In re the Estate of Rehill

142 Misc. 502, 254 N.Y.S. 854, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 934
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 142 Misc. 502 (In re the Estate of Rehill) 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 Rehill, 142 Misc. 502, 254 N.Y.S. 854, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 934 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

Slater, S.

The testator not having declared in express terms that the provisions made by his will for the widow are given in lieu of dower, the widow brings this proceeding for a construction of the will and a determination of the question whether she is put to her election.

The decedent died August 6, 1930, and the will was admitted to probate on September 4, 1930. The testator took a second wife on July 2, 1929, and he executed his will July 3, 1929. The decedent’s first wife had died leaving him and six children surviving. On February 5, 1931, the widow instituted in the Supreme Court an action to enforce dower.

The rule is that a wife is not put to her election between dower and a testamentary disposition in her favor unless it clearly appears from the will that the provision made for her was intended as a substitute for that to which she is entitled by law. The intention may be implied if the claim of dower is inconsistent with the will. Dower is never excluded by a provision for a wife except by express words or by necessary implication.

Is the gift to the widow so repugnant to the claim of dower that they cannot stand together? Briefly, the provisions of the will are as follows: The 2d paragraph gives certain property in the Bronx to a daughter, provided she pays off a mortgage on a piece of property which decedent had conveyed to a son. This clause became ineffectual because the testator conveyed the Bronx property to the daughter in his lifetime. In the 3d paragraph of the will he gives to a son a bond and mortgage which testator held upon the son’s property. The 4th paragraph directs that the property on Park drive, White Plains, be sold and the proceeds held in trust for grandchildren. This clause of the will is ineffectual [504]*504because the testator conveyed it, during his lifetime, to four of his children.

The 5th paragraph deals with the rent of the only piece of real property of which the testator died seized, and which is devised under the residuary clause of the 6th paragraph of the will. The 5th and 6th paragraphs are as follows:

“ Fifth. The income or rent which shall be due and continue to become due under the terms of the lease existing upon the real estate situated at the southwest corner of Brookfield and Main Street, White Plains, New York or under any lease existing at the time of my death, upon any real estate of which I may die seized and possessed of the fee, I direct to be paid unto my Executors and by them divided immediately upon its receipt into six equal parts, one part I give unto each of my five children hereinafter named, to wit: — Mary R. Rehill, Frank M. Rehill, Gertrude V. Rehill, Charles P. Rehill and Rosanna Tully Fennelly; the remaining one part I give unto my wife, Alice Grace Rehill. * * *
“ Sixth. All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and personal, of which I may die seized and possessed, including the fee of all my real estate on which long term leases may now exist, I give, devise and bequeath, share and share alike, unto my children, Mary R. Rehill, Frank M. Rehill, Gertrude V. Rehill, Charles P. Rehill and Rosanna Tully Fennelly.”

The 7th paragraph of the will appoints his wife, the petitioner, and a daughter executrices with full power to mortgage, lease or sell “ any of my real estate which may not be under long term leases.”

It is stipulated that the only real property owned by the decedent at the time of his death is the real estate situate on the corner of Main and Brookfield streets, White Plains, and that it is subject to a long-term lease to S. S. Kresge Company. The only piece of real estate left by the decedent is hot affected by the power of sale because of the limitation placed on the exercise of the power of sale.

The lease upon the only piece of real estate left by the decedent is dated July 10, 1923, and is between the testator and the Kresge Company for a term of fifteen years beginning June 1, 1923, with a right to renewals to June 1, 1983. The rental at the making of the lease, and at the date of the testator’s death, was $7,500 per annum, with provision in the lease that all taxes and other charges were to be paid by the lessee. So the gift to the widow of one-sixth of the net rental was $1,250 per year.

The assessed value of land and building, at the time of the death of the testator, of the Main street property was $227,000. The petitioner, the widow, at such time was about thirty-five years of age.

[505]*505The children of the testator contend that the petitioner, the widow, is not entitled to both dower right and the provision made in her favor for one-sixth of the rents of the Main street property, for the reason that the provisions of the will as a whole are inconsistent with her dower right, and repugnant to the testator’s scheme and plan for the disposition of his property.

They also raise the question of inequality in the rent, in case of the widow’s dower, as she would take four-ninths of the rentals, and claim that this would be repugnant to the scheme of the will, which calls for a division into six parts.

Counsel have briefed the question whether a trust of the rents was created. I hold that a trust was not created. A gift of the fee by the residuary clause to the five children merged the right to the rents in them, except as to one-sixth share thereof given to the widow. The devisees are entitled to the rents, not because of the gift in the 5th paragraph of the will, but on account- of their ownership of the fee simple title under the 6th paragraph of the will. The title to the fee of the real estate is in the five children. The income or rental from the existing lease is subject to the charge of the payment of one-sixth thereof to the widow. This gift is a legacy, a gift of rents up to a specified share for a specified term, which may be less than the life of the widow. In the event of the termination of the lease by expiration of its terms or otherwise, the charge and the gift of income to the widow would disappear. The executors, in the collection of rents, are acting simply as agents for those who were vested with the title to the realty. They are nothing more than trustees by acquiescence or agents by consent. (Matter of Miller, 257 N. Y. 349, 357.)

The cases which hold that provisions in wills are repugnant to the claim of dower construe wills which create trust estates wherein the entire estate is in the trustees. The theory is that, if the entire estate is placed in the hands of trustees, another estate or interest cannot enter or exist, and impliedly the testator intended to eliminate the widow’s dower. The leading cases are Savage v. Burnham (17 N. Y. 561); Tobias v. Ketchum (32 id. 319); Vernon v. Vernon (53 id. 351).

Matter of Gorden (172 N. Y. 25 [1902]) is a more recent case on the subject, and holds that where a valid trust is created covering all the real estate of the testator, it is inconsistent with the right of the widow to manage or control any part of the realty. There was a similar holding in the following cases: Wilson v. Wilson (120 App. Div. 581 [2d Dept. 1907]; Loria, Inc., v. Stanton Co. (115 Misc. 640 [1921]).

In Matter of Sobel (117 Misc. 508 [1921]) dower was excluded, [506]*506the court holding that it would destroy the scheme of the will, which was to divide the testator’s

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Related

In re the Estate of Stevens
154 Misc. 415 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1935)
In re Rehill
236 A.D. 733 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1932)
In re the Estate of Hardenbergh
144 Misc. 248 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
142 Misc. 502, 254 N.Y.S. 854, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-rehill-nysurct-1932.