In re the Estate of Gardner

4 Misc. 2d 435, 158 N.Y.S.2d 403, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1357
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 Misc. 2d 435 (In re the Estate of Gardner) 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 Gardner, 4 Misc. 2d 435, 158 N.Y.S.2d 403, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1357 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1956).

Opinion

William T. Collins, S.

The testator bequeathed his residuary estate in trust to pay the income therefrom to three named children for the lives of two named grandchildren. The will provides: " upon the death of my said two granddaughters, to render and pay over the principal of such trust fund to my children Esther Weinstein, Edith Epstein and Herman Gardner in equal shares and parts, and to the then living issue of the said Esther Weinstein, Edith Epstein and Herman Gardner, if any of my said children be then deceased, per stirpes and not per capita.”

The three children survived the testator but now are dead. The two granddaughters are living. The trustee asks for a determination that the trust ended upon the death of the last survivor of the testator’s children and the trust remainder then became distributable to the persons then constituting the issue, per stirpes, of the children.

The lawyer unfamiliar with the multitude of decisions applying the rule against unlawful suspension of the power of alienation dictates his clients’ wills with the abandon of the uninitiate while the legal practitioner familiar with many of the decisions is abashed at the ingenuity of the judicial mind in its struggle to sustain the testator’s purpose despite deficiencies and even legal inadequacies in a testamentary instrument. The unavoidable consequence of the salvaging of wills has been that statutory law, at first reading appearing readily comprehensible, has been complicated in the mind of the practitioner to the point of distortion. In some of the minor skirmishes in the battle against intestacy victory over the rule against perpetuities has been accomplished by the device of the natural term.

In Provost v. Provost (70 N. Y. 141) the court construed a direction by the testator to pay the entire income of his real estate to his widow until all of his children should be of full age and at that time to divide the property among his widow and children. The testator was survived by his widow and nine [437]*437children, three of whom were infants. The court found that the testator had created a trust solely for the benefit of his widow and for her life only and inasmuch as upon her death the trust purposes would have been fully accomplished, the trust then would terminate unless terminated at an earlier date by the contingency explicitly provided for in the will, namely, the attainment of majority by the three infant children. The resultant finding was that the testator had not suspended the power of alienation beyond a single life in existence at the time of the trust’s creation.

Crooke v. County of Kings (97 N. Y. 421) was an action in ejectment which presented a problem of will construction inasmuch as the source of title to the property was a decedent who had devised the property in trust with the income payable to her daughter for the latter’s life and remainder to her children in the event the daughter failed to exercise a power of disposition in her lifetime or at her death. The daughter died without having disposed of the property by grant but in her will she bequeathed all of her property in trust for the life of her husband with the income payable for the education, support and maintenance of her children and the remainder to the children and their heirs. The trustee was granted a power of sale, which he exercised, and the litigation was between the children of the daughter and the grantee of her trustee. Although the trust created by the daughter was measured explicitly on a single life, that of her husband, parties to the litigation raised a question as to the trust’s validity principally because of the seemingly irrelevant fact that the beneficiaries of the trust, the daughter’s children, were nine in number. The court deemed it necessary to discuss the trust’s validity at length. Recognizing the fact, even at that time well accepted, that a trust’s duration need not be measured by the life of the beneficiary the court said (pp. 439^440): “ That is, a trust dependent upon lives, as beneficial objects, need not necessarily be dependent upon the same lives for its duration. The two things are inherently different, and yet, when both enter into the constitution of the trust, they affect and modify each other, and together dictate the extreme limit of the trust. The natural term, which is the lives of all the beneficiaries, and the stipulated term, which is the close of the selected and designated lives, may either, taken separately, work out an unlawful trust; while construed together and in combination, as they should be, they bring the trust within the requirements of the statute. The natural term alone might make the trust last beyond the lawful extent of two lives in being. The stipulated term alone might go beyond the [438]*438lives of the beneficiaries, but the two combined and made elements of the trust, in its creation, effect a lawful duration, and limit the trust to the stipulated term, unless before it is reached the natural term expires, or to the natural term unless before it is reached the stipulated term expires. Unless the language of the will creating the trust imperatively forbids, where both terms are present as elements of the creation, it must be construed to run for the natural term, except as shortened by the stipulated term; or for the stipulated term except as shortened by the natural term. In the present case, the trust created is limited for its beneficial objects, and so for its natural term upon the nine lives of the children, which would violate the statute by an unlawful suspension; but the trouble is corrected and made harmless by the presence also of a stipulated term, the one life of the trustee, beyond which the natural term is not allowed to run, and which in turn is itself modified so that it cannot carry the trust beyond the natural term. The trust can outrun neither.”

Kahn v. Tierney (135 App. Div. 897, affd. 201 1ST. Y. 516) involved a trust direction that income be paid to a designated person for the use and benefit of her five children, each of whom was to receive a portion of the trust principal upon attaining majority. The testatrix directed that upon the expiration of five years from the attainment of majority by the youngest child, or from that child’s death if it should occur earlier, the then remaining principal be paid to the mother of the children or her heirs. Following Crooke v. County of Kings (supra) the Appellate Division found that the will fixed three stipulated terms for the life of the trust, namely, the life of the mother of the five children, the time elapsing until the youngest child reached 26 years of age, and the life of such child. The court concluded that in no event could the trust extend beyond the lives of the mother and her youngest child and consequently an invalid suspension had not been directed in the will. The court went on to say that the trust would sooner terminate in the event of the death of all of the children in their mother’s lifetime. The affirmance by the Court of Appeals of the result reached below was without opinion. More recent decisions distinguishing’ between the natural term of a trust and its stipulated term are Matter of Simon (60 N. Y. S. 2d 539, revd. on another point 271 App. Div. 1006), Matter of Fischer (87 N. Y. S. 2d 324) and Matter of Gordon (103 N. Y. S. 2d 530).

Each of the cited cases was concerned with the initial validity of a trust and not with tbe interpretations or construction of a trust accepted as fundamentally valid. These decisions enunci[439]

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Related

In re the Construction of the Will of Gardner
12 A.D.2d 477 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1960)
In re the Accounting of Thorne
9 Misc. 2d 126 (New York Supreme Court, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Misc. 2d 435, 158 N.Y.S.2d 403, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-gardner-nysurct-1956.