In re the Estate of Hunt

3 Mills Surr. 79, 38 Misc. 30, 76 N.Y.S. 968
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMay 15, 1902
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Mills Surr. 79 (In re the Estate of Hunt) 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 Hunt, 3 Mills Surr. 79, 38 Misc. 30, 76 N.Y.S. 968 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1902).

Opinion

Heaton,S.

S.— Proceeding for a compulsory accounting of Ruth Hunt, as executrix of the will of Thomas Hunt, deceased, and proceeding for voluntary accounting by such executrix. Motion to dismiss the petition for compulsory .accunting and to strike out the objections to the voluntary account on the ground that Ira Gifford and Allen Rathbun, petitioners and objectors, are not persons interested in the estate of Thomas Hunty deceased.

The determination of this motion calls for a construction of the will of Thomas Hunt, which is as follows:

[80]*80“ The last will and testament of Thomas Hunt, late of the town of Pitts town, County of Rensselaer and State of Hew York.
I Thomas Hunt for my last will and testament provide as follows, after my funeral expenses and the debts I may justly owe at the time of my decease are paid I give and bequeath to my wife Ruth Hunt the income of all my estate, both real and personal wheresoever it may be situated or located, and us much of the principal as she thinks proper for her support, and for the eare which she shall give to our son Ohauncey, with the privilege to dispose of the real estate if my wife thinks best to do so, and upon the decease of my said wife, I give such rest, residue and remainder to Ira Gifford and Allen Rathbun in trust, to use all the income and as much of the principal as they think best for the support, maintenance and care of my son Ohauncey for and during his natural life in his usual way of living with good and comfortable clothes and good and wholesome food. Upon the decease of my said son Ohauncey, if my said wife shall have been deceased, I give and bequeath all of my estate as follows: To my brother-in-law Ira Gifford and my nephew Allen Rathbun share and share alike, and I further provide that in case either of my said trustees should have died during the lifetime of my said son Ohauncey that the share in my estate which would have been paid him shall be paid to his children share and share alike.
Lastly, I nominate and appoint my wife Ruth Hunt executrix of this my last will and testament as long as she shall live and upon her decease, I appoint my said brother-in-law Ira Gifford and my said nephew Allen Rathbun executors of the said fund so above bequeathed and trustees, hereby revoking all former wills by me made.
In Witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 18th day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-eight.
Thomas Hunt.”

[81]*81(Here follows the attestation clause.)

Thomas Hunt died November 22, 1889, leaving his widow Ruth the executrix and one son Chauncey who was at that time and now is mentally incompetent. He left upwards of $40,000 of personal estate and a farm. Ruth Hunt, the executrix, is about eighty-seven years of age. Mr. Hunt was a farmer living upon his farm in the town of Pittstown in this county. Ruth Hunt and her son Chauncey have continued to live in the homestead since Thomas Hunt’s death.

The executrix has filed her account in which she fails to charge herself with any income from the real or personal estate of deceased, and in which she credits herself with taxes and a stated amount per year for her support, and the support, of her son Chauncey, .amounting in the aggregate to $26,993.84, which is deducted from the principal of the estate, thereby reducing it to $16,226.32. She claims that the will gives her all income absolutely as her own separate property and permits and authorizes her to charge against the corpus of the estate the taxes and such a, gross sum for her support and for the care of Chauncey as she shall think proper to charge. Although she has voluntarily .accounted in the manner above indicated, yet upon this argument her position has been that the correct construction of the will would give her absolutely all of the testate of her husband without restriction or limitation. On the other side it is contended that Mrs. Hunt has a life estate, with ,a conditional power of disposal of the corpus, limited to her comfortable support and that of the son Chauncey, and that she should charge herself with all income received and should be credited with such expenditures as she has actually made, conceding that if such payments exceed the income the principal of the fund may be invaded.

The intention of the testator must prevail, provided it be consistent with the rules of law. Was it testator’s intention to provide for his wife alone, and to that end give her abso[82]*82lutely Ms entire estate, real and personal ? Decidedly not, for the whole plan of and thought expressed in the will reaches beyond the enrichment of his wife at the expense of his unfortunate son. More than two hundred words are used in the will providing for the support and care of his wife and son, while twenty words would have been sufficient to have vested in her absolutely ,all his estate. It needs no argument to show that testator’s one thought in making his will was to properly provide out of his abundant means for the comfortable support of his aged wife and incompetent son, a son deprived by nature of the ability to .assist his mother in her declining years, or to safely adfminister the property, wMch under other circumstances, might naturally have been expected to have become his.

The force of the argument for an absolute bequest is not increased by saying that the father would trust a mother’s love to provide in her own way and in her own time for the care and support of her son out of the property thus absolutely given ' to her. Such reasoning would make necessary a will by her of the same nature as, and which could accomplish no more than, the will which the father was making. It was not. his intention to give his entire estate' to his wife and to leave her mother’s love to provide for his son; but on the contrary the love of the husband and father, the natural protector of both wife and incompetent son, manifested itself in a will made by himself in accordance with his own ideas of his duty to both, of which duty, the very act of making a sure and wise provision for their future himself and not leaving it to another, was certainly an important part. But it is argued that he did indirectly what it is apparent he had no intention of doing directly; that he gave his wife absolutely .all the income of his estate, and then directed that she be permitted to absorb all the principal of the estate by charging against such principal all taxes and any arbitrary sum yearly which she might think proper for her support and for the care which she might give [83]*83Chauncey. The will does not indicate such an intention. It will not be assumed that Thomas Hunt attempted to do with his own property by subterfuge what he did not intend to do openly. The very strongest intention shown by the will iu that not only should the widow be provided for but that the son should not, when he lost the care of a loving mother, also lose income and principal, which would furnish him support and maintenance during his natural life in his usual way of living with good and comfortable clothes and good and wholesome food.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Mills Surr. 79, 38 Misc. 30, 76 N.Y.S. 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-hunt-nysurct-1902.