Matter of Crawford

21 N.E. 142, 113 N.Y. 366, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 953
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 142 (Matter of Crawford) 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
Matter of Crawford, 21 N.E. 142, 113 N.Y. 366, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 953 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The decision in this case turns on the point whether, under the will, the issue of nephews and nieces of the testator, who died during his lifetime and before the making of the will take under the residuary clause, the share which their parents would have taken if they had survived the testator. His ten brothers and sisters had died before the date of the will, seven of whom left children surviving them at that time, but several nephews and nieces of the testator, brothers and sisters of surviving nephews and nieces had died, leaving issue, before the will was made. The living nephews and nieces claim that they only are entitled to the residue given by the will to the exclusion cf the issue of nephews and nieces who died before the date of the will. If this was the intention of the testator, or if the language of the residuary clause requires the court to say that this was his intention, that intention must be imputed, whatever the court may think was his actual intention outside of the words used. The testator in the residuary clause directs his executors to divide his estate into equal shares, specifying the number, but not their amount. He gives five shares to individuals specifically named; two to the wife of a grand-nephew, one to this grand-nephew’s daughter, and one to each of two children of a deceased niece. Then follows a gift of one share to each of the children living at his death” of his deceased brother Hath aniel, and mutatis mutandis, one share to each of the children of five other deceased brothers and sisters mentioned. Three daughters of a deceased brother, living when the will was made, and then being over sixty years of age and without issue, were not included in the gift of the residue. They were the children of the testator’s brother Frederick, who was not mentioned in the residuary clause. They were given a legacy of $700 each in a prior clause of the will, with succession inter sese, in case of the death of any one before the testator’s death.

*374 The particular language in the residuary clause, on which the controversy turns, immediately succeeds the gifts of the shares to the children of the testator’s brothers and sisters, and is as follows: But in case any one or more of the children of my deceased brothers and sisters mentioned in this clause of my will shall die, or have died before me, leaving lawful issue surviving at the time of my death, then and in that case, such issue of my deceased nephew or niece shall receive the share which his or her ancestor would have received under this clause of my will, had he or she been living at the time of my death, excepting in the case of the issue of Lemuel Crawford, deceased, to whom this clause shall not apply. The children of the said Lemuel Crawford, deceased, having been left a legacy in a former clause of this will.”

The main argument in support of the contention that the issue of nephews and nieces of the testator who died before the making of the will are not comprehended in this clause is that the clause is strictly substitutionary, and that no one can take thereunder unless he is the representative of a nephew or niece living when the will was made, but who had died prior to the death of the testator. This argument treats the nephews and nieces living at the date of the will as the primary legatees, and the clause quoted as intended to provide simply for the devolution of their shares upon their issue, in case of their death intermediate the date of the will and the death of the testator.

There are a large number of cases to be found iri the books, and especially in the English reports, upon the construction of wills, where a gift is made to a class of objects to be ascertained at the testator’s death,.or at some other future time, followed by a provision that in case of the death of some of the objects of the class before the death of the testator, the issue of child or children, or of nephews or nieces, or of the class, whatever it is, shall take. The question has frequently arisen whether the issue of deceased members of the class who died prior to the making of .the will were entitled to take the share which the parent would *375 have taken, if living at the date of the will, but dying before the death of the testator. It is manifest that the testator could include or exclude the issue of pre-deceased members of the class dying before the date of the will, and whether he did or did not include them is a question of construction of the words. The cases are divided into two general classes. In one class are the cases where the alternative clause is treated as strictly substitutionary, and in these it is held that only such issue can take as can show that they represent a person of the class who could, by possibility, have taken under the conditions existing when the will was made, but whose death after the making of the will prevented the primary gift from taking effect. In cases of strict substitution it is evident that an original member of the class pre-deceased before the date of the will could never have taken, and there could be no share of the parent to which the issue could be substituted. In these cases it is held that such issue are excluded, and that only issue of members of the class dying intermediate the date of the will and the death of the testator can take. The case of Christopherson v. Naylor (1 Mer. 319) is a representative case of this class. The other class embraces cases in which the words following a gift to a class are introduced in form or in effect by way of proviso, and are construed as adding to the class who are to participate, defined in the prior clause, another class, viz.", the issue of deceased persons of such class, at whatever time they may have died, whether before or after the date of the will, such issue constituting another and distinct class, by way of original and substantive limitation. In cases of this kind it is. held that the issue take as primary legatees, and not as representatives, by way of substitution to interests given in the prior clause. For examples of this class, we refer to a few of the cases. (Loring v. Thomas, Dre. & Sma. 497; In re Chapman's Will, 32 Beav. 382; In re Potter's Trust, L. R. 8 Eq. 52.) The distinction between the two classes of cases is stated with admirable clearness by James, V. C., in the case of *376 In re Hotchkiss's Trusts (L. R., 8 Eq. 642). It will be found, however, that the cases are not all reconcilable. The diversity of opinion arises in many cases, I apprehend, from the mental attitude in which the particular judge approaches the consideration of such a question, that is, whether he leans to a strict and literal construction of the language of a will or to a liberal and broad construction in aid of the probable intention of the testator. The tendency, however, is towards the inclusion of issue of pre-deceased children. The cases are collected by Jarman (2 Jar. 771 et seq.),

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 142, 113 N.Y. 366, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-crawford-ny-1889.