In re the Estate of Gatehouse

149 Misc. 648, 267 N.Y.S. 808, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1728
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 149 Misc. 648 (In re the Estate of Gatehouse) 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 Gatehouse, 149 Misc. 648, 267 N.Y.S. 808, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1728 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

The present proceeding raises again the frequently litigated question of testamentary interpretation, as to whether, on a gift for support and maintenance, the private resources of the beneficiary shall be taken into consideration in determining the amount properly payable to him for this purpose from the funds of the estate. An examination of reported cases on the subject indicates that this question is one of growing interest, since it has been raised almost as many times in the last decade as during the entire preceding period of New York legal history.

[649]*649In the case at bar, the testator, by the fourteenth ” item of his will, gave the residue of his estate to his executors and trustees with directions “ To pay the entire income therefrom to my wife, Kathryn H. Gatehouse, for and during her natural life, and should the income prove insufficient to maintain my wife in her accustomed style of living, then I direct my Trustees in their discretion to apply from the principal so much as may be necessary to maintain my wife in her accustomed style of living. I further direct my Trustees to pay from the principal all necessary expenses incurred for hospital or medical attention or other extraordinary expenses that may be necessary for the care and comfort of my wife. In the event of any unforeseen or unexpected emergency that will require additional funds for the necessary care of my wife, I authorize and direct my Trustees, or either of them, in their discretion, to make such payment as to them or either of them may seem best. It is my intention to amply provide for the care and comfort of my wife and the discretion given to my Trustees is to be used by them in a broad sense, and I hereby expressly relieve them or either of them from the necessity of accounting to any person except my wife for the exercise of their discretion.

Two. Upon the death of my wife, should any of the principal then remain, I give, devise and bequeath the principal and all accrued and unpaid income to those who at that time shall constitute my next of kin according to the intestate laws of the State of New York.”

It will be observed that the direction for the benefit of the wife is naturally divisible into three parts:

First. For her ordinary maintenance, for which object the entire income is given with the further provision that “ should the income prove insufficient to maintain my wife in her accustomed style of living, then * * * to apply from the principal so much as may be necessary to maintain my wife in her accustomed style of living.”

Second. “All necessary expenses ” connected with illness “ that may be necessary ” are to be paid from principal; and

Third. Expenses arising by reason of any unforeseen emergency “ that will require additional funds for the necessary care of my wife ” are also to be paid, obviously, from principal.

Whereas the second and third directions in the foregoing enumeration are important as throwing light upon the general testamentary intent, the present litigation is concerned solely with the first.

At the time of the executorial accounting in 1929, a question . having arisen in respect to the annual sum necessary to maintain the beneficiary in her accustomed style of living, the matter was [650]*650fully litigated and such sum was fixed at $3,600 a year, which, in view of the income of the trust at that time, involved an annual invasion of principal to the extent of $740.

It has now been made to appear that the widow has remarried, with consequent obligation upon her present husband to support and maintain her (De Brauwere v. De Brauwere, 203 N. Y. 460, 464; Finkelstein v. Finkelstein, 174 App. Div. 416, 419), and it is contended that by reason of this fact, further payments for this purpose from the estate of her first husband are improper.

This position is contested by the cestui que trust for two reasons, first, on the ground that the terms of the will absolutely entitle her to support, and second, that her second husband has fallen on evil days and is unable to maintain her. If her first contention were to be overruled, an issue of fact would be presented for trial on the second, but if the first position is sound, the second is immaterial.

Under ordinary circumstances, as has been pointed out on innumerable occasions, particular precedents are substantially valueless in testamentary interpretation. (Matter of Rossiter, 134 Misc. 837, 839; affd., 229 App. Div. 730; affd., 254 N. Y. 583; Matter of Weissmann, 137 Misc. 113,114; affd., 232 App. Div. 698; Matter of McCafferty, 142 Misc. 371, 373; affd., 236 App. Div. 678; Matter of Hopner, 148 Misc. 748, 750; Matter of Burling, Id. 835, 837.) In the present instance, however, the paucity of possible variations in testamentary language in this regard arouses interest in previous adjudications respecting the subject. Of the twenty-five most frequently cited decisions of New York courts bearing on the question, seventeen have determined that the private sources of support of the beneficiary have no bearing upon bis rights in a testamentary gift for that purpose, five have reached contrary results, and in one, dicta pro and con are to be found in the respective decisions of the Appellate Division and of the surrogate, the modification by the Court of Appeals being inconclusive on the question.

The first pertinent decision in chronological order is that of Stewart v. Cuyler (17 Barb. 482), written in 1854. While no will was there in question, it is obvious that the intent of the parties to the transaction amounted substantially to a testamentary disposition.

Defendants gave plaintiff a bond which recited that the latter had loaned the former substantially her entire possessions upon which she was compelled to rely for support; its condition was that interest on the principal sum should be paid her quarterly and also, such principal sums of $100 on ten days’ notice, as the said Nancy may need and shall require to be paid for her comfortable [651]*651support and maintenance.” On her death any remaining principal was to be paid to specified persons.

In a suit upon the bond it was shown that she had demanded a $100 payment for her support which defendants had failed to pay. The latter offered to show that she did not need or require any portion of the principal for her comfortable support and maintenance. In sustaining a refusal to receive this evidence, the court said (at p. 487): “ If she had other means, she was not bound to resort to them.”

The first genuine testamentary case involving this subject arose before the Court of Appeals in 1865 in Forman v. Whitney (2 Abb. Dec. 163). There the will gave the widow for fife the interest of $3,000, “or so much of said interest as my executors may deem necessary, for her comfort.” It was shown, that she was being supported by her son under an enforcible agreement. It was held that she was entitled- to the entire income, the court saying (at p. 166) that she was entitled “ to possess those nameless currents of enjoyment which take their rise in the assurance of money in the pocket and more to come.”

In Freeman v. Coit (27 Hun, 447; affd., 96 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
149 Misc. 648, 267 N.Y.S. 808, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-gatehouse-nysurct-1933.