Loder v. . Hatfield

71 N.Y. 92, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 473
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 13, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 71 N.Y. 92 (Loder v. . Hatfield) 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
Loder v. . Hatfield, 71 N.Y. 92, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 473 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

*97 Folger, J.

The legacies in question in this case are charged upon the lands • devised to the testator of the defendants. The devise of the lauds was expressly upon certain 11condi-tions and proviso and it is again stated in the will, that the devise of the homestead farm to the son Jonathan Avas on “ conditions and proviso before mentioned.” It is plain that within these conditions and proviso fall the legacies to the several daughters of the testator, among which are those now in controversy. A devise of land to one, on condition that he pay the legacies given by the will, make them a charge thereon in equity (Birdsall v. Hewlett, 1 Paige 32 ; Harris v. Fly, 7 id., 421), unless there is something in the Avill to sIioav a different intention (7 id., supra), Avhich is not the case here. Though by accepting the devise, the devisee became personally liable for the payment of the legacies, yet the lands devised remained in equity as security for the payment. (Kelsey v. Western, 2 N. Y., 500, 508.)

The question whether those legacies vested in the legatees, in their life-time, is not so easily disposed of. There are some considerations arising out of the provisions of the Avill, and the circumstances in which the legatees were placed by it, which tend to sIioav that the legacies did not vest. Thus it is plain that it was the intent of the will that the daughters of the testator, to whom these legacies were given, should remain upon the homestead farm, which was devised to the son, receiving their maintenance from it and yielding their services in carrying it on. The time of payment fixed for the legacies was after this situation of the legatees should have ceased. The legacies are made payable after marriage of the legatees, or after an inclination made known by them to leave the homestead. It is quite plausible to say, looking alone at this provision of the will, and excluding from consideration the rules of decision which have been established, and Avhich are brought into operation by other provisions of the will, and by other circumstances; it is quite plausible to say that the intention of the testator was, that the legacies should not vest at once upon his death, but should be con *98 tingent upon the happening of one or the other of those events. Neither of these has happened. And so it is quite plausible also to say, that neither of these legatees have come into the condition which was first to. take place before payment could be made or demanded, and that the successors of those legatees are not entitled to have payment of the legacies. But there are other parts of the will, and other circumstances of the case, which evoke the rules above spoken of, and which have brought us to the conclusion that these legacies vested at once in the legatees named upon the death of the testator. It is a general rule, that a postponement of the time of payment will not, of itself, make a legacy contingent, unless it be annexed to the substance of the gift; or, as it is sometimes put, unless it he upon an event of such a nature that it is to be presumed that the testator meant to make no gift unless that event happened. Now, in looking mto the will in this case, two things are quite plain: that, so far as the collocation of the words of gift, and the words of time of payment are concerned, they arc quite distinct; and that the words of gift are direct, emphatic and absolute. Hence we may gather the intent, as being to make an absolute and present vested gift, and to defer to the future only the time of payment. The form of words in which the gift is made, is this: “I order and direct my son Jonathan to pay unto my three daughters-—-Hannah, Eunice and Sarah— four hundred dollars each, which I give and bequeath to them and their "heirs forever.” This clause of gift stands alone, so far as the clause of time of payment is concerned; alone and disconnected from the latter, both in sense and the necessities of grammar. Nor is it unworthy of notice, that the contrary is the case with all the other legacies, save one, given by the will; and that as to them, it does immediately accompany the words of gift with the direction as to the time of payment. And the other one thus excepted, is in the same category ivith those in question in this case. Certainly, the idea conveyed by the terms of the gift, as above stated, is of an absolute, sure and lasting bequest, to belong *99 at once and forever to the legatees named, or to those coming after them in legal succession; while the severance of the clause of bequest from the clause of túne of payment repels, rather than supports, the notion that more than the time of payment was meant to be contingent. The gift is direct to the legatees and their heirs, and independent of the direction when to pay. In such case the rule is, that the direction for payment, on the happening of an event named, shall not defer the vesting of the legacy. ■ (In re Bartholomew, 1 McN. & Gordon, 345; Leiter v. Bradley, 1 Hare, 12, 13; see, also, Andrew v. N. Y. Bible and Prayer Book Society, 4 Sandf. [S. C.], 156, 173; Patterson v. Ellis, 11 Wend., 259.) The gift is contained in the words alone: “ unto my three daughters—Hannah, Eunice and Sarah—four hundred dollars each, which I give and bequeath to them and their heirs forever.” It. is not unto those of my three daughters who shall marry, or who shall feel inclined to leave the farm; nor is it even, “ when,” or “if” either of those things take place. The objects of the gift are made distinct by the relation of the donees to the testator, and by them given names. It is the time of payment only that needs to refer for certainty to the event of marriage or leaving home. The gift being, then, direct and distinct, the rule above quoted comes into play.

The words of the will, by which the gift is not alone to the daughters, but “ to them and their heirs forever,” are entitled to weight. They show that the testator had in mind a permanent separation from the bulk of his estate of the amount of these legacies, and a transmission of it in a different course of succession. In a like case, Lowther v. Condon (2 Atk., 130, 132), Lord Hardwicks said he might, and “ ought, to lay hold of a strong reasoning to be drawn from the words executors, administrators or assigns.” And it is to be observed of them, that they are nearly the same form of words which the testator uses in making the gift and devise to his son Jonathan of the homestead and other lands. There is no doubt but he meant to give him an absolute fee, *100 and to vest him at once with the title, charged with the payment of the legacies.

It is another rule, that if the direction to pay at a future period be for the convenience of the. estate, or to let in some other interest, the vesting of the gift is not prevented. (Packham v. Gregory, 4 Hare, 398.) That such was the purpose in this case is shown by several things.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.Y. 92, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loder-v-hatfield-ny-1877.