In Re the Accounting of Durand

87 N.E. 677, 194 N.Y. 477, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1305
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 87 N.E. 677 (In Re the Accounting of Durand) 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
In Re the Accounting of Durand, 87 N.E. 677, 194 N.Y. 477, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1305 (N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.

The specific claims of invalidity of the testamentary clauses involved in this controversy and quoted above, are in substance:

First. That the residuary clauses create a trust either in the trustees of the University of Rochester as individuals or in the university for the benefit of some independent and distinct corporation or institution, and that inasmuch as they expressly required as a condition precedent to their becoming effective, an acceptance by said trustees which might not be given until after the death of the testator’s wife and son, they provided for a possible suspension of absolute ownership and of the power of alienation for an indefinite period in addition to said two lives and, therefore, were invalid in this respect even though otherwise valid.

Second. That the specific bequest of the testator’s library, etc., if not attempting to create a trust subject to the foregoing vice, contemplated a direct gift to a separate institution to be organized at some indefinite date and, therefore, was contingent on an event which might not happen within said two lives, and void.

Third. That said provisions, if otherwise valid, gave to Rochester University a share of testator’s entire estate in excess of that which he was permitted so to give by chapter 360 of the Laws of 1860, which prohibits a person having a husband, wife, child or parent from giving by will more than one-lialf of his or her estate to charitable or literary corporations.

We shall decide the questions submitted to us in the order in which they are presented by these various claims.

We think that it is so plain as to require little discussion that the testator intended to make his devise and bequest not *484 to the trustees of Rochester University as individuals, but to them as representing and being the corporation itself. As we have already seen, the charter itself described the trustees and their successors as constituting a body corporate to be known as the University of Rochester, and if we not unnaturally assume an acquaintance by the testator with this charter, it amply justified him in designating the corporation in and by the words which he employed. Moreover, a consideration of the entire scheme disclosed by the clauses before us makes it quite impossible to believe that he intended to deal with the trustees as a shifting collection of individuals without any provision for substitution on death or other retirement, but, on the other hand, such consideration does make it clear that he had in mind the university itself as the lasting and unchanging beneficiary which would receive his property and carry out his purposes which were of no temporary character, and that the surrogate was entirely justified in interpreting the phraseology which was used as meaning the u Diversity. (Currin v. Fanning, 13 Hun, 458 ; N. Y. Inst. for the Blind v. How's Exrs., 10 N. Y. 84; Manice v. Manice, 43 N. Y. 303.)

This being so, the surrogate was right in interpreting the various clauses under criticism as making an absolute bequest to the university taking effect in possession immediately upon the death of the surviving wife or son and not as creating trusts for the benefit of some other institution or corporation.

Speaking first of the clauses other than that relating to the library and collections and cases, we have in the first place an absolute and complete direction to pay over the money into which testator’s estate was to be converted to the trustees of the university, and then is specified the purpose thereof. This purpose was female education in the city of Rochester “under the management of the Trustees of said University,” and this | latter direction, taken in connection with the primary clause, makes it very clear that the testator did not contemplate the university as a mere trustee paying over the fund or income I thereof to some other independent organization, but regarded! *485 it as his direct beneficiary, which would expend his property and itself directly carry out his wishes. It is true that the testator speaks of the new foundation as an institution,” and suggests, but does not command, that it may “ be kept independent,” although always subject to their (the trustees) management and control.” .But in our judgment he uses this term “ institution ” as meaning not more than a department or college, and when he suggests the possibility of its being kept “ independent,” he means no more than a department or college, perhaps located apart from and in its working organization distinct from the rest of the university, as might be entirely fitting in the case of a woman’s college, although still a part of the university. We probably should not' be doing violence to the principles of judicial notice if we took cognizance of the fact that in many if not all of the large universities there have been founded various departments which, although part of the university and owned and controlled by its corporation, are still designated and to a certain extent organized as distinct colleges.

Finally, the later clause of this provision directing payment of the proceeds of the estate to the trustees of the university when said Trustees shall have signified their acceptance of said devise and bequest,” is counted on as helping first the theory of a trust and then as sustaining the claim of a condition precedent, namely, acceptance occurring some time after the two lives of the wife and son, and thus unduly postponing the vesting. This resort must also fail. The preceding clauses having adequately and completely directed and provided for a proper, timely and absolute vesting of the estate, we should be conservative under any circumstances in construing a later provision as changing or impairing this result. But in this case it would be difficult, even if desirable, to impute any such meaning to the testator’s language as is urged by appellants. He was a layman and erroneously he may have deemed it necessary that the beneficiary, being a corporation, should signify that acceptance which the law implied in order to make his bequest effective, or he may have desired to procure *486 from the university a formal though unnecessary acceptance of his bounty in order that it might seem the more fully to be bound by the wishes which accompanied such bounty. Or, of course, some other notion may have been floating through his lay mind. What, however, is apparent is this, having already made a bequest which absolutely vested his pi’operty at death, this clause which relates to the mere physical payment over of the proceeds does not adequately express or fairly indicate any intention to destroy anything already accomplished by prior clauses even in the absence of a formal assent. It really requires no more than is necessarily involved in the case of every bequest, namely, the indication of a willingness on the part of the beneficiary to receive before the executors can complete payment.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.E. 677, 194 N.Y. 477, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-durand-ny-1909.