 1943, the resources of Hopewell Summerland ” apparently had become so restricted that it decided to turn all its assets back to the parent organization Hopewell Society of Brooklyn. It had received from that Society the assets which produced the capital gain realized on the sale of its original property in New Jersey. Hopewell Summerland was dissolved as a corporation in 1943, and Hopewell Society of Brooklyn assumed all its debts and liabilities and took over all its assets. Such assets as were not represented in the tangible summer facilities in Rockland County were put in the hands of the corporate fiduciary which managed the trust for Summerland under the will of deceased and the proceeds used for maintaining the summer home. The cost of the operation of the camp in recent years has been approximately twice the amount of the income from Hopewell Summer-land’s facilities and the assets thus administered by the corporate fiduciary. The difference has regularly been donated by the Hopewell Society.

In February of this year the Hopewell Society of Brooklyn and another charity called Sevilla Home for Children were consolidated under appropriate New York law and are now operating as Sevilla-Hopewell Society. The consolidated charity proposes to continue the operation of the summer home.

By the petition the trustees seek to be advised whether the trust terminated prior to the consolidation and, if not, whether the consolidation of the two societies has effected or will effect such termination. A representative of one of deceased’s distributees contends that the trust terminated in 1943, when the New Jersey corporation Hopewell Summerland ” was dissolved. This party asserts that the fund is now distributable as intestate property. The executor of the residuary legatee and the persons interested under her will contend that the trust terminated when the New Jersey corporation Summerland ” sold its property in New Jersey in 1928. They contend that the fund was then payable to the residuary legatee who survived deceased by four months. The residuary legatee was also a distributee of deceased but her successors in interest do not [808]*808premise their claims on that basis. The consolidated charitable organization contends that the trust is still operative and hence that none of the other claimants to the fund is entitled to any part of it. It is against the background of these respective assertions and the facts already outlined that the court is called on to construe the language used by deceased.

The phrases upon which the argument of the parties centers are those which speak of the operation of Summerland. The first phrase says that the trust income is to be paid over quarterly “ to ‘ Summerland as long as it continues to be operated independently as the Summer home for children under the auspices of the Hopewell Society ”.

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Bluebook (online)
194 Misc. 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-bank-of-new-york-nysurct-1947.