In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Howland

6 Mills Surr. 373, 58 Misc. 124, 110 N.Y.S. 759
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Mills Surr. 373 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Howland) 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 Howland, 6 Mills Surr. 373, 58 Misc. 124, 110 N.Y.S. 759 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

Beckett, S.

Upon the judicial settlement of the account of Samuel S. Howland, as executor, issues are raised regarding the construction of paragraph twenty-ninth of decedent’s will, dated March 15, 1904. Gardiner G. Howland, decedent’s father,’ died December 9, 1851, leaving a will in which he bequeathed to each of his ten children one-tenth part of his residiiary estate; in the case of his five daughters, however, such portions were to be held in trust for them during their lives, with remainder to their issue. He made no provision as to the disposition of such trust funds for said daughters in the event [375]*375of their dying without issue. Each one-tenth portion amounted to about $200,000.

About the year 1889, some thirty-eight years after her father’s death, this decedent took a very active part in a litigation respecting the construction of paragraph twenty-first of his will. Such litigation, I believe, is very largely the key to the correct construction here. It (Meredith Howland, as trustee, etc., respondent, v. Louisa Howland Clendenin—this decedent —et al., appellants, and Louisa M. Howland et al., respondents, 134 N. Y. 305), must have been a matter of supreme importance to her during the years 1889 to 1892 inclusive. Follett, Ch. J., writing the opinion (decided October 1, 1892), describes decedent’s position: This will (Gardiner G. Howland’s) was duly probated and the estate settled, and the residue divided pursuant to this clause (paragraph twenty-first), into ten equal shares, one of which was set apart for Louisa H. Clendenin and another for Joanna H. Grinnell, both daughters of the testator, neither of whom have borne children and both of whom have passed the child-bearing age. A dispute arose between the said two daughters on the one side and their surviving brothers and sisters, and the descendants of the brothers and sisters who have died, on the other side, as to the disposition which is to be made of the shares so set apart for said two daughters after théir deaths without leaving children. Louisa H. Clendenin and Joanna H. Grinnell assert that, in the event that they die without leaving children, the portions set apart for them will form part of their respective estates, and that their personal representatives will be entitled to receive the same from the then trustees of said trust, and that they, the sisters, are entitled to dispose of their portions by will, and that in case they die intestate their administrators will be entitled to receive said capital from said trustees and dispose of it in accordance with the statutes of this state for the disposition of estates of persons dying intestate. On the contrary, the respond[376]*376ents claim that in said event the capital must he distributed among the surviving children of the testator and the representatives of such as may then be deceased, as if the same were property as to which the testator had died intestate, or that the. capital must be divided among the issue of the testator who may then be surviving, per stirpes."

Decedent’s counsel urged a construction of her father’s will that Follett, Ch. Jr., says (Ibid, p. 309) “would render the shares of those daughters” (i. e., the two $200,000 trust, funds) “ dying without issue subject to the claims of their creditors, and to their power to sell their portions to take effect, after death, or to dispose of them by will, and if not disposed of by will or contract they would, after the payment of debts, be distributed among their next of kin.”

The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the lower court, holding that the childless daughters had, under the will' of their father, no interest in the remainder of their respective trust funds, but that as to such remainders respectively the said Gardiner G. Howland died intestate. The judgment on theremittitur was entered November 29, 1892, and provided, among other things, as follows: “ That in case either of the-said daughters, Louisa Howland Clendenin or Joanna H. Grinnell, shall die leaving no issue nor issue of any deceased issue-surviving her, then, inasmuch as by the terms of the said trust no provision is made for the disposition in that event of the* capital of the trust estate, the share of the testator’s estate devoted to the creation of the trust of the person so dying shall, upon her decease leaving no issue nor issue of any deceased issue surviving, be distributed among the heirs at law and next" of Join of the said testator

May we not presume that the decedent knew the law and the-final result of this case ? Is it conceivable that her then counsel, a former surrogate of this county, learned, farseeing and' considerate, did not clearly advise her of the outcome of her [377]*377cause and her precise and exact property relations resulting therefrom ? We can entertain no other presumption. She, who seems to have been the leading litigant, was defeated both in the lower court and in the Court of Appeals. The litigation was so protracted and important, affected such large amount of property, involved subjects so near a woman’s heart, was conducted upon both sides by such eminent counsel, that it is impossible to conceive that the determination escaped her notice- or that she was not advised of its final outcome. She must be presumed to have known that such intestate distribution was to-be in tenths, and that she (or her estate) as one of the ten children of Gardiner G. Howland, would be a distributee of such a. tenth as one of his next of kin (Doane v. Mercantile Trust Co., 160 N. Y. 494) ; indeed, after her death it was so decided respecting this very estate in Grinnell v. Howland, 51 Misc. Rep. 132. Her executor received such one-tenth share distributable at her death (about $19,500), and in the pending account alleges that he “ does not know whether these moneys shown in schedule A3 should be distributed among the testatrix’s next of kin as property of which she died intestate, and asks the direction of the surrogate in respect to the distribution thereof.” Also he further alleges: In case the surrogate shall decide that the moneys * * * are to be distributed among the next of kin of testatrix, the executor will desire the instructions of the surrogate as to whether the expenses of administration of the estate and debts of decedent shall be paid out of the residuary estate or out of the funds * * * or how otherwise such expenses and debts shall be paid.”

Decedent’s residuary legatees on one side and her next of kin upon the other contend as to the construction of paragraph twenty-ninth of her will, the former claiming that this fund passes to them, the latter urging that she died intestate as to this particular fund, and that it was expressly excluded from said residuary clause, she not knowing or realizing that it belonged [378]*378in any sense to her, nay, that she herself has said by the very -terms of that clause that it does not. We must not overlook the Tact that Judge Follett said, in construing her father’s will (134 N. Y. 308), as it has a bearing upon the law of the construction of her will also: “ While engaged in interpreting this clause it must constantly be borne in mind that it is a residuary clause by which the testator probably intended to dispose of all of his estate not devised and bequeathed by the earlier provisions of the will, and that in construing wills, and especially residuary clauses, the courts lean toward an interpretation which will prevent partial intestacy. " Morton v. Woodbury, 153 N. Y. 243, 254, 255, 259; Mills v. Tompkins, 110 App. Div.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Mills Surr. 373, 58 Misc. 124, 110 N.Y.S. 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-accounts-of-howland-nysurct-1908.