Langdon v. . Astor's Executors

16 N.Y. 9
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 16 N.Y. 9 (Langdon v. . Astor's Executors) 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
Langdon v. . Astor's Executors, 16 N.Y. 9 (N.Y. 1857).

Opinions

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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 22 All the material questions of law, upon which the parties in this case disagree, arise upon the alleged satisfaction of the legacy of $100,000 of deposit in the *Page 23 New-York Life Insurance and Trust Company, bequeathed to the plaintiff in the second codicil of the testator's will. The advancement made to her by the testator, in his lifetime, was of funds of the same precise description as those bequeathed. The entries in his account books describe the funds accurately, and there is no mistake in the reference to the testamentary paper in which the legacy is found. In regard to the other legacy claimed, there is an important question upon the construction of the language of the entries, as to the bequest to which they refer, which will be subsequently examined. I will now endeavor to ascertain whether the first mentioned legacy has been legally satisfied, so that it cannot be claimed at the hands of the executors.

It is proved that the testator caused to be issued to a trustee, for the plaintiff, a certificate of deposit in the Trust Company, being the usual evidence of ownership of this kind of property, which upon its face expressed a trust in favor of the plaintiff as to the income for her life, and conveyed a vested interest to her six children, mentioned in the bequest, as legatees in remainder. It is not questioned but that this settlement in favor of the plaintiff was a gift, as distinguished from a conveyance upon a valuable consideration. It was voluntary on the part of the testator, and the plaintiff parted with nothing to obtain it. She was passive in the transaction, doing no act but to receive the evidence of the donation and the income of the gift, as it was paid to her by the trustee. She did not agree that it should have any effect upon the testamentary provisions in her favor, and it does not appear that she knew that the testator intended it should have any such effect, or indeed that she had any knowledge that the testator had made a will. It is, however, certain that the testator intended by the settlement not to bestow upon the plaintiff an additional bounty, but to give her, by way of anticipation, and in his lifetime, what he had inserted in his codicil as a legacy in her favor, *Page 24 to take effect at his death. The gift, as he regarded it, was substitutional, and not cumulative. The contemporaneous entry in his account books states that the transfer was made to her as property left to her in a similar item in a codicil to his will. When he subsequently placed in her own hands the evidence of the fund, and found it convenient in the arrangement of his accounts to debit it to her personally, instead of the trustee to whom it was charged in the first instance, he referred to it as "being property bequeathed to her" by a similar item in the codicil. Not only the amount, but the kind of fund, and the successive estates given to the plaintiff and her children, are perfectly identical with the legacy. I think nothing more can be necessary to demonstrate that the testator intended to satisfy a prior, and not to make an additional gift; but if there were, it would be found in the draft which the testator retained of the codicil, and upon which he wrote that he had transferred to the plaintiff and her children the stock which was the subject of the legacy. This paper was given in evidence by the plaintiff, and is therefore competent against her. There is another feature of the case very material to be considered. The testator did not prepare and execute his testamentary papers in the immediate prospect of death. Several of them contain evidence that he expected to continue in the management of his property, and to add to and modify his testament, as he repeatedly did. As the proprietor of a very large and probably increasing estate, he contemplated making advancements and beneficial provisions, to operate intervivos, to those having the claims of kindred upon him. His immediate descendants were persons of mature age, the plaintiff herself having a married child, needing then, if they could hope to enjoy it, the pecuniary means they might reasonably expect to receive from the testator's bounty. The testator himself took the same reasonable view of the case. He intended not only to modify his testamentary dispositions from time to time, as a change of circumstances or of intention *Page 25 should arise, but to make gifts in presenti, as he should find occasion, in his lifetime. He might make such gifts by way of addition to those he had set down in his will, or he might advance, by anticipation, the whole or portions of what he had thus set down. He therefore recited in his first codicil that he might make advancements or beneficial provisions for persons or purposes provided for in his will and codicils, and he thereupon directed that such advancements, if charged in his books of account, should be deemed so much, on account of the provision in his will or codicils, in favor of such persons or purposes. This direction looked to future codicils, as well as the one he was then preparing. This will be evident from reading the whole clause. It begins by making certain general provisions, which he declares shall apply to his will, to that codicil, and to any subsequent codicil; and when he comes to give directions respecting advancements in satisfaction for legacies, they are made to relate to legacies given by his will and codicils, in the plural number.

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Bluebook (online)
16 N.Y. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langdon-v-astors-executors-ny-1857.