In re White

135 Misc. 377, 238 N.Y.S. 559, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1045
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 135 Misc. 377 (In re White) 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 White, 135 Misc. 377, 238 N.Y.S. 559, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1045 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

The question involved in this proceeding concerns the powers which may be exercised by a successor trustee of certain trusts erected by the will of Sarah E. White, which was admitted to probate in this court on April 4, 1905.

By the first seven items of her will, testatrix gave eight legacies aggregating $37,500, of which sum $22,500 was to be paid forthwith, [378]*378and $15,000 conditioned on the respective beneficiaries surviving testatrix’s son, Frederick F. White. She then erected a trust of $6,000 for her sister, Carry A. Cole, and a trust of the remainder of her estate for the benefit of her son, Frederick F. White, during the fife of his present wife Mary C. White,” directing that if he survived her, the corpus should be paid to him outright. Further trusts of $30,000 and $45,000, respectively, were erected for Mary C. White and testatrix’s granddaughter, Lefia K. White, in case they survived the son, with remainders payable outright to such granddaughter. Any otherwise undisposed of portions of the estate were given to three named brothers and one named sister of testatrix. The executors appointed were James Troy, Thomas H. Troy, and the son, Frederick F. White.

The will contained the following additional provision for the benefit of testatrix’s son: “ I further authorize and empower my said Executors other than the said Frederick F. White in the exercise of their Judgment and discretion, if they deem it for his benefit or advantage, to pay and advance to him from time to time out of the principal of my estate such sum or sums of money as he may require, and as they deem proper as aforesaid hereby giving and granting unto my said Executors other than the said Frederick F. White full and unlimited power and authority in this respect, it being expressly provided however that the power and authority hereby given to advance to my said son out of the principal of my estate is not so given or intended to be given to, or to be exercised by him as one of my Executors or otherwise, but is intended to be given, conferred upon and exercised by the other Executors only exclusive of the said Frederick F. White.”

James Troy, one of the named executors, died in 1917, and Thomas H. Troy, the second, died on December 14, 1928.

This proceeding has been instituted for the judicial settlement of the accounts of the executors and trustees and for the appointment of a successor trustee, in connection with which a construction is prayed as to the right of a successor trustee to exercise the discretionary powers above noted.

The accounts show that the present value of .principal is $171,922.83. During the period of thirteen and a half years covered by the submitted account, the income payment to F. F. White, the fife tenant, has averaged $7,682.08 a year and in this time it appears that the trustees in the exercise of their discretionary powers have made payments of principal on three occasions, viz., in 1916, $1,200; in 1922, $1,750; and in 1926, $600.

The rules of law in this State respecting the occasions when substituted or successor trustees are deemed to be vested with [379]*379discretionary powers granted to those first named in the instrument erecting the trust are apparently the subject of considerable confusion in the minds of a large part of the legal profession.

The opinion seems to be prevalent that on this branch of the subject of testamentary construction, a rule of thumb exists, by the aid of which all problems of this nature may be solved out of hand without reference to the otherwise universal limner of construction, that the intention of the testator must prevail so far as it is ascertainable from the four corners of the will. It is believed that the authoritative determinations involving the question demonstrate that such is not the case; and that on this branch of the subject of construction of wills, as elsewhere, the determining factor is the intention of the testator as disclosed by the words used in the document construed.

Perhaps the leading case on this subject is Smith v. Floyd, which was first heard at Special Term in 1907 (56 Misc. 196). By the terms of the will in that case, testatrix bequeathed her entire estate to trustees to apply the income for the use, maintenance and support of her only daughter, gave such daughter a power of appointment as to principal, made alternate gifts contingent on her failure to exercise the power, and gave, her trustees authority to apply such portion of the capital of the trust funds as they may deem advisable to the use ” of the daughter. One of the trustees died, and the other resigned, whereupon the question was presented as to whether a substituted trustee should be held vested with a similar discretion. It appeared that the estate consisted of $20,000 personalty, which yielded the daughter an income of $76 a month, and of $30,000 realty, which was entirely unproductive; that she had no other income and' that the sum which she received was entirely inadequate for her support. The court at Special Term reluctantly concluded that the discretionary power did not pass to the substituted trustee. This was affirmed in the Appellate Division by a three to two decision (124 App. Div. 277), Judge Ingraham writing a strong dissenting opinion. On appeal to the Court of Appeals, the decision was unanimously reversed on the opinion of Judge Ingraham (193 N. Y. 683). This opinion being thus adopted by the Court of Appeals becomes the controlling statement of the law of the State. The learned judge in this opinion notes the ratio decidendi of the court below that- “ ‘ whenever power is of a kind that indicates a personal confidence it must prima facie be understood to be confined to the individual to whom it is given, and it will not, except by express words, pass to others, to whom by legal transmission the same character may happen to belong.’ ” He then writes as follows (p. 282): With this principle we are [380]*380not at all inclined to disagree; but in considering whether it is applicable to this case, it must depend on whether it was the intention of the testatrix that the exercise of this power should be limited to the trustees that she named, for, after all, this question, like all others that relate to the construction of a will, is to be determined by the intention of the testator.”

The opinion then notes the smallness of the estate, the intention of testatrix to devote it in its entirety to the daughter with absolute power of appointment, and continues (at p. 283): “ It was not a case where a discretion was vested in the trustees in relation to the management of her estate, which she desired to intrust to the skill of the trustees, and which it was not reasonable to suppose she would intend to submit to the discretion of a substituted trustee with whose selection she could have no influence, but a provision for the benefit of a beneficiary in whom the testatrix was interested and for whose benefit she appropriated her whole estate.”

The final pertinent principle is stated at page 284: In determining whether or not a testatrix intended that a discretion with which her trustees were vested was one that must be exercised by the trustee named, and was not intended to be exercised by a substituted trustee, attention, I think, should be given to the nature and extent of the power and the period during which it was contemplated that it would be necessary to exercise the power.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 Misc. 377, 238 N.Y.S. 559, 1929 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-white-nysurct-1929.