In Re the Final Judicial Settlement of the Annual Accounts of Hoyt

55 N.E. 282, 160 N.Y. 607, 14 E.H. Smith 607, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1193
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 55 N.E. 282 (In Re the Final Judicial Settlement of the Annual Accounts of Hoyt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Final Judicial Settlement of the Annual Accounts of Hoyt, 55 N.E. 282, 160 N.Y. 607, 14 E.H. Smith 607, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1193 (N.Y. 1899).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

The principal question submitted for our determination relates to the premium on bonds in which the trust estate has been invested.

It is insisted on behalf of the appellant, Mary Irene Hoyt, that she is entitled to the entire income earned by the trust *613 fund; the trustees claim that there should he deducted from this income a certain sum each year to meet the “ wearing away ” of the premium as the bonds approach the date of falling due, in order that the remaindermen may he protected and the principal of the trust fund turned over to them at the falling in of the life estate unimpaired.

This matter was originally sent to a referee, who decided in favor of the trustees ; the Surrogate’s Court of the county of Hew York reversed this decision, holding in favor of the life tenant; the Appellate Division reversed the decree of the Surrogate’s Court.

In order to determine the question presented by this appeal, it is necessary to consider the facts surrounding the execution of the will. The testator was a man of very large wealth, estimated at from six to eight millions of dollars, nearly the entire amount of which he bequeathed to his brothers and their children.

For some reason that is not disclosed by this record, but which we must assume was sufficient, the testator made a very peculiar will so far as his only child and daughter was concerned. By the fourth clause thereof he directed that the sum of $1,250,000 should be appropriated from his estate and held in trust for the use and benefit of his daughter during her life. The trustees were directed to collect and receive the interest, dividends’and income therefrom, and from each and every part thereof, and to apply to her use, for and during her natural life, in the most bounteous and liberal manner, as to expenditure, and so as to promote her convenience and comfort and gratify her reasonable desires.

The testator further provided that the principal sum, or the securities in which the same shall be invested, and any surplus of income therefrom, should, upon his daughter’s death, go to certain nephews and nieces.

It will thus he observed that the daughter, while entitled to receive the interest upon a very considerable sum in order to meet most lavish annual expenses, was not given outright any portion of the millions constituting her father’s estate.

*614 In the light of these facts we are called upon to determine the intention of the testator when drafting the fourth clause of his will.

It is insisted by the trustees that it was the intention of Jesse Hoyt to bequeath over to his nephews and nieces, upon the deatli of Mary Irene Hoyt, the specific sum of $1,250,000, or its equivalent in securities, and to give his daughter during her life no more than the net income actually earned by that sum.

It is urged by the daughter’s counsel that not only was it testator’s intention to give the entire income, but that in case of doubt ór ambiguity the law presumes in favor of the child as against the claims of collateral relatives; or, in other words, that.if the probabilities and indications are equal on each side as against the other, the just inclination of the courts will favor the child.

By the eleventh subdivision of the will the testator directed his executors to distribute or retain, without a sale, all such stocks or securities as he might have at the time of his decease, which they thought expedient to hold, hut that they should not make any new or other investments, excepting only in first mortgage bonds and mortgages on unincumbered real estate, or in the public stocks or bonds of the Bnited States, or state stocks or bonds, first mortgage railroad bonds and city bonds.

In creating this trust fund for the daughter it appears that the trustees decided not to set apart any of the securities held by the testator at the time of his decease, but took the sum of $1,250,000 in cash and invested it chiefly in government four per cent bonds and railroad bonds at a high premium. This premium in two purchases reached twenty-nine per cent for the government bonds and thirty-three and one-half per cent for some of the railroad bonds. The result was that nearly $215,000 was absorbed by the premium.

The trustees decided that the life tenant ought to bear the entire loss thus imposed upon the fund, and, under expert computation, have kept back annually from the income the sum of $8,039.00 as a sinking fund to make good the premium that will have worn away when the bonds fall due.

*615 The courts of our own state, of other states and of England have discussed this question in various phases as to the rights •of the life tenant and the remainderman, and some of the decisions are conflicting and not to he reconciled.

This court, in the recent case of McLouth v. Hunt (154 N. Y. 179)," had occasion to examine this question in one aspect of it, Judge O’Brieit writing the opinion. He then said: “Notwithstanding the conflict of authority to which I have just referred, there is one principle or rule applicable to this case, with respect to which the parties are all at agreement, and that is that the questions are not to be determined by any arbitrary rule, hut by ascertaining, when that can he done, the meaning and intention of the testatrix, to be derived from the language employed in the creation of the trust, from the relations of the parties to each other, their condition and all the surrounding facts and circumstances of the case.”

. In considering the surrounding facts and circumstances in the case at bar, to which we have already alluded, it is reasonable to infer that the testator intended in this sole provision for his daughter that she should receive, as he expressed it in the fourth subdivision of the will, “ the interest, dividends and income therefrom, and from each and every part thereof,” referring to the trust fund.

He expresses his desire in clear and unmistakable language to provide for her in the “ most bounteous and liberal manner as to expenditure, and so as to promote her convenience and comfort and gratify her reasonable desires.”

He directs that upon the death of his daughter all moneys set apart for her use “ or the securities in which the same shall be invested ” shall be disposed of in a certain manner.

It seems quite apparent that the testator contemplated that the trust fund or a portion of it might be loaned out on bond and mortgage and thus not lose its identity as a cash sum, while on the other hand a part of it might be placed in securities at a premium, in which event the remaindermen were to take the fund as invested.

It is fair to assume that the testator, who was a man of rare *616 business sagacity, understood all the details of investing large sums of money, and that, if lie had intended to impose upon the income of his daughter’s trust fund the burden of the high-premium incident to the class of securities to which he restricted his trustees, he would have expressed himself in clear language to that effect.

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55 N.E. 282, 160 N.Y. 607, 14 E.H. Smith 607, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 1193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-final-judicial-settlement-of-the-annual-accounts-of-hoyt-ny-1899.