Jones v. Dodge

69 Misc. 126, 126 N.Y.S. 181
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 69 Misc. 126 (Jones v. Dodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Dodge, 69 Misc. 126, 126 N.Y.S. 181 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Devendorf, J.

This action is brought by the substituted trustee to obtain a construction of the will creating an express trust and for instructions respecting his authority in regard thereto.

George W. Dodge died March 9, 1881, leaving an estate of upward of $125,000. February thirteenth, preceding his death, he made and executed the will in question, which was admitted to probate shortly after his decease by the surrogate of Oneida county. ITe left a widow and four children him surviving, all of whom are parties defendant, excepting a son, Nathaniel, who died in 1907, leaving two children, the defendants Grace Harry and George W. Dodge.

Three executors and trustees were appointed by said will and duly qualified and acted as such after the probate thereof until their decease or resignation, all of them having ceased to act prior to November 29, 1892, when the plaintiff was appointed as substituted trustee by order of said Sxirrogate’s Court and has acted as such since that time.

In and by said will the testator gave to his wife an annuity of $500 during her life and authorized said executors and trustees, if in their opinion it should be deemed advisable, to purchase a house and lot for her use, not exceeding in value $1,500. He also authorized and empowered them, if they deemed such annuity insufficient, to increase the same to an amount not exceeding $1,000 per annum. The trustees exercised their discretion in favor of the widow in that regard and fixed her annuity at $1,000. He then directed his executors to divide both his real and personal property into fourteen shares and gave and bequeathed to his four children (subject to the bequest to his wife) the use, income and profit of the same during the period of their natural lives, respectively, in manner following: To his son, Nathaniel Dodge, the use, profit and income of five of said fourteen shares, and at his death said five shares were by said will bequeathed and devised to his (Nathaniels) children, share and share alike. The use and income of three of said fourteen shares was willed [128]*128to each of the daughters in language substantially in form as that used with reference to the five shares to the son.

The testator, after disposing of said fractional shares or parts of his estate as above stated, gave the trustees certain powers in the following language: “ I hereby authorize and empower my executors and trustees hereinafter named to make and execute any deeds, contracts or papers that may be required to carry but the provisions of this my last will, and hereby devise and bequeath to them all of my property in trust and for the sole purpose of carrying out the provisions of this my last will, and hereby authorize and empower them to sell and convey my real estate and to keep my money and property invested so that my children may have the use; benefit and income of the same as above provided.

“ I also hereby authorize, empower and direct my said executors and trustees, whenever they or any two of them shall deem it advisable to do so, to pay to either of my children such sum and so much of the principal of which they are to have the use, profits and income as above provided, in ease of any contingency which they may deem it safe and preferable for them to do so, and for the interest of said child or either of my said children.”

Of the foregoing provisions quoted the plaintiff desires a construction, that he may know whether or not he has the- right to make advancements from the several shares to the life beneficiaries. The property was placed in the hands of the trustees in trust for the sole purpose of carrying out the provisions of the will, and the trustees were authorized to sell and convey the real estate and keep the money invested so that the children of the testator might have the “ use, benefit and income of the same as above provided.”

The trustees were also empowered and directed, whenever they or any two of them should deem it advisable, to pay to either of the children from the principal, of which they were to have the use and income, whenever they deemed it for the interest of the child or children of the testator to do so. He did not leave it to the discretion of a surviving [129]*129trustee to make advancements beyond the use and income, but provided for the discretion and judgment of at least two of the trustees in the affirmative before that could bo done.

I think that the substituted trustee has no power under the will to exercise the discretion which was vested in the original trustees. 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. Smith v. Floyd, 124 App. Div. 282; 193 N. Y. 683.

If the construction is given as claimed by plaintiff, the substituted trustee would have unlimited power to advance and pay over to the life beneficiaries so much of the principal as he may see fit. He may turn the whole estate to them and away from the grandchildren. I think that would be contrary to the intention of the testator. The scheme of the will and the intention which seems to have been dominant in his mind, after providing as stated for his widow, was to restrict the children to the life use and income of the respective shares given them; but, in case his three trustees, or a majority of them, should have deemed it advisable to take from the principal, then that power was given them.

I think the exercise of such nower is limited, and intended to be limited, to the trustees named. The testator relied upon the discretion of the trustees. The case of Rogers v. Rogers, 111 N. Y. 228, is not in point, because there the authority given' to the trustees to appropriate part of the principal, to the support of the testator’s wife and mother and to the maintenance and education of the children, was conditioned upon the income proving to be insufficient for those purposes; and the court had from time to time passed upon the questioh of insufficiency and directed that portions of the principal be so applied. The fact of insufficiency was made the test and not the judgment or discretion of the trustees.

[130]*130The primary object of the trust in the case at bar is to conserve the estate, pay to the children of the testator the income as designated and to carry it over to his grandchildren. Incident to it was discretionary power given to the trustees named to advance from the principal, in case they deemed it necessary, for the benefit of the testator’s children. He intended that that discretion should be exercised only by a majority of their number.

An administrator with the will annexed cannot execute a discretionary power of sale vested in executors. He succeeds to the power of sale given to the executor only when the discretion to sell is imperative. Cooke v. Platt, 98 N. Y. 39; Mott v. Ackerman, 92 id. 539.

In Hull v. Hull, 24 N. Y.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 Misc. 126, 126 N.Y.S. 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-dodge-nysupct-1910.