Ogden v. Ogden

40 Misc. 473, 82 N.Y.S. 710
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 Misc. 473 (Ogden v. Ogden) 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
Ogden v. Ogden, 40 Misc. 473, 82 N.Y.S. 710 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Leventritt, J.

This is an action for the construction of a will and presents as the sole issue for determination the ever recurring question whether certain interests are vested or contingent.

Briefly stated, the general scheme of the will is the creation of a trust, measured by two lives, during which the income of the estate, which is divided into a specified number of shares, is to be paid over to named beneficiaries, who are, after the termination of the trust, to receive the principal of the shares from which the income theretofore issued.

The will is a very long document, but only two clauses, the third and sixth, are up for construction in this action. There has been a previous construction (Butler v. Green, 65 Hun, 99) which involved the validity of certain bequests to charitable uses. That question is now eliminated.

William B. Ogden, the testator, died in August, 1877, a resident of this county, where his will was admitted to probate. He was childless and left him surviving his widow, who is still living, four brothers and sisters and certain children, and a nephew and niece, children of a sister who pre-deceased him. Excepting certain specific bequests and devises, the distribution of his entire estate was ultimately to be made among this group of persons.

After appointing executors and trustees the will devises and bequeaths to them all the testator’s residuary estate in trust with very broad powers of sale, investment, leasing and administration. It was held in Butler v. Green, supra, that there was no equitable conversion of the real into personal property. The trust is measured by the lives of his'widow and brother-in-law during which term the trustees are to hold and manage the property, collect the entire income and to apply the same to the uses of the persons hereinafter mentioned in that behalf, in the manner and to the extent," and in the proportions hereinafter set forth.” This is done in the third clause of the will which reads, so far as ma[475]*475terial, as follows: “ Third. * * * I order and direct that my said Executors and Trustees shall deem all the property devised and bequeathed to them * * * as divided into twenty shares or portions, and my Executors and Trustees shall from time to time, and at least once in each year * * * apply and pay over such rents, issues, profits and income thereof * ” * to the persons and in the proportions following.”

Then follow very precise provisions as to the distribution of the income, every beneficiary being designated by name, and the members of each family being included in a separate paragraph. Thus the wife receives four shares or twenty per cent; of all the income; his sister. Emily B. Wheeler, an allowance of six per cent, which is to cease on her death; the six children of Emily B. Wheeler, all of whom are named, four per cent, each, to be increased on the death of the mother by the addition of her share, so that the six shall receive thirty per cent, in the aggregate; the two children of his sister Eliza A. Butler, designated by name, two and a half per cent, or a half-share each; the three children of his sister Caroline, by a first and second marriage, all specified with particularity, two and a half per cent, or a half-share each; the three children of his brother Mahlon Ogden, given by name, five per cent, or one share each, to be increased in favor of one of the nephews named after the testator to two shares in a certain contingency not here necessary to enlarge upon, these shares, however, not to be paid to the parents until the children are of age; the two children of a deceased sister, indicated hy name, five per cent, or one share each; finally there is a bequest of income to charitable use which has been declared invalid so far as it issued from property in this State.

The principal is disposed of in the sixth clause of the will reading as follows: “ From and after the decease of my said wife, Mariana O. Ogden, and my said brother-in-law, Edwin H. Sheldon, being the two lives now in being by which the right of my said Executors and Trustees to collect and receive the rents, issues and profits of my estate are limited, I give, devise and bequeath all and singular the real and personal estate of which my said Executors and Trustees shall theretofore have received the rents, issues, and profits, and all the rest, residue and remainder of my property and estate, whatsoever and wheresoever, not herein otherwise specifically devised and beemeathed in, to and amongst the bene[476]*476ficiaries under the trusts created by this will, in such manner that the parties theretofore receiving the income only shall receive and become vested with the estate and property out of which such income arose in the same relative shares and proportions in which they are entitled to said income, viz.”

Then, in substantially the same paragraphing as under the third clause of the will, disposing of the income, the principal is, with immaterial variation, given to the same beneficiaries. Thus, in. default of a devise by his wife, to her heirs four shares. Then follows this subdivision: “ 2. To the children of my said sister Emily B. Wheeler, namely, William 0. Wheeler, Julia H. Wheeler, Emily 0.. Wheeler, Eleanor Wheeler, Caroline E. Wheeler, and Laura Wheeler, being six persons in all, six shares, or three-tenths of my said estate, but these shares, if vested during the life-time of their said mother, shall be charged with the payment of an annuity of five thousand dollars per annum to her.”

The other subdivisions of this paragraph it is not necessary further to particularize; they give to the named beneficiaries the exact share of the principal which under the similar subdivision of the third clause was the source of the income.

The occasion for construction arises through the death, during the continuance of the trust-term, of two of the children of Emily B. Wheeler, namely William 0. and Julia H., the former having died January 27, 1900, leaving a will, the executrix of which claims the distributable moneys to which her testator would have been entitled if living; and the latter having died December 22, 1899, as the wife of Charles 0. Tiffany, also leaving a will, the executors of which likewise claim the distributable share to which their testatrix would have been entitled if living.

The precise question before the court is: Who is at present entitled to these distributable moneys? Did they vest in Julia H. Tiffany and William O. Wheeler in their life-time or was their interest contingent upon their surviving the trust-term? In the former case they passed under their respective wills -; in the latter the testator died intestate as to these shares which then vested in his heirs-at-law and next of kin.

Frequent rereadings of the entire will have only strengthened the conclusion derived from the first cursory perusal that each of the sixteen named beneficiaries, who survived the testator, took [477]*477absolutely vested interests both in principal and income, indefeasible, descendible, devisable, and alienable.

Measured by the rule of intent, or by that of the statute defining what are vested or contingent interests, or by those subordinate rules of construction which are resorted to for the purpose of elucidating intent, the result is the same. I find in this will no uncertainty of person or event which would make the interests contingent, nor do-1 find provision for any condition subsequent to divest an otherwise vested, interest.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Misc. 473, 82 N.Y.S. 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-v-ogden-nysupct-1903.