N.J. Title Guarantee, C., Co. v. Elsworth

154 A. 602, 108 N.J. Eq. 229, 7 Backes 229, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 140
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 4, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 154 A. 602 (N.J. Title Guarantee, C., Co. v. Elsworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N.J. Title Guarantee, C., Co. v. Elsworth, 154 A. 602, 108 N.J. Eq. 229, 7 Backes 229, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 140 (N.J. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Jane A. Elsworth died May 17th, 1928, leaving a will dated March 21st, 1923, duly admitted to probate. The executor and trustee therein named renounced and the complainant was appointed substitutionary administrator and trustee. The testatrix was unmarried and left no issue, or brothers or sisters, her nearest relatives being nephews and nieces. By her will, after providing for funeral expenses, a marker for her grave and two bequests of $1,000 each, she gave the residue of her estate of her executor in trust, to invest and to pay according to the provisions of clauses 5-c and 5-e of her will.

Clause 5-c is as follows:

"To my nieces Garadetta Van Burkirk and Mary Fitzgerald and my nephews Watson Van Buskirk and Edward Van Buskirk, in equal shares, the interest upon five thousand dollars for and during the term of each of their natural life, and upon the decease of the last one of my nephews or nieces mentioned in this paragraph, the said sum of five thousand dollars shall become a part of my residuary estate."

Clause 5-e is as follows:

"To my nephews Robert Elsworth, John Elsworth and Norman Elsworth, the income derived from the balance of my estate remaining, together with all other moneys that shall fall into my residuary estate as hereinbefore provided, in equal shares for and during the term of their natural life, and upon the decease of my said nephews to pay over said balance of my estate and all moneys that shall become a part of my residuary estate, to such child or children of my said nephews, including the child of my nephew Norman, by his first marriage, as shall be living at that time, in equal shares."

Edward Van Buskirk, one of the nephews mentioned in clause 5-c, predeceased the testatrix, unmarried and without leaving issue and the other nephew and the nieces therein mentioned are still alive.

As to the nephews mentioned in clause 5-e, Robert Elsworth is alive and is married, but has no child. John Elsworth is alive, married and has one child named John R. Elsworth. Norman Elsworth died January 27th, 1929, thus surviving the testatrix about eight months. He married *Page 231 Anna Smith, May 14th, 1904, when she was a little less than sixteen years of age and they had an only child, named Noella Edna, born July 29th, 1904, who afterward married George Post. When this child was born, Anna Smith Elsworth was informed (she says) that because of her youth her marriage to Norman Elsworth was not legal and she never lived with him thereafter and she subsequently married one Clark, without obtaining a divorce from, or having her marriage to Norman Elsworth annulled and she is still alive. The child Noella Edna visited the testatrix frequently until her father married Mary Hahn, August 19th, 1919. The testatrix was present at this second marriage of which a child, named Bertha J. Elsworth, was born November, 1920, and the testatrix became this child's godmother. From the time of Norman Elsworth's second marriage and until the testatrix's death, he lived with his second wife and their child in the immediate neighborhood of the testatrix's residence (from August, 1925, they lived in adjoining houses) and were on friendly terms with and visited each other.

The complainant seeks interpretation of the quoted clauses and instructions as to its duty with respect thereto and the first question to be determined is: Do the life tenants therein named take as tenants in common, or as joint tenants with the right of survivorship?

It is a rule of construction that a gift by will to individuals described by name, though they may constitute a class, indicates the testator's intention to give to them only as individuals and they therefore take as tenants in common. Mason v. Trustees,27 N.J. Eq. 47; Dildine v. Dildine, 32 N.J. Eq. 78;Stoutenburgh v. Moore, 37 N.J. Eq. 63; affirmed, 38 N.J. Eq. 281; Security Trust Co. v. Lovett, 78 N.J. Eq. 445;Pennsylvania Co. v. Riley, 89 N.J. Eq. 252. But the testator's intention is the law of wills when it does not conflict with statutory limitations or principles of public policy, and if upon reading the whole will it appears that it was his intention that the persons so named should take as a class and not as individuals, the will must be construed accordingly and they will take as joint tenants and the death *Page 232 of one of the persons named, before the death of the testator, will not cause a lapse of part of the gift. Dildine v.Dildine, supra; Security Trust Co. v. Lovett, supra;Pennsylvania Co. v. Riley, supra.

By clause 5-c, the testatrix directed her executor and trustee to invest the sum of $5,000 and hold the corpus until the decease of the last one of four nieces and nephews and to pay to them the interest on the investment for and during the term of "each of their natural life." The use of the word "each" has some signifiance and I think that thereby the testatrix intended that the entire income should be paid during the lives of each and every of her nieces and nephews, equally according to the number of such persons who survived her, to such survivors and to and including the last survivor. If it was her intention that each of the four should receive only one-fourth of the income for their respective lives, then she made no provision for the disposition of the share of income of the one dying. Such failure, coupled with her direction that the corpus should remain intact until the death of the last surviving niece or nephew, strengthens my belief that she intended the nieces and nephews named in this clause to receive the income as joint tenants and not as tenants in common. The death of the nephew, Edward Van Buskirk, did not cause a lapse of part of the income, and the complainant is advised that the entire income is to be paid to the remaining nieces and nephew equally during their lives and to the last survivor until his or her death, when the corpus reverts to the testatrix's residuary estate.

By clause 5-e the testatrix directed that the income derived from the balance of her residuary estate should be paid to three nephews for and during the term of "their natural life" and "upon the decease of my said nephews," the corpus should be paid to such child or children of said nephews as should be living at that time. The plan of disposition by this clause differs from the plan disclosed by clause 5-c, in that the income is not given the nephews for "each of their natural life" and the disposition of corpus is not directed to be made "upon the decease of the last one of my nephews." *Page 233

By clause 5-e the testatrix either intended that no final disposition of her estate should be made until all the nephews named had died, and that upon the death of the last survivor such children then alive of the three nephews should take thecorpus; or she intended that the three nephews should take as individuals, each to receive one-third of the income for life and as their respective deaths occurred, one-third of the corpus should be distributed. Here the rule of construction above stated operates, demonstrating its reasonableness, and it must be held that the latter proposition states the testatrix's intention. All three nephews survived the testatrix and Norman has since died.

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Bluebook (online)
154 A. 602, 108 N.J. Eq. 229, 7 Backes 229, 1931 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nj-title-guarantee-c-co-v-elsworth-njch-1931.