Onderdonk v. . Onderdonk

27 N.E. 839, 127 N.Y. 196, 37 N.Y. St. Rep. 918, 82 Sickels 196, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1772
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 N.E. 839 (Onderdonk v. . Onderdonk) 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
Onderdonk v. . Onderdonk, 27 N.E. 839, 127 N.Y. 196, 37 N.Y. St. Rep. 918, 82 Sickels 196, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1772 (N.Y. 1891).

Opinion

Haight, J.

This action was brought to have certain provisions of the will of the late Horatio Gr. Onderdonk adjudged invalid, unlawful, indefinite, uncertain, void and of no effect, and that as to the property therein mentioned, Horatio Gr. Onderdonk died intestate, and that the whole thereof vested in the plaintiff and the other-heirs at law and next of kin of said deceased.

The complaint, among other things, in substance alleges that Horatio Gr. Onderdonk, late of Manhasset, died in the year 1886, leaving him surviving the defendant .Andrew J. Onderdonk, Sarah Onderdonk, Catherine E: Onderdonk, Maria O. Simms, Josephine D. Skillman, Francis Onderdonk, and this plaintiff as his only heirs at law and next of kin; that at the time of his death he was seized and possessed of real and personal estate situate within the state of Hew York to the amount and value, as plaintiff is informed and believes, of two million dollars and upwards; that he left a last will and testament bearing date the 15tli day of December, 1885, and a codicil thereto bearing date the 17th day of March, 1886, which will and codicil were duly admitted to probate as a will of both real and personal estate by the surrogate of the county of Queens on the 1st day of June, 1886; that in and by such will the defendants Sarah Onderdonk, Maria O. Simms, Josephine D. Skillman, Catherine Elizabeth Onderdonk, Edward P. Simms, Harry Simms and Andrew J. Onderdonk, their survivors and successors, were appointed executors and trustees thereof, and that they have duly qualified and entered upon the discharge of their duties as such.

The will contains numerous provisions, many of which are not questioned. He gave and devised

*201 1. To his executors the capital sum of ninety thousand dollars in trust to safely and profitably invest the same, collect the income thereof and pay it to his daughter. Sarah Onderdouk, during her life, for her sole use, free from any husband’s or creditor’s claim; and after her death, without issue, to pay said income to her sister, Catherine E., during her life, for her sole use, free from any husband’s or creditor’s claims; and after said Catherine’s death to pay over said capital sum per stirpes to her next of kin of the testator’s first wife’s blood legally entitled to it, as though it were her absolute property, and she had died unmarried and intestate. But if at said Sarah’s death she leave surviving issue, said capital sum shall be paid to such issue per stirpes as if it was her absolute property, and she had died unmarried and intestate.

2. He gave to the executors the capital sum of eighty thousand dollars in like trust for his daughter, Maria 0. Simms, during her life.

3. He created a similar trust to that of the first provision, in favor of his daughter, Josephine D. Skilhuan.

4. Created a similar trust in favor of his grandson, George O. Linkletter.

5. Created a similar trust in favor of his daughter. Catherine Elizabeth Onderdonk.

6. Disinherited the plaintiff.

J. Created a similar trust to the amount of thirty thousand dollars in favor of his son Francis, but upon certain conditions, the non-performance of which works a forfeiture of his right to the same.

10. He gave to his son, Andrew Joseph Onderdonk, certain mortgages, judgments, claims and demands therein expressly enumerated which he estimates to exceed one hundred thousand dollars in value, but as a condition precedent he required his son Andrew to pay or secure the executors the principal and interest without discount or offset of certain notes, checks, due bills, bonds and mortgages, etc., therein specifically mentioned.

*202 16. He provided that when the executors have paid all the-debts, funeral charges and specific legacies, and have set apart the designated bonds for the several trusts, then all the rest and remainder is to be known and denominated the “ residue,” and shall he divided into six equal shares. These shares he gave to the executors in trust to safely and profitably invest, collect the income, rents and profits thereof; the first share to be held for the use of his daughter Sarah who shall receive the income thereof during her life; and after her death, without surviving-issue, to be held for the use' of her sister Catherine E., who. shall receive the income thereof during her life; and after her death such first share shall be paid to her next of kin of his. first wife’s blood. Similar provisions are made in reference to the other five shares of the residue to other children, including his grandson George O. Linkletter, and then concludes the provision as follows: “ My further will is that all my property not herein otherwise legally disposed of, and any gifts, bequests or devises which are adjudged invalid, or which fail, lapse, cease, or are forfeited for violation or non-fulfillment of any condition precedent or subsequent, or for any cause, shall also pass, go over, belong and he added to this ‘residue,’ and be apportioned and held on the same trusts aforesaid; but if tins latter provision be illegal, unlawful or impossible, the same shall be distributed, per stirpes, among my first wife’s complying, unoffending descendants.”

39. Imposed many conditions upon the beneficiaries and made the executors the sole judges of their performance.

40. “ In case any aforesaid legacy, trust, income or devise is annulled, vacated, forfeited or susj>ended by death, vagueness, uncertainty, misconduct or non-performance of any condition, or shall lapse, cease or fail for any cause, and no valid order is hereinbefore made for its gift over or distribution to any specific person, fund or object^ then I give the same one-third to the then living daughter of my brother James, and the then living son and daughter of my nephew Joseph 0. Skillman, to be divided equally between them.,per capita, and the other two-thirds to Edward P. Simms, to be applied in his *203 discretion for the use of Saint Peter’s Hospital, or Saint. Catherine’s Hospital, or any other hospital in Brooklyn where he thinks it will do the greatest good.”

41. “ It is my will that in case any trust, bequest, order, provision or direction herein should be held illegal or void, or fail to take effect for any reason; that no other part of this-will shall be thereby invalidated, impaired or affected, but that this, my will, shall be construed and take effect in the same manner as if the invalid direction or provision had not been, contained therein. And if any preceding trust is valid in substance, but its final distribution is suspended beyond the-time or lives limited by law, and so far is invalid, I wish the-trust not to fail therefor, but that its duration be performed,, modified and limited during the lives, and to the remotest period allowable. If any section contains both valid and-invalid provisions, I wish the invalid provisions stricken out and the valid provisions to remain in full force. And where any trust herein is made dependent on and during the life of any grandchild, or specified person, wdio predeceases me, I wish the trust not to thereby fail; but that my youngest grandchild living at my death be substituted as the person on and.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 839, 127 N.Y. 196, 37 N.Y. St. Rep. 918, 82 Sickels 196, 1891 N.Y. LEXIS 1772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/onderdonk-v-onderdonk-ny-1891.