In re the Estate of Strasenburgh

136 Misc. 86, 242 N.Y.S. 447, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1119
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJune 6, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 136 Misc. 86 (In re the Estate of Strasenburgh) 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 Strasenburgh, 136 Misc. 86, 242 N.Y.S. 447, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1119 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Feeley, S.

Upon this intermediate accounting in this estate, it appeared that this testator, with four or five other gentlemen of financial standing in Rochester, had joined in indorsing certain corporate notes aggregating about $391,000; and that he had given his own notes for about $58,000. None of these has been renewed by the executor; and notices of protest have been served upon the estate. The expenses of liquidation will be about $30,000. These estate liabilities will reach a total of about $479,802. The assets comprise a corporate note of $15,000; land on Exchange street appraised at $64,000, and 7,670 shares of corporate stock of the R. J. Strasenburgh Company, appraised at $273,000. The total taxable estate was found to be $1,173,412.23. This court by its decision of December 7, 1928 (136 Misc. 91), held that the three legacies of this stock, by the 3d, 4th and 5th clauses of this will, totalling 4,800 shares, were legacies of such specific kind as to entitle the legatees to dividends declared thereon after the death of testator. There is no objection now raised to the delivery of those shares of stock to the legatees; but the 6th clause of the will, bequeathing only the income of some stock in the same corporation, now comes in question, in connection with said contingent liability, by reason of a demand by this legatee for delivery of the stock itself to her. The executor declined to do so, even though an individual bond were given, with the stock itself pledged as collateral thereto, to save the executor harmless from said contingent liability of testator.

The 6th clause of the will reads thus: “ Sixth. I give to my wife, Stella G. Strasenburgh, the income for Ufe arising or derived from two thousand six hundred and seventy (2670) shares of the capital stock of the R. J. Strasenburgh Company.”

Upon the death of the widow, the testator gave to his three children each a lot of 890 shares of said capital stock, by the 7th, 8th and 9th clauses of his will; thereby evidently intending to dispose of the 2,670 shares which, under the 6th clause, were to furnish the widow their income for her Ufetime.

By the subsequent clauses of the will, testator gives the residue [88]*88of his estate to the executor, expressly, in trust, for various parties, with certain express powers, privileges and directions to the trustee in regard to the trust property in its hands. This aspect is mentioned because the 6th clause now in question is not worded as an express trust; nor does it expressly direct the executor to pay the income to the widow legatee, but purports to give her the income on this stock without any right to invade the principal, and the remainder is given over directly to their children.

The counsel for the widow raises these questions: Does this 6th clause create a specific legacy? Is the widow entitled to possession of the stock from which the income is to derive? Does the contingent liability justify the refusal of the executor to deliver the stock to her?

For the reasons heretofore stated in the decision holding the three preceding legacies of this stock to be specific, as regards dividends declared after the testator’s death, I am now of opinion that this legacy of income on a certain lot of that stock is a specific legacy in the same regard, and also in two other senses; in that if this stock failed to yield an income the legatee could not ask the equivalent from the residuary estate; and also in the sense that, if a marshaling of assets ever were necessary, this stock and this income would be among the last to be applied to meet the deficiency of less preferred assets; but beyond these aspects, I cannot find any authority for saying that the character of this legacy in so far as it is specific is determinative of the right to take possession of the shares of stock whence this specific income is to be derived; nor do I know of any to the contrary; but its specific characteristics look toward possession.

A more decisive feature as to possessory rights in such case is that the legacy is one of a life estate in personal property. This is clearly inferable from the ruling in the Whitson Case (53 N. Y. 479) where such a legatee was made to pay ordinary carrying charges, such as taxes. This legacy is obviously a bare right to receive income so long as the legatee lives. It confers on her no right to invade or consume the principal. There is no direction to the executors to pay her annually, such as appears in Matter of Dewey (153 N. Y. 63). This legatee could not be held to be a trustee for herself. (Brown v. Spohr, 180 N. Y. 201, 209.) The clauses of this will next after this relating to this fife use and remainder over, set up express trusts of another lot of this stock for the life use of the widow also, with specific directions, as in the 14th clause, as to the trustee’s control of the corpus and its investment.

This 6th clause now in question presents, therefore, in such context and phrasing, a mere life estate in personal property, [89]*89directly given without the interposition of a trust. The rules on possession in such case.seem to have sprung out of the comestible nature of the articles, mentioned first in the following generalization, quoted from 40 Cyc. 1551: “ A fife estate in personal property gives the donee a right to consume or wear out such articles as cannot otherwise be enjoyed; and this is the rule whether the bequest is general or specific. * * * But the general rule is controlled by the intention of the testator showing how the tenant for life is to enjoy the estate.”

This stock is that of the business corporation founded by this testator, bearing his name, now in control of his widow and children, one of whom is still actively engaged in it as an officer of the corporation; and such legacy carries with it some right to the widow to a voice in the corporate management or policy; but all that is not inconsistent with the stock being retained in the hands of the executors until the widow die. The case does not clearly meet the test, namely, whether “ the scheme of the will, viewed in the light of the surrounding circumstances, indicates plainly that testator intended the life tenant should have possession.” (Matter of Rowland, 153 N. Y. 327.)

We must fall back, then, on the general rule. Recently in the Limburger Case (128 Misc. 577, 579), where the widow was given, not only income for life, but a right to invade principal, it was said': “ There is a vastly different result flowing from a legal life estate and a legal life estate with the addition of the power of disposing of the principal during life * * *. In the former case the fife tenant has simply the income, and cannot take possession of the corpus of the property without giving security. (Matter of Colwell, 181 App. Div. 408.) In the latter case the rule is that security is not required.”

In the Colwell Case (supra) the court said: “ Cases have arisen presenting the question as to whether such an estate should be paid over to the fife tenant without such security being given, but the absolute right to its payment and delivery when adequate and proper security has been tendered has never, so far as I am advised, been questioned.”

In Matter of McDougall (141 N. Y. 21) a residue was given to the widow “ to be used and enjoyed ” by her during life or widowhood, the same to “be received and accepted” by her in lieu of dower, with remainder over, in either event, to persons named. The surrogate decreed all .to her without a bond.

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Related

In re the Estate of Merritt
182 Misc. 1026 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1944)
In re the Estate of Strasenburgh
148 Misc. 595 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1933)

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136 Misc. 86, 242 N.Y.S. 447, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-strasenburgh-nysurct-1929.