In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Fay

9 Mills Surr. 442, 77 Misc. 514, 137 N.Y.S. 983
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 Mills Surr. 442 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Fay) 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 Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Fay, 9 Mills Surr. 442, 77 Misc. 514, 137 N.Y.S. 983 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Woodin, S.

The testator died in June, 1901, leaving a will and three codicils which were thereafter admitted to probate in this court. This proceeding is an accounting by the trustees and relates solely to a trust fund of $3,000 created in the second clause of the second codicil, which reads as follows:

Second. I give to my executors the sum of Three thousand dollars to invest and keep invested and pay the income thereon to my nephew Nelson Perry during his lifetime and on his death to divide the three thousand dollars among his, said Nelson Perry’s heirs at law, but this legacy shall not be increased by or participate in the division of the residue of my estate.”

The said Nelson Perry has recently died, and the trustees are ready to distribute the trust fund to the persons entitled thereto. A controversy has arisen over the meaning of the words “ heirs at law ” in this clause, and is the sole question presented. Nelson Perry left as his nearest relatives numerous first cousins, paternal and maternal, and also descendants of deceased first cousins. It is contended by the trustees that the fund, being personal property, should be distributed to Nelson Perry’s next of kin, namely, the first cousins, excluding the representatives of deceased cousins. Another point is raised by them which is hereafter referred to.

The special guardian, representing one of the descendants of a deceased first cousin, urges that the fund should be distributed, per stirpes, to Nelson Perry’s heirs at law, giving [444]*444the expression its strict legal meaning, thereby including the representatives of deceased cousins. He bases his contention also upon the further ground that the testator, having died in 1901, the Statute of.Distributions, then in force, to wit: section 2732, subdivision 12, of the Code, as amended by chapter 319 of the Laws of 1898, permitting representation among' collaterals, applies, as the act of May 18, 1905, amending said section prohibiting representation after brothers’ and sisters’’ descendants, expressly provides, this act shall not apply to an estate of a decedent who shall have died prior to the time this act shall take effect.”

The court is concerned with only one question: What persons or classes of persons did the testator embrace in the term “ Nelson Perry’s heirs at law? ” The fundamental rule underlying the construction of a will is that the intent of’ the testator shall control. If the intent is plainly expressed, no resort need be made to rules of construction; they are useful only 'where the meaning is ambiguous, and the courts, will not indulge in mere conjecture in construing the testator’s language. The primary meaning of the words “ heirs at law ” is the persons related to one by blood who would take his real estate if he died intestate, and the words embrace no one not thus related.

The cases are numerous where the courts have held that the word “ heirs ” or the expression “ heirs at law,” when used in connection with the disposition of personal property, means next of kin; and so frequently has this construction been given to these words that, at first blush, it might seem as though it had become a settled rule of construction, and that whenever a bequest of personal property was made to heirs or heirs at law it should be interpreted to mean next of kin. But in all the cases which I have examined in which this construction has been given to the word “ heirs,” the courts have first sought to as[445]*445certain the intent of the testator, and when the conclusion has been reached that the word “ heirs ” should be taken to mean next of kin, it is because the court has found such to have been the intention of the testator as gathered from the whole will and surrounding circumstances and not because personal property in case of intestacy is distributable to next of kin only. A brief reference to a few of the cases cited by counsel in which the courts have construed the meaning of the word “ heirs ” will serve to illustrate this view.

In Lawton v. Corlies, 127 N. Y. 100, the will provided: “ I order and direct that my estate be divided among my heirs at law in accordance with the laws of the state of New York applicable to persons who die intestate.” It seemed clear to the court in that case that the direction to divide in accordance with the laws of the State of New York plainly indicated the intention of the testator to give his personal estate to his next of kin and his real estate to his heirs at law, the court saying: While technical words in a will, when uncontrolled by the context, are presumed to have been used in their technical sense, still the context may overcome the presumption when it appears thereby, and from extraneous facts * * * that the testator used the words in their common and popular sense.”

In Woodward v. James, 115 N. Y. 346, the testator gave to his widow the use of one-half of his estate. He gave to his “ legal heirs ” the remainder of the income from his estate during the life of his wife, and then further devised and bequeathed to his “ legal heirs ” the reversion and ownership of the estate after the death of his wife. He further provided a forfeiture in case any of his legal heirs should interfere with the widow in the enjoyment of her interest in the estate, and provided in such an event that such heir should be excluded from sharing in the estate and the share which otherwise would have gone to him be “ divided among the remaining heirs ac[446]*446cording to law.” The next of kin and heirs at law were not coextensive and it became necessary for the court to determine whom the testator meant by “ legal heirs.” The court concluded, after taking into consideration the entire will, the use of the word “ legal ” and the provision for division of a forfeited share “ according to law ” indicated the sense in which the testator used the phrase, and accordingly held that the personal estate should be distributed to the next of kin.

In Matter of Fidelity Trust & Guarantee Co., 57 App. Div. 532, the court construed the words “ my heirs,” used with reference to the disposition of a certain trust fund, to mean next to kin, basing its interpretation upon the fact that the testator did not employ legal terms, and especially the word “heirs,” with legal discrimination; that there were many bequests of personal property to “heirs,” the expression “next of kin ” nowhere appearing, and there was no bequest or devise of the residue of his property, and the bulk of his estate, consisting of both real and personal property, was left to be distributed among his next of kin or descend to his heirs at law pursuant to the statutes of distribution and descent, according to the character of the property.

Other cases might be referred to in which the courts have construed the word “ heirs ” to mean next of kin when used in connection with the disposition of personal property; but all of these cases recognize the principle that, where the context of the will shows that the testator used the word “ heirs ” or the expression “ heirs at law ” or “ next of kin ” in a sense other than the primary legal sense, the actual intention must prevail over the use of the technical language.

The case of Armstrong v. Galusha, 43 App. Div. 248, is further illustrative of this principle. In that case, the testator, in the eighteenth clause of his will, directed his executors to pay the remainder of his estate to his “ heirs ” in [447]*447portions according to the laws and statutes of the state of New York the same as if he died intestate.

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9 Mills Surr. 442, 77 Misc. 514, 137 N.Y.S. 983, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-accounts-of-fay-nysurct-1912.