In Re the Probate of the Will of Turner

101 N.E. 905, 208 N.Y. 261, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1050
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 101 N.E. 905 (In Re the Probate of the Will of Turner) 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 Probate of the Will of Turner, 101 N.E. 905, 208 N.Y. 261, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1050 (N.Y. 1913).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.

The clause of the will which we are called upon to construe in this case reads as follows:

Eleventh. All the rest residue and reversion of my estate, both real and personal, I give, devise and bequeath *264 as follows,— to my nephew, Byron J. Tillman of Buffalo, N. Y., one share; to my niece, Grace Joy of Boise, Idaho, one share; and to each of the children of my brother, George Turner, one share, to be divided equally among my said nieces and nephews share and share alike. I direct that the share of any dying with issue surviving shall be paid to such issue and that the share of any dying without issue surviving shall be equally divided among the survivors.”

In the portion of the decree which is appealed from the surrogate of Monroe county considered this clause as requiring that the residuary estate of the testator should be divided into eight equal shares “and that of said eight shares said Byron J. Tillman is entitled to one share; said Grace Joy is entitled to one share; said Helen M. Lucas is entitled to one share; said Belle Shumway is entitled to one share; said Fred Turner is entitled to one share; said Charles 0. Turner is entitled to one share; said George W. Turner is entitled to one share and said Blanche Turner is entitled to one share.”

Byron J. Tillman is a nephew of the testator; Grace Joy is a niece; and the other persons above mentioned are the children of the testator’s brother, George Turner (who died before him), except Blanche Turner, who is the daughter of a deceased son of the said George Turner. This son died before the testator made his will.

The extrinsic facts which were proven upon the hearing before the surrogate in reference to the knowledge of the testator concerning his several relatives and notably his lack of knowledge concerning the children of his brother, George, might suffice to create a doubt as to whether the construction adopted by the surrogate was really expressive of the testator’s intention were it not for the plain language of the will and the natural and accepted meaning of the words used in the eleventh clause. It is plainly impossible to adopt the construction contended for by the. learned counsel for the appellant *265 unless we disregard the presence of the word “each” in the bequest to “each of the children of my brother— George Turner. ” This word is correctly defined in Anderson’s Law Dictionary as meaning “Every one of the two or more composing the whole.” In State v. Maine Central R. R. Co. (66 Me. 488, 510) it is said: “ Each means every one of any number separately considered.” Assigning to it this signification in the clause in question, the bequest is the gift of one share to every one of the children of the testator’s brother George and can only be carried into effect by treating the entire residuary clause as a bequest per capita to the individuals named or indicated therein. In support of the argument that the use of the word each in the will in no way alters the fact that the bequest was a bequest to the children of George collectively, but two cases are cited: De Nottebeck v. Astor (13 N. Y. 98) and Pimel v. Betjemann (183 N. Y. 194). In the De Nottebeck case the testamentary provision in controversy was as follows: “Also I give to the said six children of my daughter Dorothea, or to such of them as may survive me, one hundred thousand dollars of the public debt of the City of Mew York, bearing five per cent, interest, usually called the water loan, to be paid to each on attaining their age of twenty-one years.” This was held to give to the six children who should survive the testator the one hundred thousand dollars of water stock collectively notwithstanding the limiting phrase “to be paid to each.” This result was reached by comparing the clause in question with other bequests in the will, such as “to each of my said grandsons,” naming them, and “to each of my said granddaughters.” Judge Demo thought that these bequests showed that where the testator designed to give to each of several persons a legacy pf an equal amount of money he had adopted a form of expression which he omitted to use in the clause under consideration, and from this fact the court drew the inference that he did pot intend to give each of the six surviving children of *266 Ms daughter Dorothea the sum of one hundred thousand dollars. In the Pimel case, while a direction to executors “to pay to each of my children who shall have arrived at the age of twenty-one years the sum of five hundred dollars ” was spoken of as a bequest to a class, the only question there considered was whether the class included persons dead before the making of the will, and we do not find any intimation in the opinion as to the quantum receivable by the members of the class. Neither of these decisions, therefore, seems to sustain the position of the appellant.

On the other hand, very much in point the other way is the case of Penney's Estate (159 Pa. St. 346). There the sixth clause of the will after providing for the payment of previously mentioned legatees and the funeral expenses of the testator, including a tombstone, directed that the balance of the estate be converted into cash and “be distributed share and share alike to the following persons if they are living at the time of my death, namely: to my sister Martha J. Houghton, one share, and to my stepdaughter, Olive J. Smith, one share, and to each of my nephews and nieces then living, one share.” The auditing judge divided the residuary estate into three parts and distributed one-third to Martha J. Houghton, one-third to Olive J. Smith and one-third to the nieces and nephews. The court of intermediate appeal and the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held that this distribution was erroneous by reason of the presence of the dominant word “each” in the bequest. “The grammatical meaning of this clause of the sentence,” said Mr. Justice Mitchell, ‘ ‘ does not admit of question. The word each ’ separates the class into individuals and is equivalent to the detailed enumeration, cto A. one share, to B. one share, to 0. one share,’ etc., for which it was a compendious summary. As well said by the learned court below, had the testator, after directing distribution share and share alike to the following persons, then ‘ designated all *267 -of the legatees by name there would be no room for doubt that he intended a per capita distribution.’ But by the use of the word £ each ’ he did in effect designate them all individually as plainly as if he had inserted their several names.”

We 'are not greatly impressed by the argument in behalf of the appellant based upon the punctuation of the eleventh clause to the effect that because the phrase “to be divided equally among my said nieces and nephews share and share alike ” is preceded by a comma instead of by a semicolon it, therefore, is to be deemed to qualify only the gift to the children of George Turner and not all the gifts which precede it.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.E. 905, 208 N.Y. 261, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-probate-of-the-will-of-turner-ny-1913.