In Re the Estate of Hayes

188 N.E. 716, 263 N.Y. 219, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 1263
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 188 N.E. 716 (In Re the Estate of Hayes) 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 Estate of Hayes, 188 N.E. 716, 263 N.Y. 219, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 1263 (N.Y. 1934).

Opinion

Htjbbs, J.

Ellen Hayes, a spinster, evidently of advanced years, died on October 27, 1930. Three days before her death she dictated a last will and testament to Louise Seymour Brown, who was a beneficiary under the will.

It is evident that testatrix was highly educated but that she lacked familiarity with the precise meaning of legal terms. The opinion of the learned Surrogate and briefs of counsel deal at length with assumed interests and activities of deceased, intended to explain the purpose of the distribution of her property, and of certain requests made in her will. These matters are entirely apart from the record before us and may not be considered.

The Surrogate decided that the appellant Hays took under the will an absolute beneficial estate in all of the remainder not specifically devised or bequeathed. The Appellate Division reversed, made new findings and decided that the attempted devise and bequest to Hays referred only to the balance remaining in the fund referred to in subdivision (a) paragraph Y of the will hereafter *222 quoted and that subdivision (d) of that paragraph attempted to set up a trust which was void and, therefore, that the testatrix died intestate as to the balance of such fund and also as to certain other bank balances not mentioned in the will. Paragraph V reads as follows: " V. (a) From the fund above mentioned in charge of the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company, I desire my executor, Stanley Wolcott Hayes, to administer two thousand dollars ($2,000) to each of my sisters, Anna Hayes Hollister and Mariquita Hayes Wallace in payments of two hundred dollars ($200) each per annum per person.

"(b) One thousand dollars ($1,000) outright payment to the Free Press Association, Ltd., 628 Johnson’s Court, Fleet Street, London. This to be paid in one flat sum to the treasurer of the F. P. A.

"(c) One thousand dollars ($1,000) to the Free-thought Press Association, 250 West 54th Street, New York.

"(d) Any remainder after these bequests have been made, I leave to Arthur Garfield Hays to use at his discretion in promoting the ends of justice.”

The first question for determination is what the testatrix intended to convey to Hays by subdivision (d) of paragraph V. The second is whether subdivision (d) constituted an absolute gift of the property intended to be conveyed or was it an attempt to create a trust which is void.

In deciding those questions, our primary purpose must be to ascertain from the will the intent of the testatrix. Adjudicated cases are of little assistance. Each will is a law unto itself.

It is apparent from the reading of the will that testatrix was what is known as a radical, a liberal or free thinker, and she is so referred to in the briefs of counsel. In her will she left to a physician at a State hospital full charge of her brain and body; one thousand dollars to the Free Press Association, Ltd., of London; one thousand dollars *223 to the Freethought Press Association of New York, and she willed upon certain conditions the income of a fund to the Vineyard Shore School for Women Workers in Industry, also certain real property and provided that no man should occupy for residence any domestic building upon the property. She stated in the will that she did not wish any funeral services, music or flowers, but that she would like it “if the students will sing one stanza of the International,” and she directed that she should be buried in “the cheapest and plainest wooden box.”

Her nearest surviving relatives were a brother and asters. To her relatives she willed only a small portion of her estate. It is apparent that they were not thfc. special objects of her bounty.

The intended trust as found by the Appellate Division includes only the amount on deposit as represented by bank books found in the safe deposit box of the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company. It was so limited by treating the clause marked (d) in the will as referring only to the fund mentioned in the clause marked V (a).

The question presented is whether in the mechanical process of paragraphing and numbering the paragraphs of the will, there is evidenced an intent on the part of the testatrix to limit the effect of clause (d) to the fund mentioned in V (a). The holding that such an intent is evidenced by the numbering and designation of the paragraphs of the will is to assume an intent on the part of the testatrix to leave a large portion of her estate undisposed of by the will.

In this connection, it should be noted that she requested her executor, who is not the beneficiary named under clause (d), “ to faithfully administer this my estate according to my obvious wishes. ’ ’ Nothing makes obvious her wishes beyond the expressed terms of the will. In the construction of the will we are confronted by the question which of two canons of interpretation should be applied, namely, whether that construction should *224 be given to the will which avoids intestacy as to any part of her estate or as to whether that construction shall be given which avoids the exclusion of testatrix’s next of kin from participation in the estate.

As to the competency of testatrix, no question is raised. That she was an educated, intelligent woman, with a clear conception of the nature of her property and of the relationship to her of certain of her next of kin is evident from the will. She did dispose of a portion of her estate by gifts to next of kin. Is it to be presumed that she did not appreciate that there were others who were of her next of kin, or realizing that there were such others, that she purposely left a portion of her estate undisposed of that next of kin generally, including those specifically named, should share in such residue?

The fact that she made bequests to certain next of kin indicates that such provision was all that she intended that they should receive of her estate. To permit them to share to a greater extent as next of kin in her estate would be contrary to her intent as expressed in the will, and would tend to defeat rather than further the ‘ obvious wishes ” of testatrix.

It requires no elimination of words to construe paragraph V (d) as intended to embrace her entire residuary estate. On the contrary, there must be read into the clause the words “ from the fund above mentioned in charge of the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company ” in order to assume an intent to limit the gift there provided to the remainder of a certain fund rather than to make it inclusive of the residue of her personal estate after satisfaction of the specific bequests. All real property not specifically devised was directed to be sold and added to her personal property.

The construction adopted by the Surrogate makes the will a complete instrument and avoids intestacy as to any part of the estate. It seems to us that was the intent of the testatrix. In that conclusion we are aided *225 by the presumption that testatrix who had taken the trouble to make a will did not intend to dispose of only a small part of her estate and to die intestate as to a major part thereof. (Hadcox v. Cody, 213 N. Y. 570; Schult v.

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Bluebook (online)
188 N.E. 716, 263 N.Y. 219, 1934 N.Y. LEXIS 1263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-hayes-ny-1934.