In re the Estate of Shehan

157 Misc. 2d 904, 597 N.Y.S.2d 1017, 1993 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 175
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 13, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 157 Misc. 2d 904 (In re the Estate of Shehan) 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 Shehan, 157 Misc. 2d 904, 597 N.Y.S.2d 1017, 1993 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 175 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Joseph S. Mattina, S.

This matter was brought before the court on a petition by W. Barry Mallon, Esq. for the judicial settlement of his account as successor trustee of the trust under paragraph 2 of article fifth of the will of Bertha E. Shehan and for a determination as to the validity, construction, and effect of such paragraph.

Bertha E. Shehan died February 28, 1947, leaving a will dated September 11, 1945, which was admitted to probate by this court on May 5, 1947. The decedent was survived by her sister, Mary Elizabeth Davis, her niece, Sarah Louise Bowden, and two children of her niece, Charles W. Bowden, III and Deborah B. Laury. After a small bequest to an employee, Ms. Shehan’s will leaves her personal effects to her sister and [906]*906niece and establishes a trust in her residence for their benefit. Article fifth divides the residuary estate into two equal parts, the first to be held in trust during the lives of Sarah Louise Bowden and her youngest child surviving at the decedent’s death. Income is to be paid first to Ms. Davis, then, on her death, to Ms. Bowden, and on her death to her surviving children and issue of deceased children, per stirpes. At the trust’s termination on the death of the survivor of Ms. Bow-den and her youngest child living at her aunt’s death, the principal is to be distributed outright to Ms. Davis, or if she is not then surviving, equally to the then surviving children of Ms. Bowden and surviving issue of her deceased children, with such issue to take their parent’s share.

Paragraph 2 of article fifth, which is at issue in this proceeding, provides as follows:

”2. The other of said one-half parts shall be held in trust for the benefit of my niece, sarah louise bowden, during her life to pay or apply for her benefit during the term of her natural life the income thereof. Upon the death of my niece, Sarah Louise Bowden, my Trustees shall divide the same into as many parts as there are children or issue of deceased children of Sarah Louise Bowden then surviving, the children of a deceased child of Sarah Louise Bowden to take their parent’s share. The Trustees shall designate each of said parts as a separate trust fund for the benefit of each child or child of a deceased child of Sarah Louise Bowden and shall pay over to or apply for the benefit of each of said beneficiaries during the term of life of each the income of their particular trust. Upon the death of each of said life tenants the Trustees shall pay over the balance of said fund to his or her surviving issue, per stirpes and not per capita. If said life tenant leaves no issue him surviving, then the principal of said fund shall be paid to the surviving children or issue of deceased children of Sarah Louise Bowden, per stirpes and not per capita.”

Two other provisions of the will are relevant to the issues before the court. Article thirteenth, in expressing the testatrix’s intention that the various trusts not be subject to the debts of their beneficiaries, designates them as spendthrift trusts. Article sixteenth provides that any property "not heretofore disposed of’ shall pass to the Church Home at 7th and Rhode Island Streets (now the Episcopal Church Home) to be held as the "H. R. and Bertha E. Shehan Fund,” to be used for such purposes as the Home’s officers and directors consider most advantageous.

[907]*907The death of Sarah Louise Bowden, on June 4, 1991, has occasioned this accounting and construction proceeding. Ms. Bowden is survived by three children, Deborah B. Laury, Charles W. Bowden, III, and Cecilly B. Sullivan, the latter born after Ms. Shehan’s death. Deborah Laury has no children, Charles Bowden has two children, and Cecilly Sullivan one child, a minor, who is represented by a guardian ad litem. Petitioner trustee, who, pursuant to the terms of article fifth, paragraph 2, must now divide the fund held for Ms. Bowden into separate trusts for her children, confronts the possibility that some or all of the trusts violate the Rule against Perpetuities because any one of the secondary life tenants could have been, and in fact, Ms. Sullivan is, a person not in being on the testatrix’s death. Petitioner therefore seeks a construction by this court to effectuate the testatrix’s intent by upholding the validity of all three trusts, or in the alternative, the two to be created for Deborah Laury and Charles Bowden, who were in being at Ms. Shehan’s death. Respondent Sullivan, along with the guardian ad litem for her minor child, argues for a construction determining all the trusts to be legal, while respondents Laury and Bowden urge the court, if it cannot see fit to uphold all three trusts, at least to validate their two. All of these parties maintain that the will reflects Ms. Shehan’s intent to benefit her closest relatives. Respondent Episcopal Church Home, in contrast, supported by the Attorney-General, claims that the entire trust fund under paragraph 2 is invalid because in violation of the Rule and therefore that fully one half of the residuary estate must pass to it under the terms of article sixteenth as property not heretofore disposed of.

It is well established that in a construction proceeding a court must seek to ascertain the intent of the testator. Such intent "must be gleaned not from a single word or phrase but from a sympathetic reading of the will as an entirety and in view of all the facts and circumstances under which the provisions of the will were framed.” (Matter of Fabbri, 2 NY2d 236, 240 [1957].) A construction presupposes some ambiguity, lack of clarity, or vagueness in the language of the instrument that gives rise to uncertainty about the testator’s wishes. We find no such ambiguity in the will before us. The language of paragraph 2 of article fifth is clear on its face, and evidences an intention on the part of the testatrix to benefit her niece during her lifetime with income from trust assets and, after her death, to hold the funds in further lifetime trusts for the niece’s children who survive their mother, or for issue of [908]*908predeceased children. The remainders are to be distributed on the respective life tenants’ deaths to their issue, per stirpes, or if they leave no issue, to the niece’s then surviving children or issue of deceased children, per stirpes. The trusts under paragraph 2 were purposely designed to benefit two, if not three, generations of Bertha Shehan’s relatives. Paragraph 2 contains no designated measuring lives for the trusts thereunder, in contrast to paragraph 1, which specifies that the lives of Sarah and her youngest child surviving at the testatrix’s death shall determine its duration.

Not only must a court in construing a will ascertain the testator’s intent, but it also must determine whether effectuating that intent would contravene the law. In the case before us, the principles of construction must therefore be applied in light of the public policy considerations which underlie the Rule against Perpetuities. As the Court of Appeals noted, quoting Gray, Rule against Perpetuities § 2a, rules governing restraints on alienation are " 'modes adopted by the common law for forwarding the circulation of property, which it is its policy to promote’.” (Carrier v Carrier, 226 NY 114, 122 [1919].) And, as this court itself stated some 40 years ago, "it should be borne in mind that the Rule against Perpetuities is not a canon of construction but a legal prohibition. Its purpose is not to determine intent but to prevent illegality. Indeed, when the Rule is applied, it defeats intent.” (In re Gohr’s Will,

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Bluebook (online)
157 Misc. 2d 904, 597 N.Y.S.2d 1017, 1993 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-shehan-nysurct-1993.