Leask v. Richards

116 A.D. 274, 101 N.Y.S. 652, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2651
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 7, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 116 A.D. 274 (Leask v. Richards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leask v. Richards, 116 A.D. 274, 101 N.Y.S. 652, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2651 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinions

Scott, J.:

The controversy in this -action concerns the 30th clause of the will of Hudson Hoagland,- who died on January 30, 1904, leaving a will which had been executed on ¡November 16,1903, with a codicil 'bearing date December 9, 1903. By the earlier clauses of his will he had disposed of a very considerable sum of money which he had. left in the main to nephews and nieces and grandnephews and grandnieces, giving to some bequests outright, and as to others intrusting the sums to his executors with instructions to pay over the income to the principal beneficiaries for life, with differing directions as to the. final disposal of the principal. • The 30th clause, which we are now required to construe, reads as follows :

“ All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate and property, that is to say, all not hereinbefore disposed of, I give, devise and bequeath to my nephews and nieces to be divided between them in the proportions which the respective gifts made to them herein bear to each other/’ ' •

AH the property disposed of by the will, as well 6s that comprising the' residuary estate, is personal property. The fir^t question which arises is whether or not this 30th clause is operative at all, or [277]*277whether on the other hand the testator died intestate as to his residuary estate. Although this is the first question to suggest itself its answer can be found only after the other questions presented have themselves been answered, for there is no ground for pronouncing the clause invalid unless, owing to the peculiarities of the will, it should be found impossible to carry out the testator’s intentions respecting the distribution of his residuary estate. It is our duty to so construe the clause, if possible, as to avoid intestacy and at the same time carry out the declared will of the testator and, as will be seen, we are of opinion that both of. these ends can be accomplished. It is quite evident that the testator did not intend to die intestate as to any portion of his estate, and the difficulty of carrying out the directions contained in the clause in question arises only from the manner in which he had in the earlier clauses of his will made bequests to his different beneficiaries. The language of the 30th clause, standing by itself and without reference to the other parts of the will, is clear and unambiguous. The testator gives, devises and bequeaths his residuary estate to certain nephews and nieces. The words import an absolute'gift. There is no suggestion of any attempt or desire to create trusts or life interests, but to whomsoever may be found to be the nephews and nieces intended the residuary estate is given outright. To construe this language as reating trusts or life interests would be to strain the language of the will, to violate well-established canons of construction and, as to a part of the residuary estate, would be to create an unlawful postponement of absolute ownership. We, therefore, conclude that whoever may be entitled to share in the residuary estate will take their shares absolutely. The question as to who are entitled to share is one which has been much discussed, and requires an examination of the whole will and of the history and circumstances of testator’s family. The will is not a model of draughtsmanship, and at first reading would appear to have been drawn without any very definite plan of distribution. Each clause containing a bequest is.clear and definite in itself, but when read together there is a suggestion of incoherence so far as regards any general plan either as to the parties to be benefited or as to the benefits to be conferred. Much of •this apparent incoherence, however, disappears when the will is carefully studied in the light of the testimony as to the testator’s family [278]*278and relations. The testator was eighty-three years old at the time of his death and had, during the last seven years of his life, made a number of wills. In the case of the will under exaihination he had had the provisions of a former will recopied, except as_ to-a few o:f the clauses, in which he had made,, changes, mkinly as to the amounts involved; and it is not unreasonable to suppose that the apparent inconsistencies in the final will may have been due to the adqption from time to time of this method, of engrafting changes upon a will which 'doubtless in the first instance bad been properly and consistently drawn. The testator was k widower and. left no children or descendants. He had had four sisters, all of whom had married and- had died leaving children-.- He bad had four brothers, one of whom survived him, and another of whom' had died young and unmarried. The. other two had married and had died leaving children. . Many of the testator’s.nephews and nieces had married and had children, and some.had dijsd leaving children. He had had in all twenty-eight nephews-and nieces, of whom sixteen survived him and twelve, died -before he did.; In one form ■ or another he- remembered fifteen of these surviving nephews and-nieces; the sixteenth had gone west many years - ago, and it is not certain that the testator knew of his existence. In the 6th clause of his will he gives an absolute legacy to the .son qf Mary Hurd, who was his eldest sister. In tlie 7th ' clause he gives a sum of money to his executors, in trust for Emma McCarthy;, who was the daughter of his deceased sister, Sally Ann McCarthy. In the 8th and 9th clauses he makes provision for Cornelia F. Hose and Mary Benjamin, the children of his deceased sister, Phcelbe Hurd. ' In the 10th clause he gives legacies outright to a grandniece and grandnephew— the children of a deceased son of his deceased sister, Eliza .Belknap, and explains that for special reasons lie has made no provision for another grandnephew. In the. lltli clause he also makes provision for a grandnephew, the son of a deceased daughter of his sister Eliza. In the -12th clause he provides for a son of his deceased brother, William Hoagland; in the 13th clause he provides for a grandnephew, the son of -a deceased son of William Hoagland, and in the 14th clause he provides for two nieces, daughters "of said ' brother,-William Hoagland. In.the 15'th; 16th and 17th clauses he provides severally for the- children of his. deceased brpther, John E. [279]*279Hoagland. Up to this point the testator had provided severally and separately for each nephew and niece (save one) who were children of a deceased brother or sister, and where a nephew or niece had died he had made provision for his or her children. The sole exception was his nephew, Edward B. Hurd, the nephew'w'ho, as has been said, had gone west many years before the will was made; and in a later clause of the will, as if by an afterthought, lie gave a legacy to the daughter of that nephew. • He had one surviving brother, Mahlon, a very old man,.who had a son, grandchildren, the " issue of a deceased son, and three daughters. He gave a considerable sum to his executors to hold during his brother’s life, paying, the income to him, and at his death gave a portion of the principal to Mahlon’s son and the testator’s namesake, absolutely; gave another portion to the widow of his deceased nephew, son of Mahlon, for her life, with the residue to her children ; and with the remainder he provided .for his nieces, the three daughters of his brother, Mahlon.

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Bluebook (online)
116 A.D. 274, 101 N.Y.S. 652, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leask-v-richards-nyappdiv-1906.