In re the Estate of James

22 Misc. 2d 1062, 123 N.Y.S.2d 520, 1953 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1427
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 16, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 2d 1062 (In re the Estate of James) 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 James, 22 Misc. 2d 1062, 123 N.Y.S.2d 520, 1953 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1427 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1953).

Opinion

George Frankenthaler, S.

The respondents James Foundation of New York, Inc., and the individuals acting as trustees thereof, move to dismiss the cross petitions of three other respondents in this construction proceeding on the ground that the pleadings fail to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. (Bules Civ. Prac., rule 106.) A similar motion directed against the petition was heretofore denied (119 N. Y. S. 2d 259). It is conceded that the reasoning of that decision applies to the present motion insofar as respondents Christodora House and First Presbyterian Church of the City of New York are concerned. The motion is, therefore, denied with respect to these two cross petitioners.

The remaining cross petitioner is National Board of the Young Women’s Christian Association of the U. S. A. (sometimes referred to as Y. W. C. A.). Unlike the petitioner and the other cross petitioners, Y. W. C. A. is not named in the will. It is described in the main petition only as one ‘ claiming an interest under Paragraph Ninth of [the] Will”. The first portion of paragraph ninth deals with approximately one half of the income and its division and distribution among the 17 named charities. With respect to the remaining income, the will provides: “It is my further wish and desire that, as to the remaining income from principal funds available to said foundation for distribution, the trustees or directors of said foundation shall devote the same, from time to time, to furthering the work of institutions organized solely for charitable, religious or educational purposes of the same general character of those hereinabove designated.” One of the institutions chosen pur[1064]*1064suant to this authority was Y. W. C. A. Between 1943 and 1948 it received substantial amounts each year. In 1949 and thereafter the Foundation made no payments of any kind to this charity.

The cross petition alleges that the “ discontinuance of annual income payments to respondent by the Foundation was arbitrary, unjustified and capricious and upon information and belief was designed to penalize respondent for having acted in conjunction with other aggrieved parties to compel the Foundation to disgorge large sums of money wrongfully obtained by the Foundation from the estate of Arthur Curtiss James at the expense of the estate of Harriet Par-sons James (wife of Arthur Curtiss James) and the legatees under her will of which respondent, National Board Y. W. C. A. was one.” It asks that the will be construed to determine the share of income and principal to which it has been, is and will be entitled and the area within which the Foundation may exercise discretion to discontinue payments to an institution theretofore selected by it as one “ organized solely for charitable, religious or educational purposes of the same general character as those # * * designated ’ ’ in the will.

The presence of the cross petitioner is not necessary for the complete determination of the questions raised by the petition. Although the cross petitioner states that it is joining in the prayer of the petition for a construction of the will, the question of construction which it attempts to raise is quite different from those presented by the petition and by the other cross petitions. There the primary issue is whether the provisions relating to payments to certain named charities are mandatory or merely precatory and, if mandatory, the second question is whether the Foundation has a limited or a broad discretion to discontinue payments. Here there can be no question of any mandate in the will to make a disbursement of income to Y. W. C. A. This cross petitioner will, therefore, have no interest in the primary question presented by the other petitions.

At first glance the cross petition of Y. W. C. A. would appear to present the same issue as is raised by the petition respecting discontinuance of payments. The cross petition alleges that by virtue of the payment of income for six consecutive years, Y. W. C. A. acquired a right to receive income and principal just as if named in the will and ‘ ‘ that the discretionary power to discontinue payments may be exercised only when the trustees of the Foundation find as a fact that the status of a beneficiary has so changed, and so -changed its charitable, religious and educational purposes, as to justify such discontinuance.” [1065]*1065However, the text of the will quoted in the cross petition explicitly refers to the ‘ ‘ authority of the board of directors or trustees of the proposed foundation to discontinue distributions to any of the institutions hereinabove specified in this paragraph ninth of my said will.” (Emphasis added.) This cross petitioner is not one of the institutions “ hereinabove specified ” in the will.

The cross petitioner, therefore, has no interest in any of the questions of construction presented by the petitioner or by the other cross petitioners. Its status is in reality that of an independent petitioner who seeks to raise new and different questions of construction. It must satisfy the court that it is a “ person interested in obtaining a determination as to the * * * construction or effect of any disposition of property contained ’ ’ in this will (Surrogate’s Ct. Act, § 145).

In weighing the arguments of the contending parties, we must bear in mind the difference between a proceeding to construe a will and a proceeding to enforce a charitable trust.

In the construction advanced in its formal pleading, the cross petitioner claims that when the trustees of the Foundation exercised the power to select charitable institutions to receive portions of the income and thereafter continued to make the payments for six consecutive years, Y. W. C. A. acquired the right to continue to receive income and principal just as though it had been explicitly named in the will. It alleges that beneficiaries so selected cannot be deprived of a share in annual income “ except for proper cause.” The cross petitioner concedes that the trustees are vested with a discretionary power to discontinue payments but it claims that ‘ it appears from the scheme of the will and the context in which such power is granted, that the discretionary power to discontinue payments may be exercised only when the trustees of the Foundation find as a fact that the status of a beneficiary has so changed, and so changed its charitable, religious and educational purposes, as to justify such discontinuance.”

The cross petitioner cannot point to any text of the will which so limits the discretion of the trustees in relation to institutions selected by them. Such a limitation, it says, is imposed by the general charitable plan of the testator. A practicable execution of this plan, it is argued, requires that an institution once selected may be eliminated from participating only if it disqualifies itself by changing its aims and purposes. The implication of any such limitation, however, not only does violence to the language of the will but it is contrary to the general plan and spirit of the will which the cross petitioner invokes.

[1066]*1066The will expresses the wish that the trustees shall devote the remaining income “ from time to time, to furthering the work ” of charities of the same general character as those named by him. The words chosen by the testator indicate that he expected continued vigilance by the trustees and informed judgments made from time to time, rather than a single determination from which future payments would proceed automatically.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 2d 1062, 123 N.Y.S.2d 520, 1953 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-james-nysurct-1953.