In re the Estate of Johnson

1 Pow. Surr. 68, 19 N.Y.S. 963, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 391
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJune 16, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Pow. Surr. 68 (In re the Estate of Johnson) 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 Johnson, 1 Pow. Surr. 68, 19 N.Y.S. 963, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 391 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

Ransom, S.

The testator, by his will, executed May 13, 1882, and a codicil executed May 22, 1889, gave his property in certain proportions to his wife and issue. On November 29, "1889, he executed a deed of trust by which he transferred the bulk of his property, real and personal, to a trustee in trust to invest the same and apply the income therefrom to the support and maintenance of the grantor and his family, and upon the death of the grantor to distribute and pay over the property [70]*70and its proceeds to and among the heirs or representatives of the grantor in accordance with the provisions of his will. The testator died in September, 1891, subsequent to the passage of the act by which the law was amended so as to subject to taxation the personal estate of decedents bequeathed to wife or children, where the beneficial interest exceeds $10,000.

The appraiser reported that the legatees were exempt, holding that they took by virtue of the deed a vested interest in the estate. The surrogate, in a decision appearing at page 200 (April 26, 1892), overruled the appraiser, and held that the legatees took by virtue of the will; consequently, their interests were taxable. The executrix now moves for a reargument, basing her motion upon the decision of the Court of Appeals in Genet v. Hunt, 113 N. Y. 158, 22 St Rep. 774. That case was brought for the construction of the will of Caroline M. Riggs, who, in anticipation of marriage, executed a trust deed, by which she conveyed all her estate, real and personal, to trustees to receive the income and apply the same to her use during coverture, and upon the further trust, if she should die during coverture, to convey the same to such devisee or devisees, in such share or proportion, as she by her* last will and testament may direct; and in default of any such direction to convey the same unto such persons living at her death, and being her heirs-at-law, as would be entitled to take the same by descent in case the same was land belonging to her in the State of Hew York. Testatrix died during coverture, having executed a will by which she directed that said estate he set apart into two equal shares for the benefit of her children. She directed her executors and trustees to take charge of the property, to manage the same, and to apply the income to the support, maintenance and education of said two children during minority, and upon their respectively attaining twenty-one years of age to pay over to each child after so attaining that age the net income of one-half said estate during their respective lives; and after their deaths respectively the respective shares of said estate set apart as above directed shall go to and belong to their heirs-at-law and next of kin re[71]*71spectively, in the same manner as though they were respectively absolute owners of the same. In case of the death of either of said children before attaining majority and without issue, the share set apart for the benefit of the one so dying to be applied to the use of the survivor. If issue, then the issue to receive the same. In case of the death of both children without issue, before attaining majority, then upon the death of the longest liver the property was given, after the payment of certain legacies, in equal shares to her brothers and sisters and their issue. The question presented was whether the trusts created were valid. If the testatrix was the absolute owner of the property at her death, then the trusts were valid, for the absolute ownership was to vest at the furthest within the lives of the two children. The court held that the validity of the trusts was to he determined by the test whether it would be valid if it had been part of the limitation -in the trust deed and had been inserted therein at the time the deed was executed; that for the purpose of determining this question the deed and the will must be read and construed together, and inasmuch as when so read they provided for a possible suspension of the power of alienation for three lives they were invalid. An additional reason was that the two children upon whose lives the trusts in the will are limited were not in being when the trust deed was executed and could not have taken such an estate as was limited under the will if it had been limited in the same manner in the trust deed.

It was absolutely necessary that the will should be executed- and admitted to probate for tire purpose of giving effect to the power reserved in the deed. 4 Revised Statute, part 2, chapter 1, article 3, section 115. Without the will the legatees named therein would not have taken the same interest. While the two instruments are construed together for the purpose of determining the disposition made thereby, and for other purposes, it is a fiction of law which is only resorted to for equitable purposes and its application is not unlimited. As is said by Lord Sugden: “Where a person takes by execution of a power, [72]*72whether of realty or personalty, it is taken under the authority of that power, but not from, the time of the creation of that power. The meaning that the persons must take under the power, or as if their names had been inserted in the power, is that they shall take in tire same manner as if the power and instrument executing the power had been incorporated in one instrument; then they shall take as if all that was in the instrument executing had been expressed in that giving the power. So it is in the appointment of uses. If a feoffment is executed to such uses as he shall appoint by will, when the will is made, it is clear that the appointee, cestui que use, is in by the feoffment, but has nothing from the time of the execution of the feoffment so as to vest the estate in him. The estate will vest in him according to the nature of the act done and appointment of the use from the time of the testator’s death. This, therefore, is not a relation so as to malee things vest from the time of the power, but according to the time of the act executing that power; not like the referring back in cases of assignment in commission of bankruptcy, that is, by force of the statute, and to avoid mesne wrongful acts,” citing the decision of Lord Hardwicke in the Duke of Marlborough v. Lord Godolphin, 2 Ves. Sr. 61 ; 2 Sugden on Powers, 23.

The doctrine thus stated is approved in this State in Jackson v. Davenport, 20 Johns. 536-550, the chancellor saying: “This doctrine, that a deed executing a power refers back to the instrument creating the power, so that the party is deemed to take under the deed from the grantor by whom the power was created, and not from the power, is a fiction of law, and so it was considered in Bartlet v. Ramsden, 1 Keb. 570, relatio est fictio juris, according to the resolution in Menvil’s Case, 6 Co. Rep. 416, and is upheld to advance a right-, not to advance a wrong, or to defeat collateral acts which are lawful, and especially if they concern strangers.”

In Seibert’s Appeal, 110 Pa. St. 329, testator, by his will, bequeathed his property to certain collateral relatives, and for religious and charitable purposes; subsequently he transferred [73]*73all his property, by deed duly acknowledged, to the persons named as executors in his will, they to receive the income of the same to their own proper use during the life of the testator, and at his. death to hold the same for the uses and purposes set forth in said will. The court said: “The intent of the testator is to be deduced from the language of his will. An examination thereof clearly leads to the conclusion that its main purpose was to prevent his property from liability to a collateral inheritance tax.

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Related

Genet v. . Hunt
21 N.E. 91 (New York Court of Appeals, 1889)
Prince v. Hazleton
11 Am. Dec. 304 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1822)
Reish v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
106 Pa. 521 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1884)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Pow. Surr. 68, 19 N.Y.S. 963, 47 N.Y. St. Rep. 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-johnson-nysurct-1892.