In re the Estate of Ladew

183 Misc. 1020, 52 N.Y.S.2d 102
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 183 Misc. 1020 (In re the Estate of Ladew) 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 Ladew, 183 Misc. 1020, 52 N.Y.S.2d 102 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinion

Delehanty, S.

In this accounting proceeding there is presented another facet of that gem of banker-inspired legislation which was enacted despite unanimous disapproval by informed professional and judicial opinion and became chapter 694 of the Laws of 1943 creating a new section 285-a of the Surrogate’s Court Act effective September 1st of that year. That enactment destroyed many long-established concepts of trust administration theretofore accepted as essential to the safety of trusts and revolutionized the basis upon which trustees were to operate. In this proceeding commissions in a trifling sum are claimed by the accounting trustee. The principle involved in passing on that claim is one applicable to every case in which property is continued in trust by reason of the exercise of a power of appointment.

An understanding of the problem requires reference to the will of deceased and to the power granted by him therein. The will created a trust for the benefit of a son and gave to the beneficiary a power to appoint the remainder. The donee of the power is now dead. He left a will which was admitted to probate in Nassau County. Thereby the donee exercised the power and directed that the principal of the trust be continued in trust for the minority of the donee’s daughter.

Deceased appointed as his trustee a banking institution of this city. The donee appointed as his trustees two individuals who have qualified in this court in the donor’s estate and who are prepared to receive from the trustee now accounting the remainder of the trust fund. The retiring trustee will have nothing further to do with the management and operation of the trust fund. Such management and operation now passes to the trustees named by the donee. The retiring trustee asks for the minimum principal commissions prescribed in subdivision 3 of section 285-a of the Surrogate’s Court Act. That request [1022]*1022requires decision whether such commissions are payable under existing law.

It is established law that the appointees under a power granted by a will take their benefits directly from the donor of the power, the original testator, and not from the donee of the power. In Matter of Harbeck (161 N. Y. 211, 218) the court quoted from Kent’s Commentaries (Vol. 4, p. 338) a statement of the Chancellor as follows: ‘ ‘ The party who takes under the execution of a power, takes under the authority and under the grantor of the power, whether it applies to real or personal property, in like manner as if the power and the instrument creating the power had been incorporated in one instrument. ’ ’ Speaking of appointees selected by the donee of a power the court went on to say: ‘ ‘ The source of their title to the fund was the original will * * * and into that instrument must be read the names of the appointees, although designated by a later instrument. For those who take under a power of'appointment, take as if their names were in the grant of the power.” (Emphasis supplied.) In Fargo y. Squiers (154 N. Y. 250, 259) the court said: The validity of the provisions of the will * * * must * * * be tested by reading the provisions of her will into the provisions of the will * * * which created the power.” In Bishop v. Bishop (257 N. Y. 40, 51) the court said: The appointment under the power is to be read into the will by which the power was created and the validity of the gift determined as if the provision thus incorporated had been there from the beginning ”.

It is established law that when a will directs the holding of a fund in trnst for one life and thereafter the holding of some or all of the same fund for another life only a single trust is created. (Matter of Coutts, 260 N. Y. 128.) In the cited case trustees acting at the end of a primary life estate sought allowance of paying out commissions on the original principal and also sought receiving commissions in each of three separate trusts set up as secondary trusts out of the original fund. In that case the will directed that at the end of the first life the trustees were to divide the then principal into three parts and were “ to hold and invest ” such parts for respective beneficiaries. The case cites with approval Leask v. Beach (173 App. Div. 873) where the will directed that a portion of the trust property should ‘ ‘ be paid over ” to the trustees of the original trust who were to administer it in further trust. Prior to the enactment of section 285-a of the Surrogate’s Court Act it was clear that in respect of the same trustee no double commissions were payable at the [1023]*1023termination of one trust period and the inception of another if the fund were the same in whole or in part. The concept established by Matter of Coutts (supra) and Leask v. Beach (supra) is that the trust created was a single trust and that nothing but bookkeeping was involved in the death of one life beneficiary and the inception of the rights of a successor life beneficiary.

It is established under the authorities first cited herein that the will of this deceased must be read as if it had said that the gift in trust was made to the accounting bank for the benefit of the son and, upon the latter’s death, to the successor trustees for the benefit of the son’s issue. The order of this court which qualified the successor trustees correctly describes them as such. By its text the successors are granted letters of trusteeship as successor trustees to the Grace National Bank of New York, as trustee under the last Will and Testament of J. Harvey Ladew, deceased, of the fund created under said will for the benefit of Patricia Happie Ladew by virtue of the exercise of the power of appointment by the will of Joseph H. Ladew ”. It seems clear from the authorities that a retiring trustee who had not finished the administration of a trust was not entitled to paying-out commissions under the law prior to September 1, 1943, though a newly acting trustee might be entitled to receiving commissions. Even if, for the sake of the discussion only, it were to be assumed that the retiring trustee who now accounts would under the former act have been entitled to paying-out commissions the trust involved remains a single one and the question remains whether or not the trustee here accounting is entitled to receive commissions under existing law.

The case which in the first instance discussed the revolutionary changes made by chapter 694 of the'Laws of 1943 is Matter of Hurlbut (180 Misc. 681). As the discussion in that case showed, the new legislation in respect of the commissions of trustees had made inapplicable most of the well-settled law on the subject. The court which wrote the Hurlbut decision had occasion in Matter of Edwards (183 Misc. 1014, 1017) to develop this thesis. In the Edwards case the court was dealing with a claim for commissions on disbursements made prior to the final termination of a trust and was discussing subdivision 3 of section 285-a of the Surrogate’s Court Act in that regard. Among other things it said: “ The purpose, intent and scope of subdivision 3 of the statute is perfectly clear. We are left in no state of doubt as to the nature of this commission. It is not ‘ a paying commission. ’ It is expressly characterized ‘ as a minimum principal commission. ’ Having in mind the [1024]*1024background of the former statute and the different method of computing and awarding principal commissions under the new section, the meaning of these words cannot be mistaken.

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Bluebook (online)
183 Misc. 1020, 52 N.Y.S.2d 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-ladew-nysurct-1944.