In re the Construction of the Last Will & Testament of Briggs

101 Misc. 191
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 101 Misc. 191 (In re the Construction of the Last Will & Testament of Briggs) 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 Construction of the Last Will & Testament of Briggs, 101 Misc. 191 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Ostrander, S.

Petitioner prays judicial construction of the will and codicil of Alice Hall Briggs, [193]*193deceased. The will is dated December 18, 1911, and the codicil June 7, 1915. Testatrix died November 25, 1916.

The will directs payment of debts, provides for care of her cemetery lot, leaves to her mother, if she survive testatrix, the life use of her homestead with its furnishings, and gives the fee to her husband at her death, or in case her mother does not survive her.

By the 4th clause she gave the rest of her property to trustees to keep invested and pay the net income to her mother quarterly during her life, and upon the mother’s death to pay the net income■ thereof to her husband quarterly during his life. Said 4th clause further provided: “ I further direct that he (her husband) use during his lifetime as much of the principal of my said estate as in his judgment is necessary and proper and that he in no way be held liable or accountable for such principal so used.”

By the 5th clause she directed that on the death of her mother and husband, if either survived her, or on her own death if neither so survived, the remaining principal be disposed of as follows: $5,000 each to various cousins, and, in the event of their prior decease, to their issue per stirpes; $18,500 to various religious and charitable uses, and the remainder to be divided into six equal parts which were to be paid over to certain of her collateral relatives.

The 6th clause related to realty which by a codicil she gave to her husband, and this clause became inoperative.

, The 7th clause empowered her executors and trustees to hold and change investments as directed.

- The 8th clause appointed her husband, John Lynde Briggs, and Edward D. Eddy executors and trustees, and provided that each should be liable for his own acts, but not for the acts of his co-executor, and [194]*194directed that neither executor nor trustee should be liable, except for gross negligence.

Her mother having died prior to June 7, 1915, a, codicil executed on that day gave all her realty to her husband, and in other respects ratified the will.

The realty devised to the husband was worth about $25,000, the personalty a little over $143,000, the income from her personalty about $6,000. Decedent’s debts were about $1,300. The whole estate was subject to payment of several thousand dollars for state and federal tax and, expenses of administration.

Acting under the provision of the 4th clause: “ I further direct that he use during his lifetime as much of the principal of my said estate as in his judgment is necessary and proper and that he in no way be held liable or accountable for such principal so used,” John Lynde Briggs, the husband, has withdrawn $6,000 from the principal of the personal estate, claims a right to withdraw it all and claims to own the fee of the whole estate which he threatens to withdraw and expend for his own personal use.

Mr. Eddy, his co-executor and trustee, seeks a construction of the will and asks the court to determine, first, whether the husband is entitled absolutely to the whole estate not disposed of by the 1st, 2d and 3d clauses of the will; second, if he be not so entitled, whether the use of principal by him is limited to the amount necessary and suitable for his support and maintenance or limited in any other way; and, third, if so limited, whether he must first exhaust his own property before drawing upon the principal for such use.

The pleadings raise issues upon these questions and also upon the jurisdiction of the court to entertain the petition at this time.

It is urged that if the court has any jurisdiction in [195]*195the matter it is limited by the ordinary and usual rules of equity, as applied in the courts of equity, and that the question now presented is academic and not to be entertained.

It appearing that the husband has already taken $6,000 of the principal, claims the right to all of it, and threatens to exhaust it for his personal use, a substantial question is presented and the petitioner is entitled, under section 2510 of the Code, to a construction of the will to guide his action in the premises.

A question which involves the management of the whole estate and the rights conferred by the will is not academic.

Briefly stated, Mr. Briggs’ claim to the fee of the whole principal is founded upon the doctrine that the gift over to the cousins, charities and residuary legatees is determinable at his will, is repugnant to the gift to him, is therefore void in its inception and that the whole fee is vested in him. In support of this claim he relies upon section 153 of the Beal Property Law, which provides that: “ Every power of disposition by 'means of which the grantee is enabled, in his lifetime, to dispose of the entire fee for his own benefit, is deemed absolute.”

This contention to some extent confuses or overlooks the distinction between an absolute estate and an absolute power of disposition.

Under the common law, as stated in Van Horn v. Campbell, 100 N. Y. 287, an executory devise, determinable at the will of the first taker, was invalid because the gift is repugnant to the prior estate. Under that rule the expectant estate or gift over was invalid at its inception.

That rule has been changed by statute, and section 57 of the Beal Property Law provides that while an expectant estate may be defeated by any act or means [196]*196which the cre.ator in the creation thereof has authorized, yet such expectant estate so liable to defeat shall not be void in its creation.

Contrary to the rule of the common law, the expectant estate is now valid until defeated by the means provided.

Under section 50 of the Beal Property Law, a remainder may be limited on a fee, upon the contingency of non-exercise of a power of disposition.

Under the language of the 4th clause of the will, there was no direct gift, in terms, of the property mentioned therein to Mr. Briggs, either for life, for years, or in fee. The gift of the title was to the trustees, subject, however, to the power of Mr. Briggs during his lifetime to use so much of the principal as in his judgment should be necessary and proper.

Sections 149,150 and 151 of the Beal Property Law prescribe conditions under which a lesser estate, or an absolute power of disposition, is deemed to be changed into a fee or is tantamount to a fee. None of these sections apply in the case at bar.

An absolute power of disposition may give its holder dominion over property, which, if exercised, will be equivalent to a fee.

This brings us to the question whether Briggs is given an absolute power of disposition. In the absence of any statutory provision, an absolute power of disposition would be one by which the holder of the power might dispose of the property as fully and in the same manner as he might dispose of his own individual estate acquired by his own efforts. This would include the power to dispose of it by will, the power to dispose of it foolishly for his own whim or caprice, to squander it, to give it away, or make any disposition that he chose, not infringing upon the rights of his creditors.

[197]*197It was held in Matter of Cager,

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101 Misc. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-construction-of-the-last-will-testament-of-briggs-nysurct-1917.