Monson v. New York Security & Trust Co.

35 N.E. 945, 140 N.Y. 498, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 443, 95 Sickels 498, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1235
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 35 N.E. 945 (Monson v. New York Security & Trust Co.) 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
Monson v. New York Security & Trust Co., 35 N.E. 945, 140 N.Y. 498, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 443, 95 Sickels 498, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1235 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

David Dunham Withers, the executor of his father’s will, died on the 18th day of February, 1892, leaving a will which was admitted to probate by.the surrogate of Hew York county, and letters testamentary were issued thereon by him to the plaintiff herein on the 16th day of March, 1892. This action is brought for the purpose of having the accounts of David Dunham Withers, as executor of the will of his *507 ■father, Beuben Withers, settled and allowed,- and the rights ■and interests of all the parties interested in the estate of the father finally settled and determined and a distribution made in accordance with such determination. From the time that David Dunham Withers - qualified as executor in 1870 the •estate remained in his hands up to his death, and at that time the estate was invested in various securities, some of them standing in the name of the executor individually, some in the name of the estate of Beuben Withers, deceased,’ and some in the name of Beuben Withers. Since the death of the widow of Benben Withers in March, 1878, the estate has largely increased in value by the appreciation of certain of the securities in which it was invested. The investments made by Beuben Withers in his lifetime were kept substantially unchanged during the life of the widow, and from her death •down to the death of the executor, David Dunham Withers*, the investments remained also about the same, with some named exceptions which appear in the accounts of the executor. The failure of the executor, upon the death of the widow, either to pay the sum of $20,000 in money for each of the four trust funds, or to actually and formally allot and set apart ■the various trust shares from the balance of the estate, together with the large appreciation in the value of some of the securities belonging to the estate, have given occasion for this controversy.

The question has arisen substantially Detween the interests of the sisters on the one side and those of the brothers on the other.

On the part of the sisters it is claimed that they should share ro rata in whatever rise in value there was in the securities in which the estate was invested, because, as alleged, those securities represented the trust estates belonging to them under the will of their father.

. . On the part of the brothers, on the contrary, it is claimed that they should be paid the whole residue of the estate after deducting the amount of the various trust estates provided for .by the terms ,of the will. In other words, the representatives *508 of the brothers’ interests claim that they alone are entitled to the whole of the estate, be it great or small, after the sisters have had their four shares of exactly $20,000 each.

Up to the death of the executor in 1892, the brothers, since the death of the mother in 1878, were paid all the income arising from the investment'of the estate, after deducting a sum amounting to the legal interest on each of the four sums of $20,000. The interest actually paid to the sisters during all this time amounted to a little over $71,000. Taking the total value of the estate at the death of the widow to have, been in round numbers $140,000, there remained after deducting therefrom a trust fund of $13,000 under the third clause, and one of like amount under the sixth clause of the will, for the two brothers respectively, and the $80,000 trust fund for the sisters, a balance to be divided between the brothers of $34,000; but as the above sums of $13,000 each were also given in trust for the sons it is just to say that taking them together, the $34,000 and the $26,000, would leave $60,000 to be divided between them as against $80,000 to be divided between the sisters.

Mo division was, however, made, and by reason of the appreciation in the value of the securities' in which the estate remained invested, the brothers were from time to time paid as income upon their interest in such estate a total sum of a little over $95,000, and there is now a large fund (after providing for the trust estate), awaiting distribution under the direction of the court, the whole of which is also claimed on the part of the brothers or those representing their interests. If the securities had been sold and a formal division of the moneys made upon the death of the widow the brothers, upon the assumption that the whole estate was of the above-mentioned value, would have taken in the proportion above set forth.

If an actual setting apart and- allotment of certain special securities had been made, such allotment would of course have been made according to the judgment of the executor, and no one can now say what that judgment would have *509 dictated. But the division, segregation and allotment once being made, the sisters would then have received all the benefits resulting to them from an appreciation of the stock which had been allotted and set apart for them. As there was no formal division of such securities the result is claimed to be that all these benefits accrue solely to the interests owned by the brothers.

Notwithstanding the omission of the executor (who was also trustee) to formally make this separation and division, the sisters claim the right to share proportionately to then* interests in the estate as it existed at the death of the widow, in the increase in the value of the securities in which the estate has all along been invested. This claim in our judgment should be allowed. We think that by the language used in the ninth clause of the will the testator authorized his executor either to pay .the legacies for his daughters in money to the amount of $20,000 each, which should be thereafter invested, or to allot and set apart to them out of the estate of the testator in his hands securities of such estate of the value of $20,000 for each fund. If the latter were done, the rents, issues, income and profits would belong to the persons owning the trust estate. And we agree that if he chose to set apart and allot securities from the estate, he could have taken any security he deemed best (up to the value stated) without being restricted to a proportionate share of all the securities. What securities he should take for the purpose of forming these trust funds, if he decided to set apart any particular ones, was matter for the judgment of the trustee alone.

The use of the words “ value and amount,” as contained in the ninth clause, indicates only that if the executor were to pay the legacies in money, it should amount to the sum of $20,000 for each of the funds, while if he chose to set apart securities of the estate, they should be of that value for each of such trust funds. As the executor omitted to pay the legacies in money, and as he never formally set apart or allotted any of the securities of the estate for the purpose of forming the four trust funds for the sisters, the question is. *510 whether that formal omission is to result as a benefit to the brothers’ interests exclusively.

The sisters’ shares, by reason of the course pursued by the executor, were in truth all contained in, and were at all times represented by these securities. The testator’s estate consisted of such securities, and out of the testator’s estate the several trust estates were to be formed. In substance the sisters owned as life legatees a certain proportionate share of each security.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.E. 945, 140 N.Y. 498, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 443, 95 Sickels 498, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monson-v-new-york-security-trust-co-ny-1894.