In re the Estate of Cronise

167 Misc. 310, 6 N.Y.S.2d 392, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1218
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 167 Misc. 310 (In re the Estate of Cronise) 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 Estate of Cronise, 167 Misc. 310, 6 N.Y.S.2d 392, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1218 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

Feely, S.

In this final judicial settlement of the account of the executor, several matters are to be determined, mainly, the apportionment of the estate or death taxes laid both by the Federal government and by the State of New York; and next the allocation of certain disbursements of the executor as between the life beneficiary and the residuary legatees.

Testatrix was domiciled in Rochester, N. Y., where she made her last will on April 2, 1933, and died on the eighteenth of the next August. After the will had been probated in this court, it was re-probated in Stockton, Cal., where testatrix also bad both real and personal property. Her last will was that her debts and funeral expenses be paid; and also $5,000 be given to Mills College for a scholarship. By the third paragraph she gave to her sister, Mrs. Eliza F. H. Middlecoff, now by marriage, Mrs. Emery, of Stockton, Cal., “ all real estate owned by me situate in the State of California; ” and by the next paragraph to the same sister there was given “ as her absolute property all my personal effects such as jewelry, clothing, household furniture and all other articles of domestic and personal use.” These personal effects lay in Rochester, N. Y. The general residue of her estate was given to Security Trust Company, in trust,

“ (a) to collect and receive the rent, issues, income and profits thereof, and after paying 1 herefrom all lawful dues and expenses in respect thereof, the pay the net income thereof to my said sister, Eliza F. H. Middlecoff, in monthly payments as long as she shall live; and

(b) on the death of my said sister, the corpus, with any unpaid net income to ” two named nephews, who are the children of the life beneficiary, and are residents of the State of California.

1. There is nothing else in the will that bears on the matter of allocation or apportionment.

“ The general rule, as shown by Surrogate Wingate in Matter of Shepard (136 Misc. 218) is to charge principal only with such expenses as tend to enhance the value of the principal of the trust, while income must bear all ordinary expenses connected with the continuance of the property in substantially its existing state; and this is especially so where the will gives only the ‘ net ’ income. (See, also, Matter of Lichtenstein, Rochester Daily Record of July 11, 1932.)

[313]*313“ In other words, Mr. H. W. Jessup summarizes the rule by saying that expenditures to protect the integrity of the corpus, to avert wastage, etc., are charged to principal; but those made to assure productivity, or for ordinary administration costs are charged to income.”

In Matter of Brewster (148 Misc. 390, 392), from which the foregoing summary of the rules is copied, the same distinction is also expressed by referring to one class as items made to assure productivity, but to the other class as items of a structural or defensive character.

The facts bearing on the allocation of outlays, other than for death or estate taxes, are undisputed. The homestead is a large, spacious house, on a large city lot, in a somewhat central section of this city and in a neighborhood that has changed from a fine residential section to one of a boarding house and professional office class; and at death of testatrix was not the kind of a house that could be let to an ordinary family. This real property is valued at $15,000. Despite the executor’s efforts, the house was neither sold nor leased, except that the fife tenant was in occupancy of it from November 1, 1933, till December twentieth following; and thereafter it stood idle until October, 1935, when it was let at a rental that hardly meets the carrying charges. The expense of fitting up the property for this tenant is one of the items in question.

In the meantime, the executor paid a caretaker to watch the property and keep the yard and walks in condition; and in the house there were living for a time, for the purpose of caring for the house and its contents, a maid and a sister-in-law of the testatrix, for whom food, etc., was supplied by the executor until the arrival here of the life beneficiary. These outlays kept the property in good condition, and protected it from the dangers to which vacant houses are nowadays exposed, especially when filled, as this house was, with furniture, etc., of the appraised value of $5,612 (New York tax deposition), which had been specifically bequeathed to the life beneficiary as the latter’s absolute property. This movable property the executor could as well have put into a public storage warehouse at the charge of the specific legatee. On the basis of the value of the lot and house alone at about $15,000, and this specific legacy at $5,612, one-fourth of these caretaking charges, with insurance premiums on personalty, should be borne by the specific legatee, and the remaining three-fourths should be apportioned between the life beneficiary and the residuary legatees in such ratio as the value of the fife estate bears to that of the residuary, because to that extent a common benefit was derived therefrom by both parties in interest. A like apportionment should be made [314]*314of the expense of caretaking (other than fire insurance) from the time the life beneficiary moved out, taking the personal property with her, until the present tenant was found in October, 1935. The city and county taxes that became liens before the death of testatrix for ordinary purposes other than for local improvements, must be borne wholly by the residuary legatees, but those that became hens after the death of testatrix fall entirely to the charge of the life beneficiary under the provision of the will giving her only “ net ” income.

On September 14,1933, a plumbing bill of six dollars was incurred, which was paid December 13, 1933. This appears to have been an ordinary repair. The fact that it was the culmination of wear that probably was given it mainly in the lifetime of the testatrix does not lessen the obligation of the fife beneficiary, now that the latter has accepted benefits- under the will, from bearing the whole of this charge, as she is deemed to have accepted the condition of the property as it was on the date of the death of the testatrix. No authority for apportionment of any such repair charge has come to the attention of this court.

Most of the other outlay in question arose out of the fitting up of the large outmoded family residence so that it could be used as a boarding house. In this adaptation, the making of a new bathroom was required in addition to the existing two; and $22 was laid- out on a partition, $10 on resetting a door, and $100.63 for decoration afi er these changes. The plumber’s bill for the fixtures installed in this new bathroom, with ventilation, amounts to $233. As the only call in this neighborhood is for a lay-out suitable either for boarding house purposes or for the offices of medical or dental doctors, this adaptation was necessary rather than optional, and was designed to “ assure productivity,” and at the same time it consisted of a permanent addition to the structure of the house; and the cost should be apportioned.

The same is true of the bill of thirty-five dollars spent to run a new pipe line from the heater to the old front bathroom on the second floor, which never before had been heated, except by the seepage from adjoining rooms.

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Bluebook (online)
167 Misc. 310, 6 N.Y.S.2d 392, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-cronise-nysurct-1937.