Phillips v. . Davies

92 N.Y. 199, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 135
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 92 N.Y. 199 (Phillips v. . Davies) 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
Phillips v. . Davies, 92 N.Y. 199, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 135 (N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The courts which have construed this will were so impressed with the necessity of a trust estate, or power in trust vested in the executors, by force of which the real estate could be sold and converted into money, to effect the carefully framed and deliberately expressed purposes of the testatrix, that they have sustained a trust power as arising by implication, *204 and have been ready to put a construction upon the last clause of the will somewhat different from that suggested by the order of its language. That clause is as follows : “ I hereby nominate and appoint my beloved husband, John D. Phillips, and my sons, Louis, Isaac, Henry J. and Asher L., executors of this my last will and testament, hereby authorizing such and whichever of them as shall qualify, and the survivor and survivors of them to act in the like manner and with like effect as if they or he alone had been named, as such executor, and during the life-time of my said husband, my said executors, and such and whichever of them as shall act are authorized and empowered, by and with the consent of my said husbwnd, to sell and dispose of any part of my estate, real and personal, not specifically bequeathed,” etc. If the two expressions we have italicized belong together, and have been separated by accident or mistake; if they may be brought together by transposition, and if then they may be inclosed in brackets and read parenthetically, the construction of the courts below will be reached, and what seems inevitably to have been the purpose and intention of the testatrix will be preserved. The material part of the clause in question would then read thus, viz.: “ and my said executors, and such and whichever of them as shall act are authorized and empowered (during the life-time of my said husbwnd, by and with the consent of my said husband) to sell and dispose of any part of my estate, real and personal,” etc. If such was the real meaning and intention of the testatrix; if an examination of the whole will forces that conviction ; if its plain and definite purposes are endangered by inapt or inaccurate modes of expression; and we are sure that we know what the testatrix meant; we have a right and it is our duty to subordinate the language to the intention. In such a case the court may reject words and limitations, supply them or transpose them, to get at the correct meaning. (Pond v. Bergh, 10 Paige, 140; Drake v. Pell, 3 Edw. 251; Mason v. Jones, 2 Barb. 229.) But we are to construe the will, not make it anew; and the inquiry comes *205 whether in the case at bar the actual intention has been reached in the construction adopted.

The testatrix owned a large amount of real estate but only about §16,000 in personal property. She left surviving her, besides her husband, four sons and five daughters, all of age and all of the latter married, and one grand-daughter, the sole representative of a deceased daughter. This property she sought to dispose-of for the benefit of this family by a will which is long, deliberate, and characterized by distinct and definite purposes. After the payment of debts she first provided for her husband. She gave all her property, real and personal, to her executors in trust, to rent, invest and improve the same, and apply the rents, issues, income, interest, dividends, and profits thereof to the use of her husband for and during his natural life. This trust and estate of the trustees was to end at the death of the husband. All that follows in the way of bequest or devise expressly and carefully relates to the= situation and period after her husband’s decease. There is first a specific devise of her house abd lot in Thirty-fourth street, New York, to her daughter Rachel Moeller, together with the household furniture. Then comes a series of ten carefully constructed trusts for the benefit of the nine children and the grandchild Clara, in each of which the trustees named are different, and the sum of $25,000 is to be invested for the use of the selected beneficiary. These ten trusts required $250,000 from an estate having not enough of personal property to constitute a single one of them, and.show conclusively the purpose and intention of the deceased to devote to them the proceeds of her real estate. Each of these ten trust estates is created and described by itself, and they disclose a definite aim in the manner of their creation. Taking the first as-an example, we find that the beneficiary is Henry, while the trustees are his three brothers, Lewis, Asher and Isaac. The latter are required to invest the sum of $25,000 and apply the interest and income to the use of Henry during his natural life, and upon his death to pay the principal to his issue, or in default of such, to his surviving brothers and sisters, and the issue of such as may be dead. *206 For each of the sons the trustees were his three brothers; and for each of the daughters two of the sons and the husband of the beneficiary, while for the granddaughter Clara, the four sons were made trustees. The details of these ten trusts carefully wrought out occupy five printed pages of the case, and they evince a clear and definite purpose on the part of the testatrix to carry the bulk of her estate to her grandchildren and preserve it for them, safe from the possible waste or improvidence of the sons, or the control and possession of the sons-in-law. For the married daughters the trusts were important safeguards, and for the grandchildren the sole basis of their rights. It is quite clear that the testatrix did not intend to put the bulk of her property represented by these ten shares within the absolute control of the beneficiaries, and leave the grandchildren to the chances and accidents 'of their parent’s success or failure, if there be nothing else in the will to modify our conclusion.

The next clause in the will is a bequest of $1,000 to each of her living grandchildren at the date of her death. How many there were we are not explicitly informed, but the papers in this case and'in the action of partition submitted with it, indicate that at that period they were more than forty in number; the payment of their legacies alone requiring not less than $40,000, a sum for which the testatrix must have known the personal property was totally inadequate, and, therefore, must have considered her real estate as converted into money, and providing the source of payment.

' There is then a devise to Priscilla Cohen, a sister-in-law, of a house and lot on Forty-first street. This property and that previously specifically devised to Mrs. Moeller became seriously incumbered before the death of testatrix, and caused the execution of a codicil. That instrument recites that the incumbrance upon the house and lot devised to Mrs. Moeller was about $20,-000, and directs her executors to pay that off and also the incumbrances upon Mrs. Cohen’s lot “from any money or assets that may come into their hands before making any other disbursements, or paying off any legacy.” The personal estate was *207 utterly insufficient even to pay off these incumbrances, and when so applied, as far as it would reach, left the ten trusts and the legacies to the grandchildren utterly valueless and hollow.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.Y. 199, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-davies-ny-1883.