Stevens' Administrator v. Stevens'

23 N.J. Eq. 296
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 23 N.J. Eq. 296 (Stevens' Administrator v. Stevens') is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens' Administrator v. Stevens', 23 N.J. Eq. 296 (N.J. Ct. App. 1873).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This suit is by the administrator of Julia A. Stevens, deceased, one of the children of Edwin A. Stevens. It is brought against the executors of his will to ascertain and [297]*297recover the part of the estate of their testator which the complainant may be entitled to under his will. The other surviving children of the testator, being his residuary legatees and the next of kin of Julia, are made parties. They are all infants except his daughter, Mary P. Lewis, wife of Edward P. C. Lewis. She has answered with her husband, and the infants have answered by their guardian ad litem, Martha B. Stevens, their mother. The executors have not answered. They, as executors, have no interest in the questions raised, the controversy being between Mrs. Lewis and the infants, and Mrs. Stevens. The executors are properly parties to the suit, and Mrs. Stevens is a party, though she has not answered either individually or as executrix. In both capacities she is willing to submit to such decree as the court may make, without controversy on her behalf. _ Thus all necessary and proper parties are before the court.

Edwin A. Stevens died August 28th, 1868. He left a will, dated August 5th, 1865, with a codicil, dated April 15th, 1867; these were duly proved and probate issued to the complainant, Samuel B. Dod, and the defendants, Martha B. Stevens and William W. Shippen. He left eight children; two of them, Albert B. and Richard, born after the date of the will, and Richard born after the date of the codicil.

Julia, one of the daughters, died after the testator, on the 7th day of August, 1868. All the children, except Mrs. Lewis, were, at his death, and still are, under twenty-one. Mrs. Lewis was a child by a former wife, and half-sister of the infants.

The will gave to Mrs. Stevens and each of his children a legacy of f100,000; the codicil gave a like legacy to Albert, and to any child that might thereafter be born. The will directed these legacies to be paid by productive property standing in his own name, and by the purchase of productive real estate, and bonds and mortgages, and other productive assets, of the Hoboken Land and Improvement Company.

The codicil empowered his executors to pay the legacies given in the will and codicil by transferring personal pro[298]*298perty, stocks, bonds, and other securities in which his money was invested, as well as any of his real estate standing in his own name, or such as his executors should receive from the Hoboken Land and .Improvement Company and in the case of the transfer of real estate, he gave power to his executors to pass the title, fee simple or otherwise, provided such property, real or personal, so transferred should be equal in value to so much of the legacy for which it should be transferred or conveyed to such legatees; all which payments in the manner therein authorized, to be in the discretion of the executors.

Besides the legacies of $100,000 to his wife and each of his children, the codicil devised and bequeathed real estate and money legacies to others to a large amount. After these gifts the codicil declared, that the devise and bequest to his wife, in his original will, of one-third of the profits of the remainder of his estate, in that devise and bequest mentioned, he intended, and it was his will, should be of the remainder of his estate, after making the demands upon it in that codicil provided for. In the next sentence he gave, devised, and bequeathed the rest and residue of his estate, both real and personal, unto his wife and children born, and to be born; each son to have two shares, and his wife two shares, and each daughter one share.

The personal estate of the testator was, in the inventory, valued at $9,741,407.90, including fifteen thousand shares of the stock of the Ploboken Land and Improvement Company, valued at $8,996,677. His real estate at the same time was appraised and valued at $1,181,500. This included Castle Point and the homestead, devised to his four sons, and valued at $350,000.

On the 9th of December, 1868, the executors did set apart out of the estate, real and personal, to the widow and children of the testator, $100,000 to each; and did set apart for his daughter Julia, three lots of land in Hoboken, valued at $26,333, with sufficient personal property to make the legacy of $100,000 bequeathed to her. These lands were, by the executors, conveyed to Martha B. Stevens in fee, in trust for [299]*299•Julia, until she should arrive at the age of twenty-four years, and at that period to convey the same to her in accordance with the provisions of the will. And, at the same time, all the residue of the real estate of the testator, amounting in value to §258,999, was conveyed to his wife and children in payment of the legacies of §100,000. The personal estate set apart for the purpose was, at the same time, transferred for the payment of these legacies.

The executors, on the 16th of May, 1870, settled their account before the Orphans Court of the county of Hudson, anti by this there remained in their hands on December 31st, 1869, a balance of §6,915,661.93, all invested in fifteen thousand shares of the Hoboken Land and Improvement Company. This was above the §800,000 paid over or held in trust by them for these certain legacies.

The first question raised is, whether these three lots so conveyed to Mrs. Stevens for Julia are to be considered as real estate. If they are, Mrs. Lewis and Mrs. Stevens are not entitled by succession to any share in them; if personal, they are entitled to share equally with the infant children.

The executors were clearly authorized by the will to pay the legacies of §100,000, by conveying lauds for the whole or any part. These were given as money legacies, and were due one year after testator’s death. To Mrs. Stevens and Mrs. Lewis they could then be paid and delivered in full; they were then entitled to them. The direction that the others should not have the' control or management of their shares until twenty-two or twenty-four years of age, and that until then the executors should take care of the money and property given to them, made the executors trustees for each infant child of the property given to it; but it was their duty to set off to each one its legacy at the end of the year, and take charge of it for each. This could be set apart in real or personal property, and when so designated and set apart each was entitled to any increase in value, and must suffer any loss in deterioration in his own share so separated. These lots the executors set apart by conveying them to Mrs. Stevens, [300]*300one of their own number, in trust for Julia. She could not, or did not take the title as her guardian, for she had not given the bonds required before she can act as such; the title is to her in trust. The question before me is not upon the properiety of this transfer under the will, or whether it should not have been made to all three executors. It has been made, and by it Mrs. Stevens held these lots in trust for Julia at her death. That was a money legacy, and had by authority plainly given in the will, been converted into real estate. This conversion required no confirmation by Julia; the executors by the will had the power to convey it as part of the legacy. It so existed at Julia’s death. Like the real estate of every cestui que trust, it descended to her heirs. The question, whether real or personal estate, depends upon what was the actual character of it at her death.

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23 N.J. Eq. 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-administrator-v-stevens-njch-1873.