Ogden v. McLane

67 A. 695, 73 N.J. Eq. 159, 3 Buchanan 159, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 38
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 10, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 67 A. 695 (Ogden v. McLane) 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
Ogden v. McLane, 67 A. 695, 73 N.J. Eq. 159, 3 Buchanan 159, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 38 (N.J. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Stevenson, V. C.

This is a friendly suit brought by the complainants as trustees of real and personal property, alleging that doubts have arisen as to their duty, and praying for the instruction of this court in the premises.

My conclusions are as follows:

1. The complainants, as trustees at the present time, plainly hold legal title to the estate in their hands. The will of James [161]*161Gore King, deceased, which created the trust, makes a gift consisting of both a devise of real estate and a bequest of personal estate to the trustees to whose title the complainants have succeeded. The trustees are to apply the income of the entire trust estate to the beneficiary, a daughter of the testator, Fanny King McLane (now deceased), during her lifetime.

Upon the death of this beneficiary the trustees are charged with the duty of paying over and transferring the corpus of the estate in their hands to certain persons named or described in the will, under certain conditions therein set forth or provided for. So far as the trust estate consists of personal property the duty of the trustees either is now or at some future time will be to pay over the same to the final takers. A corresponding duty now rests or will rest upon the trustees to make a conveyance of the real estate vested in them in trust to these takers.

The only questions now before this court upon this bill, which the court can answer, are—

First. Whether the trustees are now under the duty of paying over and transferring the trust estate, or are to continue to hold the same.

Second. If the trustees are to continue to hold the trust estate which involves the collection of the income thereof, to whom is such income payable ?

Third. If the time to pay over and transfer has been reached, who are the persons to whom such transfer and payment should be made ? •

If the first question is answered in favor of the continuance of the trust, then it follows that the third question will not be considered. This court will not instruct trustees in regard to their duty with respect to the payment -or transfer of the trust estate in their hands until the time for such payment and transfer has arrived. When the time to act arrives the parties who then will be affected by the action of the trustees are entitled to be heard; they are the parties who argue the question, the determination of which directly affects their interest. Griggs v. Veghte, 47 N. J. Eq. (2 Dick.) 180; Traphagen v. Levey, 45 N. J. Eq. (18 Stew.) 448, 453; Tuttle v. Woolworth, 62 N. J. Eq. (17 Dick.) [162]*162532; Norris v. Beardsley, 62 Atl. Rep. 425; Conant v. Bassett, 52 N. J. Eq. (7 Dick.) 12.

2. I think it is clear that the will vests three distinct powers of appointment in the testator’s daughter, Eanny King McLane, and that these powers are absolutely independent of each other, so that the invalidity of one could not affect anyone of the others.

These different powers of .appointment appear to be ag follows:

(1) The power to appoint the entire corpus of the estate among a class of relatives named in the will, or a sub-class of such relatives to be selected by the donee of the power, Mrs. McLane.

■(2) The power to appoint the entire corpus of the estate to any surviving husband of the donee- of the power absolutely. ■

It is manifest that these two powers are alternatives; that one onfy of them could be exercised. They are, however, plainly independent of each other although the exercise of one excludes the exercise of the other.

(3) The power to appoint “a life estate either in the whole income or any part thereof” to a surviving husband. This power and the one last enumerated are also alternatives, not only because of their essential nature, but because of the express language of the will. The donee of the power is authorized to give to her surviving husband either a life estate in the income or the whole of the capital.

This last-mentioned power — the power to make an appointment of income for the benefit of a surviving husband — may be subdivided into two distinct alternative powers, viz., (a) the power to appoint a life estate in the whole income, and (5) the power to appoint a life estate in any part of the income. The exercise of this power in either form or to either extent imposes a modification of the first power of appointment above mentioned, and in like manner imposes a modification upon the express gift of the remainder contained in the testator’s will.

The slightest examination of the various powers vested in Mrs. McLane will, I think, make it evident that each of these powers as above enumerated is entirely independent of the others. The testator disposes of the entire remainder after the death of [163]*163bis daughter, Mrs. McLane, but subjects such disposition to the possible exercise of either of these three distinct powers, and to the possible exercise of two of these powers. Whether one of these powers, or two of them above mentioned, or none of them, shall be exercised, is left absolutely within Mrs. McLane’s discretion. She may exercise the power of providing for the support of her surviving husband out of the income of the trust estate without undertaking by the exercise of another power to interfere with the final disposition of the corpus of the estate which the testator has clearly made. On the other hand, she may appoint the corpus of the estate absolutely to her children and other relatives mentioned in the will, without mentioning her husband’s name or giving him any interest in either income or principal. ■She may also appoint income to her husband and corpus to the relatives of the class named. Finally, she may make no appointment either in respect of income or corpus and thus leave the ■entire trust estate to vest upon her death in the remaindermen named in her father’s will.

3. The power vested in Mrs. McLane, the beneficiary of the income for her life, to appoint either the corpus of the estate to her husband absolutely or create by appointment a life •estate in him in the income of the trust estate, is not invalid-on .account of the rule against perpetuities. Loring v. Blake, 98 Mass. 258; Lawrence Estate (appeal of Appleton), 136 Pa. St. 354; 1 Jarm. Wills (R. & T. ed.) 547, 551. The authorities seem to establish the proposition beyond dispute that the mere fact that the surviving husband may have been born after the ■decease of the testator does not affect the validity of the testamentary disposition. The reason is that, upon the death of the life tenant or beneficiary for life, by her appointment the entire estate becomes vested, and there remains no possible uncertainty as to who are the takers. There are parties in esse who are capable of making absolute transfers. In this case Mrs. McLane, the daughter of the testator, survived him over fifty years. It is possible that she might have married a young man a few weeks before her death and then have appointed to him a life estate which might endure for half a century longer. Nevertheless in [164]*164such case,, upon Mrs. McLane’s death, the whole estate in tire hands of the trustees, which is the subject of disposition, would immediately vest in definite persons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 A. 695, 73 N.J. Eq. 159, 3 Buchanan 159, 1907 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-v-mclane-njch-1907.