Nester v. Nester

68 Misc. 207
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 68 Misc. 207 (Nester v. Nester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nester v. Nester, 68 Misc. 207 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

Foote, J.

The testator, Samuel K. Hester, died on the 10th day of January, 1908. His will, and two codicils thereto, were probated on the 25th of January, 1908, and letters testamentary were issued to the plaintiff Minnie J. Hester, his widow, the defendant David S. Hester, his cousin, the plaintiffs Byron M. Hester, his son, and Sylvia M. [211]*211Rawleigh, his daughter, and the defendant Montgomery S. Sanford. The testator left him surviving his widow, Minnie J. Fester, about forty-eight years of age, a son, Frederick T. Fester, aged thirty-nine, and a daughter, Sylvia M. Rawleigh, aged thirty-five, both children by a former wife and both plaintiffs, and three sons, Byron M. Fester, aged twenty-four, S'amuel K. Fester, aged twenty-one, both plaintiffs, and Harold A. Fester, aged eleven, a defendant, children by his surviving wife. He also left him surviving four infant grandchildren, the defendants Howard W. Fester and Albert T. Fester, sons of the plaintiff Frederick T. Fester, the first born before, and the second after, the date of the will, and J ames F. Rawleigh and Carol J. Rawleigh, children of the plaintiff Sylvia M. Rawleigh, the first born before, and the second after, the date of the will. He left an estate inventoried after his death as of the value of about $1,075,000, about $360,000 of which consisted of numerous parcels of real estate in and near Geneva, F. Y., where he resided, and large farms in Dakota and Kansas. He had about $430,000 invested in the malting business aside from the real estate where that business was conducted. The annual income from his real estate is about $10,000, and from his personal estate about $35,000. At the time of his death he was sixty-eight years of ¿ge. His will was executed on the 9th day of May, 1896, the first codicil on the 24th of January, 1905, and the second on the 3d day. of May, 1907. These codicils make changes in the executors and trustees named in the will and revoke some pecuniary legacies, but do not affect the main provisions in question here.

The controversy here is over the legal validity of the trusts created by the will; the claim of plaintiffs being that they all suspend the power of alienation of the real estate and the absolute ownership of the personal property beyond two lives in being at the time of the death of the testator, contrary to statute. It should be noted that the widow and all the adult children join in the attack upon this will, and that it is defended only by two of the executors and trustees, who receive nothing under the will except the annual salary [212]*212of $1,000 for one and $1,500 for the other, in lieu of all commissions or other compensation, and by the guardian ad litem for the infant son Harold.

By the first item of his will the testator gives to his executors the house and lot in the village of Geneva, where his son Frederick resides, in trust, to receive the rents, issues and profits “until the arrival of the time herein fixed for my said executors to have their first judicial accounting,” if his son Frederick shall live so long, and, if not, then until his death, and during that time to apply the same to the use of his said son Frederick. By the eighth item of the will the executors are directed to permit his son Frederick to live in and occupy said house and lot during the time limited for the duration of the trust. By the fifteenth item the executors are authorized to sell this house and lot in the event of Frederick’s death or his entire abandonment of its occupancy, and, in case of such sale, it is provided as follows: “ The avails thereof shall, if the time herein fixed for the distribution of the capital of the estate given in trust by said seventh item shall not have arrived, pass to said executors in trust and be held by them upon the trust in said seventh item defined.”

The remainder, after the termination of the term for the benefit of his son Frederick, is not afterward otherwise mentioned or disposed of in the will. By the seventh item of the will all the testator’s property, real and personal, not otherwise specially disposed of, is given to the executors on certain trusts therein mentioned during the two lives of his sons, Byron and Samuel, or until the youngest shall have attained the age of twenty-six years. By the tenth item of the will provision is made for an accounting by the executors and trustees upon the termination of his trust of the residuary, and for a distribution of his estate among his next of kin, except in respect to a portion directed to be held to produce annuities for life to his widow of $3,000, and to his son Daniel Delano for $600.

The plaintiffs contend that there is an unlawful suspension of the power of alienation of this house and lot beyond the statutory period; the argument being, first, that the time [213]*213fixed by the tenth item for the first accounting may be beyond two lives in being; and, if not so, then, second, that there is a suspension of the power of alienation during the three lives of Frederick, Byron and Samuel. Neither of these contentions is in my opinion well founded. This house and lot are, by the first item of the will, given to the executors in trust “ until the arrival of the time herein fixed for my said executors to have their first judicial accounting.” The time for the first judicial accounting is fixed by the tenth item of the will in the following language: When my son Samuel shall have attained the age of twenty-six years, or if before then he shall die leaving my son Byron surviving, then, when my son Byron shall attain the age of twenty-six years, or shall die before attaining that age, or in case of the death of my son Samuel occurring before he attains the age of twenty-six years my son Byron be not living, then within two years after the death of my said son Samuel so occurring, my executors shall render to the proper court an intermediate account of their proceedings as such and as trustees under this will.”

It is said that because of the expression then within two years after the death of my said son Samuel ” the time fixed by the testator for his executors to have their first judicial accounting (and so the time fixed for the termination of the trust of the house and lot for his son Frederick) is or may be limited by the two lives of his sons Byron and-Samuel, and a term or period thereafter not measured by lives, but by the time within two years within which the executors may render their account.

The principal trusts created in this will are found in the seventh item embracing the residuary estate. Their validity is attacked upon the same ground, but the question is not precisely the same as will be seen when we come to consider the seventh item. A construction should undoubtedly be made in favor of the validity of this as of all the items of this will, if it can be done within the established rules of construction, and the true intent and meaning of each item of the will should-be ascertained from the whole instrument. There appears to be no reason for assuming from anything [214]*214to be found in this will that the testator intended to create a trust in respect to this house and lot for Frederick to endure for a longer period than the principal trusts embraced in the seventh item of the will covering the bulk of the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
68 Misc. 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nester-v-nester-nysupct-1910.