Staples v. Hawes

24 Misc. 475, 53 N.Y.S. 860
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 Misc. 475 (Staples v. Hawes) 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
Staples v. Hawes, 24 Misc. 475, 53 N.Y.S. 860 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Stover, J.

This is an action for the construction of a will.

- By the second and third clause!? of the will the testator gave to Ms daughter Agnes Hawes a farm, and all the personal" property on the farm, for her use during her natural, life. And by the fourth [476]*476clause the farm was given to his granddaughter, Mary Hawes. The - fifth, sixth and seventh clauses of the will are as ■follows:

“ 5th. I give, devise and bequeath the rest and residue of all my property, both real and personal and wherever situated to Frank T. Staples in trust for my grandchildren, Mary Hawes, David Henry Hawes and Isaac Hawes, my adopted son Jesse Wakeman, and my daughter Agnes Hawes, to be divided and distributed ¡among them, share and share alike, on December 1, 1910.

“ 6th. I direct my said trustee to pay the income of said trust property to said David Henry Hawes, Mary Hawes, Isaac Hawes, Jesse Wakeman and Agnes Hawes semi-annually.

“ 7th. I appoint James Staples executor of this my last will.”

The testator lived and'died in the state of Connecticut, and owned certain real property in the state of Hew York, which was part of the residuary estate, and disposed of in'the fifth and sixth; clauses of the will. This action is to determine the effect of those clauses under the laws of this state.

The defendant Agnes Hawes is the only heir-at-law of the. itesr tator. The defendants Mary Hawes, David Henry Hawes and Isaac Hawes are grandchildren of the testator, and children of the . defendant Agnes Hawes. They are'all inf ants. Jesse Wakeman, the other defendant, although spoken of as an adopted son, was, in reality, .never adopted by the testator.

The contention is made on behalf of some óf the defendants, that the fifth and sixth clauses of the will are to be read and'construed separately, and thus construed, no trusts are attempted to be created by the testator. But it seems to me that such a construction would be at variance with all established rules, and, in fact, with the ordinary interpretation of language. A primary rule of construction is that the intention of the testator is to be gathered, by reading the whole of the will, .and that separate and isolated portions are not to be considered by themselves, if the whole instrument would indicate,' or lead to a different construction, but that full effect is to be given to the whole of the will. In order to constitute a trust, there should be a trustee, an estate and a beneficiary, and all three of these elements exist in the case under consideration. The trastee is not the executor of the will, and is named in this connection only as trustee. An estate, separate and distinct from that of the executor, is carved out of the estate, and vested in the trustee, to be held by .him until such, time as the estate is to be divided. ■ So it must be held that this contention is not well founded, but that by the fifth [477]*477and sixth clauses of the will the testator intended to create a trust. This trust, if valid, must go under section 55 of the Statute of Uses and Trusts, which permits the receipt of (rents and profits to. be applied to the use of any person.. So far as the purpose of the trust was to invest the trustee with power to receive retats and profits, it was valid, and had it been limited upon such a term as the statute authorizes; but the wording of the statute is, “ And to apply them to the use of any person during the life of such person, or for any shorter term,” etc. Under all rulings the duration of a trust, whether in real or personal property, must be limited to lives in being, and no term of years, however brief, will satisfy the statute. Greene v. Greene, 125 N. Y. 506, and authorities cited. This trust, therefore, sought to be created, was invalid and void. But it is said that • the estate can be held and the intention of • the testator effectuated by construing the trust simply as a power in trust; but as has been said, the power of alienation can be no more suspended by the exercise of a' power in trust than by the effectuation of an active trust. Whatever the form, if the carrying out of the spirit or intention of the grant or devise would be to. suspend the power of alienation beyond the term permitted by the statute, it must be held to be void. And it seems to me that no accumulation of argument is necessary to determine that in this case it was the intention of the testator that the title to his property should remain in the trustee until the year 1910, when it was to be divided among the beneficiaries. Again it is said that a construction which would vest the ''estate in the beneficiaries at the time of the death of the testator, cutting off the illegal provision in the will, Would be to effectuate the intention of the testator. I have given careful consideration to this view of the case, with a view of determining, if possible, by some legal construction, and without ignoring the fundamental rules of construction or the ordinary interpretation of language, some method by which the intention of the testator might be) carried out, but I am unable to uphold the provisions of this will. It is true that in cases where the will has contained strong words of gift in praesenti, but by after clauses or conditions the subject of gift was endeavored to be placed in trust and the estate limited, the court has held that the provisions being inconsistent, one being legal and the ¡other illegal, the illegal condition may fail and yet the gift stand, freed from such illegality. But it will be seen in each of these caséis, so far as I have examined, with perhaps a single exception, where a [478]*478divided court disposed of a case, presumably not upon grounds at variance, with other well-consi'dered cases, that the foundation of the rule is that there is a valid expression of a desire to vest the estate in praesgnti, and that this will, if capable of such cpnstrucition, would come within this line of decisions. But the testator has made no such expression in the case under consideration. Were the estate of the trustee and of the beneficiary combined, the estate would have vested in trust immediately upon the death of the trustee. • But the testator has been at great pains to vest the title .of the estate in .the trusted, who is an entire stranger to the property, otherwise than in his capacity as trustee. He has no interest whatever in it except as trustee. Hone of the beneficiaries are to enjoy or eyen take the title to the property until .1910, when it is to be divided ■ between them. So. I think it must be said in all fairness, that it was the intention of the testator that Ms trustee should be vested with the title to this property until- the year .1910', and that upon the expiration of that term the property was to be divided, and the interest of the beneficiaries then vested in them.. TMs was not a legal disposition of property. . It is not for the court to say what disposition the testator would have made, if he had known this was an illegal disposition. Presumably he intended that he would be in-' testate, because he made noi .other disposition of Ms property, and the coUrt ought not to undertake to make what to it would seem a reasonable will. Non constat the testator determined when he made the provision that he would take the hazard of its illegality, knowing . that if it was illegal, Ms heir-at-law would take the property. In fact, the ¡presumption would be that he so intended, for it must be presumed that he knew the law, and where the intention is plain, the. court ought not to be anxious to dispose of the property in some other way than that intended by the! testator.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Misc. 475, 53 N.Y.S. 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staples-v-hawes-nysupct-1898.