In re the Estate of Healey

161 Misc. 298, 291 N.Y.S. 772, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1534
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 161 Misc. 298 (In re the Estate of Healey) 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 Healey, 161 Misc. 298, 291 N.Y.S. 772, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1534 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

Although the question here presented is nominally one of testamentary construction, the real issue concerns the validity and effect of a certain agreement executed on April 4, 1916. Shorn of superfluities, the question is, in essence, propounded as to whether a competent adult person who voluntarily enters into an agreement, untainted by fraud or undue influence, and receives and enjoys the material consideration provided therein for upwards of a score of years, may, at the end of that time, repudiate the agreement and be relieved of the obligations therein assumed by him without a return of the consideration which he received.

Jacob F. Healey died on August 8, 1915, survived by four adult daughters and an adult son as his sole heirs at law and next of kin. His will, which was admitted to probate in this court on September 4, 1915, directed that substantially his entire estate be erected into a series of trusts for his daughters. He bequeathed a legacy of $1,000 to the son and directed the cancellation of all evidences of indebtedness of the latter, stating that they should be considered advancements to him. The testator elucidated the reasons motivating this manner of disposition of his estate, stating in the ninth item of the will: I am not unmindful of my son Frank F. Healey, and I do not exclude him through any ill feeling or feeling of displeasure with him, but for the reason that I have already made substantial advancements to him, and I wish especially to care for the welfare of my daughters and the survivors or survivor of them.”

[300]*300In spite of this elucidation of the parental wish, the son felt aggrieved at the terms of the will and seriously contemplated the institution of an action for the revocation of its probate. Negotiations between the parties looking to an amicable settlement of the controversy ensued and these culminated in an agreement bearing date the 4th day of April, 1916, which was duly executed, acknowledged and delivered by the son, the four daughters and the executors of the estate. By this instrument the son, in return for the sum of $5,975, then paid to and received by him, released all claims or causes of action for the revocation of probate or to determine the validity of the will, and accepted the sum thus paid him in full of all claims against the estate with a single exception, which read as follows: This agreement is made with the understanding on the part of all of the parties hereto that in case the said Frank F. Healey should survive all of his sisters, he would be entitled to a one-fifth (1/5) interest in that part of the said Jacob F. Healey’s estate which was undisposed of by the said will, and it is not intended by this agreement that he shall release any interest which might come to him through the happening of such contingency, but that in case that contingency shall happen and the said Frank F. Healey does survive all of his said sisters, he shall be entitled to the same share in the undisposed of property belonging to the estate which he would have received had this agreement not been made, the said Five thousand nine hundred seventy-five Dollars paid out of the estate to him under this agreement to be charged against him as a payment on account of any amount which may become payable to him upon the happening of the said contingency, but interest shall not be charged against him on said sum of Five thousand nine hundred seventy-five dollars in applying the same upon the share which may become payable to him under such circumstances.” (Italics not in original.)

The contingency envisaged in the exception has eventuated. Frank F. Healey survived all his sisters and, by reason of a failure of the dispositive directions of the will, the remainder of the trust erected by its sixth item passes as intestate property. The value of this remainder, exclusive of deductions to be made for trustee’s commissions and the expenses of this proceeding, amounts to $11,414.09. In other words, were it not for the last quoted provisions of the agreement of the parties, Frank F. Healey, on the termination of the trust, would have been entitled to receive $2,282.82, less a pro rata amount for commissions and expenses, or a concrete sum of somewhere between $1,500 and $2,000.

It is this sum which is the subject-matter of the litigation, all parties, with the exception of the widow and adult sons of Frank [301]*301F. Healey who died subsequent to the filing of the account, contending that by virtue of the terms of the agreement, Frank and those standing in his position are entitled to receive nothing since the charge of the $5,975 paid him more than exceeds this intestate share, and the latter asserting that the agreement is void and not binding upon them in this regard. They do not tender a return of the $5,975 which Frank admittedly received in return for his engagements, but assert their right to treat the agreement as void, to retain the financial consideration received thereunder and to receive this contested sum in addition.

It is unquestionable that as to the remainder of this trust the testator died intestate. As a result, each of his five children received a right to one-fifth of the distributable amount as of the date of their father’s death in 1915, with the time of payment thereof alone postponed. As this interest did not involve real property, it was merely a chose in action or personal right which except for transfers or quasi-transfers thereof by him, was at all times to the date of his death owned by Frank F. Healey, and passed to his personal representatives on his death. (Petersen v. Chemical Bank, 32 N. Y. 21, 45; Blood v. Kane, 130 id. 514, 517; Leitch v. Wells, 48 id. 585, 595; Wickenheiser v. Colonial Bank, 168 App. Div. 329, 333; affd., 224 N. Y. 651; Milliner v. Morris, 219 App. Div. 425, 427; Matter of White, 136 Misc. 631, 633; Matter of Booth, 139 id. 253, 254; Matter of Burstein, 153 id. 515, 517.) His statutory distributees never can possess any direct right therein, and his personal representative may receive it only in the same plight as that in which it existed in his hands at the moment of death. (Matter of Guarneri, 149 Misc. 759, 762, 763.)

It follows that there is no merit whatsoever in the contention of the statutory distributees of Frank that he was without power to deal with their interests in this intestate remainder. The answer to the position is twofold, namely, first, that even if Frank had never dealt with this remainder these objectants could never have possessed any interest therein as such; and second, such acts as he performed were in respect to his own absolute and unconditioned property in which no other person could acquire any rights whatsoever except as they were received through him.

The question thereupon resolves itself wholly into one of whether Frank, if now living, would now be permitted to receive one-fifth of this remainder sum, which is less than $5,975, in spite of his express and unequivocal agreement (italicized above) that the sum received by him under the agreement should be considered as a payment to him of his share of such remainder interest up to the face amount of such payment without interest.

[302]

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Bluebook (online)
161 Misc. 298, 291 N.Y.S. 772, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-healey-nysurct-1936.