Purdy v. . Hayt

92 N.Y. 446, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 166
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by91 cases

This text of 92 N.Y. 446 (Purdy v. . Hayt) 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
Purdy v. . Hayt, 92 N.Y. 446, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 166 (N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The surrogate erred in declining to entertain jurisdiction to construe the will. The construction of the will was necessary to determine the questions arising on the accounting, and in such a case jurisdiction to construe a will attaches as incident to that proceeding. (Riggs v. Cragg, 89 N. Y. 479; In re Verplanck, 91 id. 439.) It becomes necessary, therefore, in deciding this appeal, to consider the dispositions of the real estate made by the testator, and to determine as to their validity.

It is claimed on the part of the appellants that by the will three successive life estates were created in the testator’s farm, viz., one to continue during the joint lives of the testator’s sisters, Jane and Catharine, another for the life of the survivor, and a third in the proceeds for the life of Elizabeth Brinkerhoff. If this claim is well founded it is, we think, impossible to resist the conclusion that both the life estate given to the testator’s niece, Elizabeth Brinkerhoff, and the remainder to her children, are void, the life estate by force of the express terms of section 17 of the article of the Be vised Statutes relating to the creation and division of estates, and the remainder because it suspends the power of alienation beyond the period allowed by law. How far the claim of the appellants can be sustained will be now considered.

It is provided by the seventeenth section of the article of the Bevised Statutes, before referred to, that successive estates for life shall not be limited unless to persons in being at the crea *451 tian. thereof; and where a remainder shall be limited on more than two successive estates for life all the life estates subsequent to those of the two persons first entitled thereto shall be void, and upon the death of those persons the remainder shall take effect in the same manner as if no other life estates had been created.” (1 E. S. 723, § 17.) The prohibition against the creation of more than two successive life estates in the same property has no necessary connection with the law of perpetuities. There is no suspense of the power of alienation of land by the creation of successive life estates therein unless they are contingent. Any number of successive vested life estates may be created without violating the statute of perpetuities. The prohibition against creating more than two successive life estates in the same property applies to such estates, whether vested or contingent. The policy of the prohibition, where applied to vested and therefore alienable interests, need not be considered. It is sufficient to say that it was regarded by the legislature as not imposing an undue restraint upon the owner of property, and the provision is in harmony with the general rule prescribing the period during which the power of alienation of land may be suspended, viz., two lives in being at the creation of the estate. The statute, however, does not avoid the whole limitation where more than two successive life estates are limited. It permits the first two to take effect, avoiding those only which are in excess of the permitted number.

So also the seventeenth section preserves a remainder limited on more than two successive estates for life. But we apprehend that the section must be construed as referring to vested, and not to contingent remainders. It cannot in reason, or by its true construction, be held to apply to the latter. Where the right of the remainderman is vested, and the right of possession only is postponed, the statute, in case of three or more precedent estates for fife, accelerates the period fixed by the will or deed for the vesting of the remainder in possession, and vests it immediately upon the termination of the two estates for life first created. The statute so far overrides the» *452 precise intention of the grantor or testator, as expressed in the will or deed, but as the possession in the remainderman was postponed, presumably ’for the purpose of allowing an intermediate life estate to run, and that purpose being defeated by section 17, the statute, by accelerating the remainder, gives effect as near as may be to the intention of the creator of the estate. But where the gift in remainder is upon a contingency, which has not happened at the time of the death of the second life tenant, so that it cannot then be known who will he entitled in remainder according to the terms of the instrument creating the estate, the statute, we conceive, can have no application.

The construction that section 17 applies only to vested .remainders, is moreover, sufficiently plain upon its language. The remainder, the section says, is to take effect in the same manner as if no other life estate had been created. Where the remainder was contingent when the life estate commenced, and remains so at the death of the tenant of the second life estate, it would not vest, although no other life estate had been created, and the statute gives effect to remainders only in the same manner as if limited upon two life estates instead of three. It is plain we think that the statute only executes the remainder in possession in favor of such ascertained persons as, except for the void life estate, would under the terms of the will or deed, be entitled to the immediate possession. (See Knox v. Jones, 47 N. Y. 397; Smith v. Edwards, 88 id. 104.)

We are now prepared to consider the nature and character of the several estates for life, and in remainder, created by the will. We are of opinion that by the true construction of the will, the devise to the testator’s sisters, Jane and Catharine, vested in them a life estate in the farm as tenants in common, with cross-remainders. That they took the estate devised, as tenants in common, is declared by the express language of the statute. The statute declares that “ every estate granted or devised to two or more persons in their own right, shall be a tenancy in common, unless expressly declared to be a joint tenancy.” (1 R. S. 727, § 44.) By the common law a *453 grant or devise to two or more persons, without more, created a joint tenancy. (Lorillard v. Coster, 5 Paige, 228.) This rule of the common law was abrogated by the legislature at an early period (1 Green. Laws, 207, § 6), and the rule as then enacted, and re-enacted in the Revised Statutes, has ever since been the law of this State. It was said by Nelson, J., in his opinion in the Court of Errors, in the case last cited, that in order to create an estate in joint tenancy, since the Revised Statutes, it was not necessary that the words joint tenancy should be used, but that any other expression clearly imputing such an intent, would be sufficient. (Coster v. Lorillard, 14 Wend. 342.) In that case the real estate of the testator was devised to his brother and twelve nephews and nieces in trust to" pay over and divide the rents and profits of his real estate ‘ ‘ to and among the twelve nephews and nieces during their natural lives, and to the survivor and survivors of them equally, to be divided between them, share and share alike,” and Judge Nelson was of opinion that this language created a joint tenancy in the beneficiaries, basing his opinion upon the words of survivorship in the will, the right of survivorship being the principal incident of that estate.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.Y. 446, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purdy-v-hayt-ny-1883.