Steinway v. Steinway

10 Misc. 563, 32 N.Y.S. 183, 65 N.Y. St. Rep. 262
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Misc. 563 (Steinway v. Steinway) 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
Steinway v. Steinway, 10 Misc. 563, 32 N.Y.S. 183, 65 N.Y. St. Rep. 262 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.

The question to be détermined in this case is whether the provisions of the thirty-third clause of the will of W. F. T. Steinway, whereby 4,000 shares of the stock of the corporation of Steinway & Sons are disposed of, is valid; and it is with reluctance that I have been forced to the conclusion that the scheme of the testator cannot be sustained.

The intention of the testator is clear, and I think it also clear that to carry that intention into effect would be to violate the one limitation which the law of this state imposes upon the disposition of personal property, and that is that the vesting of the absolute ownership of such property shall nof be suspended for a longer period than two lives in being at the date of the instrument containing the limitation or condition.

The will of the testator, after making a large number of legacies, provides, in the thirty-third clause, for the disposition of his stock in the corporation above named. That clause commences as follows: “ Thirty-third — I give and bequeath all my shares in the corporation of Steinway & Sons, of the city of New York, to my executors and trustees, hereinafter named, m trust, to be managed by them until the first day of January, in the year one thousand nine hundred and four (January 1st, 1904), as follows: A—One-fourth part of such shares in the Steinway & Sons’ corporation to and for the benefit of the five children of my sister, Wilhelmine Candidus, late of the city of New York, deceased, viz.: Louise Deppermann, wife of Gustave Deppermann, of Hamburg, Germany; Albertine S. Ziegler, wife of Henry Ziegler, of New York, and Harry Candidus, Johanne Candidus and Gustave Candidus, and to pay to them, in equal proportions, an annual sum representing an income of five per centum on and from such phares, and on the first day- of January, 1904, to pay over, in equal proportions, to the said five children of Wilhelmine Candidus, deceased, or their heirs, the said shares in the Steinway & Sons’ corporation, or the proceeds thereof, to have and to hold to him, her or them, his, her or their heirs and assigns forever. [565]*565“ The excess of the annual income of such shares in the Steinway & Sons’ corporation, New York, over and above said five per centum, shall be retained by my executors and trustees, hereinafter named, as their compensation for the management of such shares, and such excess, annually, shall be divided pro rata among them or their successors until January 1, 1904.”

Subdivisions B and C of said clause make provision in identically the same language; subdivision B disposing of one-fourth part of said shares to and for the benefit of the children of his sister Dorrette Ziegler, and subdivision C disposing of one-fourth part óf said shares to and for the benefit of his brother Charles Steinway. Subdivision D of the said clause contains a provision disposing of one-fourth part of said stock for the benefit of his brother William Steinway. But the variation between subdivision D and the other subdivisions is important, as throwing light upon the intention of the testator.

Subdivision D is as follows: One-fourth part of my shares in the said Steinway & Sons’ corporation to and for the benefit of my brother. William Stein way, or, in case of his death prior to January 1st, 1904, to and for his son George A. Steinway, his daughter Paula Th. Steinway, and his children by his second wife, Elisabeth C. Steinway, nee Ranft; and to pay to him, or; in case of his death, to his said children, an annual sum representing an income of five per centum in and from such shares, and on the first day of January, 1904, to pay over to my said brother William Steinway, or, in case of his death prior to -that date, to his said children as mentioned in this section of this my last will and testament, or their heirs, in equal proportions, the said shares in the Steinway & Sons’ corporation, or the proceeds thereof, to have and to hold to him, her or them, his, her or their heirs or assigns forever.” And the clause then contains the same provision as to the excess of the annual income of such shares over and above the five per cent.

The thirty-sixth clause of the will is also important as show[566]*566ing just what the testator intended by the words to be managed,” contained in the first part of the thirty-third clause, as the trust upon which the shares were to be held. After appointing his executors and trustees, he gives them full power and authority “ to transfer or cause to be transferred any of my shares of stock in the Steinway & Sons’ corporation according to the terms of this my last will and testament, and also to vote on any such shares in the stockholders’ meetings of the Steinway & Sons’ corporation, and in them discretion to assent to or oppose any reduction or increase of the capital stock of said Steinway & Sons’ corporation, and also in. case of such reduction of the capital stock of the Steinway &r Sons’ corporation, or the discontinuance of the said corporation being determined upon by the lawful majority of the stockholders of the Steinway & Sons’ corporation, to invest the proceeds of my said shares therein (which shall not be less than the par value thereof) in securities deemed good and sufficient by them, and to apply and manage principal and interest of such investment precisely as I have directed to be done •Rrith my said shares of stock in" the Stein way & Sons’", corporation.”

Our first duty is to ascertain, if possible, just what the intention of 'the testator was in respect to these shares of stock. As was said by Chief Justice Church, in Colton v. Fox, 67 N. Y. 348 : “ The intention of the testator must be ascertained and the will construed accordingly, if practicable, and when the construction is determined, that is, when it is ascertained what disposition the testator intended to make of his property, the question then is whether such disposition is in accordance with the law of the state.”

A careful consideration of these two clauses of the will that I have named can leave no doubt as to what the testator intended. The intention is clearly expressed that his stock in the Stein way & Sons’ corporation should be held by his executors ; should stand in their name upon the books of the corporation ; should be voted upon 'by them for the election of officers and the control of the business of the corporation, [567]*567even so far as to reduce the stock or to dissolve the corporation, according to their discretion, until January 1, 1904. During that period neither of the persons who are ultimately to be entitled to have the stock transferred to them was to have the slightest voice in the management of the corporation, in the disposition of its business, the election of its officers, or in the continuance of the business of the corporation. No power of sale is given to the trustees to sell a share of this stock.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Misc. 563, 32 N.Y.S. 183, 65 N.Y. St. Rep. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinway-v-steinway-nysupct-1894.