Matter of Hoffman

94 N.E. 990, 201 N.Y. 247, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 1243
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 94 N.E. 990 (Matter of Hoffman) 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 Hoffman, 94 N.E. 990, 201 N.Y. 247, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 1243 (N.Y. 1911).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The Appellate Division has affirmed a decree of the surrogate of Kings county, which admitted to probate the will of Charles Ferdinand Hoffman, deceased, and which cou.strued certain of its provisions. It consisted of two instruments, a will and a codicil; both of which were wholly written by the testator and were executed a few years before his death. The testator died April 9th, 1909, unmarried and leaving no descendants. The will was executed in 1899. By its first and second articles the testator gave to his nieces Margaret and Carolyn, respectively, legacies of $75,000 and $50,000. He directed that the two legacies should be held in trust and that the income shall be paid only to said legatees respectively and an amount of Ten Thousand dollars ($10,000) *251 of the principal may be paid to each of them if they so elect when they attain the age of 30 years, to purchase and furnish a home. * * * Theremainder of their respective legacies shall remain in trust * * * and in case of the death of either of them without issue, before the death of their Aunt Inez Hoffman, legatee under Art. IV herein, then the share of such decedent shall in such event revert to her the said Inez Hoffman. And in case either said nieces should die without issue subsequently to the death of their Aunt the said Inez Hoffman and prior to the death of their grandmother Caroline Hoffman then in such case their respective shares shall in like manner revert to their grandmother Caroline Hoffman.” Article III gave to his brother, John Frederick Hoffman, a plantation in Louisiana. By article IV the testator gave to his sister, Henrietta Louisa, known in the family as Inez Hoffman, a legacy of $125,000, to be held in trust “and the income thereof to be paid to herself only, * * * with this proviso however that she may if she wish draw not exceeding Ten Thousand dollars ($10,000) with which to purchase and furnish a home for herself. * * * In case of her death without issue and prior to that of her mother, all her interest herein shall revert to her mother.” lie, also, gave to her all his “ interest in and to the estate ” of his mother. By article VI the testator appoints his mother his “ residuary legatee, the amount to be placed in trust as herein provided in Art. VIII, for her sole benefit, and the income thereof to be paid to her. * * * At her death, the principal and any accumulated income there may be shall be divided pro rata between the legatees named in Articles I, II, and IV herein respectively upon the basis of their respective legacies herein and to be subject to the same trust restrictions stated herein appertaining to their several legacies hereunder.” By article VIII the testator appointed the Hnion Trust Company of the city of Hew York as the trustee for the trusts in his will and as the executor thereof. A year later, the testator executed the codicil. By that instrument he, first, revoked the legacies given in art. IV of the will to his sister Inez and substituted in place thereof the sum of *252 “ $25,000, subject to all the conditions and terms as expressed in said Art. IV, with this exception to wit: that the sum of $2,500, * * * instead of ten thousand dollars, be allowed her out of said amount for purchase of a home for herself if she so elects.” Next he bequeathed to his sister, Wilhelmina Bourdette, the sum of $35,000 and to his brother, John Frederick Hoffman, the sum of $10,000 and then provided as follows: ‘‘And I hereby make these two legatees, upon the death of my mother, pro rata residuary legatees under the terms and conditions as set forth in Art. VI herein, as additional residuary legatees. The above legacy to John F, Hoffman is in addition to the one in his favor under Art. HI herein.”

The contents of the will and codicil have been sufficiently referred to for the present purpose. ■ When they became operative at the testator’s death, his mother and the brother and sister mentioned in the codicil had been dead several years. He left an estate of upwards of two million dollars, and his next of kin consisted in two sisters and certain nieces and nephews. While this will is not always well expressed and indicates that the testator was not advised by counsel in framing its provisions, his intention is sufficiently apparent. It has been questioned and construed with respect to the validity of the trusts and with respect to the effect of the provisions of the codicil upon the division of the residuary estate. By the principal instrument, the intention of the testator was to make provision for his two nieces Margaret and Carolyn, for his sister Inez and for his mother. He placed his gifts to them in trust, as to each, and each trust terminated at the death of the particular beneficiary. The trustee was to hold each legacy and the residuary estate as separate trusts, subject as to testator’s sister and nieces to the right to withdraw $10,000 for the purchase of a home. The principal of the trusts for his nieces, in case either died without issue, was to go to their Aunt Inez; or, if she should have died, to their grandmother. In case of the death without issue of his sister Inez, her mother was to receive the trust *253 fund. While a gift of the principal of the trust to children of a beneficiary is not expressed, it arises by implication. The testator, though apparently malting no provision for the contingency of issue, as by a gift in words to such, nevertheless, only gives the remainder to others in the case of a beneficiary’s death without issue. Ho remainderman could talte except in that event. He will be deemed, therefore, to have intended the trust fund to go, primarily, to the children, if any there should be. They would take an estate by implication. (Matter of Moore, 152 N. Y. 602; Close v. Farmers' L. & T. Co., 195 ib. 92.)

Some criticism is made, by way of argument, upon the use of the word share ” by the testator, when directing the disposition of the trust fund upon the death of a niece. It is suggested that that indicates a gift only of the beneficiary’s share of the trust income and that the trust continues as to the principal; but that proposition is untenable. It is very clear that the trust funds were not to be held in solido, but in several trusts; they are so treated in the will and each terminated at the death of the beneficiary. The word share,” however inapt, had reference to the principal of the trust. It referred to the portion of his estate which the testator had set apart and, if susceptible of two meanings, that one will be given, which will support the testamentary provision. Hor is there any difficulty with respect to the trusts in the residuary estate created by article VI. Under the original will, at the death of the testator’s mother, who was to have the use of the residuary estate for life, it was to be divided between the two nieces and the sister of the testator, pro rata, “ upon the basis of their respective legacies and to be subject to the same trust restrictions appertaining to their special legacies.” The effect of this disposition of the residuary estate by the testator was to create additional and separate trusts for each niece and for the sister in shares therein, which would be defined by ascertaining the proportion which the amount of each legacy bore to the aggregate of the three legacies.

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Bluebook (online)
94 N.E. 990, 201 N.Y. 247, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 1243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-hoffman-ny-1911.