Stevens v. . Melcher

46 N.E. 965, 152 N.Y. 551, 6 E.H. Smith 551, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 993
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 46 N.E. 965 (Stevens v. . Melcher) 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
Stevens v. . Melcher, 46 N.E. 965, 152 N.Y. 551, 6 E.H. Smith 551, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 993 (N.Y. 1897).

Opinion

Haight, J.

This action was brought for an accounting by the trustees under the will of Paran Stevens, with his executors, his widow and remaindermen. Paran Stevens died in the city of Hew York on the 25th of April, 1872, leaving him surviving the defendant Marietta E. Stevens, his widow, and Ellen S. Melcher, the wife of John S. Melcher, Mary Eiske Stevens, now the wife of Arthur H. F. Paget, and Henry Leiden Stevens, his only children and heirs at law. Lie left a last will and testament in which he bequeathed to his widow the sum of $100,000 to be paid to her out of his estate as soon as practicable after his decease, and by the fifth clause thereof he gave and devised to Charles G. Stevens, of Clinton, in the state of Massachusetts, and George F. Eichardson, of Lowell, in that state, and to the survivor of them, the sum of $1,000,000, in which should be included at its fair value the premises known as Ho. 1 store, State street block, in the city of Boston, Mass., in trust, however, to hold, invest and manage the same as a trust fund and estate for the benefit of his widow during her natural life, and to collect the income therefrom and pay the same over to her, and upon her decease to divide the principal of such fund among his children in equal proportions, the issue of any deceased child taking the share their parent would have taken if living. Legacies were given by other provisions of the will which are not material to this controversy. By the eleventh clause he directed that the residue and remainder of his estate, *561 real and personal, should be divided by his executors into-three parts, one of which parts he gave to trustees, naming-them, in trust for his daughter Ellen, another part to trustees in trust for his daughter Mary, and the remaining part to trustees for the benefit of his son Henry. By the fourteenth clause he authorized his executors to make conveyance to the trustees of the several trust funds created in order to effect the division contemplated and provided for and to erect the several trust estates. He further authorized and empowered his trustees of the several trust estates created by him to sell and convey any real estate that may, at any time, form part of such trust estate under their charge, respectively, and to reinvest the proceeds thereof in other real estate in the states of Hew York and Massachusetts, or in United States government, or city or state securities, and hold the same upon the same trust and for the same purpose upon which the estate so sold was held. In the fifteenth clause he prohibited payments to the cestui que trust in anticipation and required that such payments should only be made after the same had accrued and had been received by the trustees. He appointed his widow, Marietta B. Stevens, his son-in-law, John L. Melcher, and Charles G-. Stevens, executors, and, upon the decease of either of the two last named, he appointed George F. Richardson as executor in such deceased executor’s place. The provisions made in his will for his widow were .to be in lieu of dower. The personal estate left by the testator amounted to the sum of §310,773.37 as shown by the appraisement and included his interest in the partnership of Darling, Griswold & Co., as proprietors of the Fifth Avenue Hotel in the 'city of Hew York, also his interest in the partnership of Weather by, Chapin & Co., as proprietors of the Revere and Tremont Houses in Boston, and also his interest in the partnership of J. E. Kingsley & Co., as proprietors of the Continental Hotel in the city of Philadelphia, which partnerships by the terms of the will were to continue for the benefit of his estate until the expiration of the terms of the several contracts of copartnership. He also owned considerable real *562 estate in the city of New York and elsewhere, including the interest in each of the hotel properties above mentioned.

A question having arisen with reference to the power of the executors, an action was brought in the Supreme Court for a construction of the will, which resulted in an adjudication that the executors were authorized to retain the hotel interests and to continue so much of the interest as was invested therein if they should so elect; that it was the intention of the testator to charge his real estate with the payment of the legacies bequeathed by him, and that it was his intention to permit the trustees of the several trusts created by him, including the trustees of the million dollars left for the benefit of his widow, to accept real estate to be conveyed to them in satisfaction of such trust, and that his executors were authorized to satisfy any deficiency in the payment of the legacies caused by the retention of the hotel interests or otherwise, from the real estate left by the testator, and that his executors may satisfy the same by procuring a sale so far as necessary of the real estate, under the charge of the legacies, and so far as respects the million dollars left in trust for the benefit of his widow by conveying the necessary amount of real estate to her trustees at a valuation to be fixed and determined, there being included therein the premises known as No. 1 store, State street block, on State street, in the city of Boston, Mass.

At the time of the testator’s death he was engaged in erecting and had substantially completed a building at the corner of 27th street and Fifth avenue, New York, known as the Stevens Apartment House, on which there was a considerable indebtedness, which, together with the legacies, would substantially exhaust the personal estate, leaving nothing out of which the million-dollar trust for the benefit of his widow could be set up except out of the real estate.

After a judicial construction of the will had been made the widow accepted the provisions made for her in lieu of dower, and then, on the 28th day of October, 1873, entered into an agreement with the executors and her trustees, under which the executors conveyed to her trustees, to apply upon the *563 million-dollar trust, the store known as Ho. 1 State street block, Boston, at $105,000, together with the premises known as the Stevens Apartment House, in the city of Hew York, a stable known as Ho. 3 East 28th street, and premises known as numbers 228 and 230 Fifth avenue, in the city of Hew York, valued at the sum of $450,000, aside from the mortgages thereon, which, together with the Boston property, amounted to $555,000. Upon the Stevens Apartment House property there was a mortgage for the sum of $425,000, and upon the premises Hos. 228 and 230 Fifth avenue were other mortgages, amounting to $140,000, making a total of $565,000. Henry L. Stevens died, unmarried, July 18, 1885, and Mrs. Stevens died after this judgment was entered, and the appeal herein on her behalf is prosecuted by the Union Trust Company, her executor.

The first controversy to which our attention is called arises with reference to the premises known as Hos. 228 and 230 Fifth avenue. Upon these lots were two dwelling houses which had been occupied for many years as residences and on which the lease had expired on the first day of May, 1873. They were incumbered with mortgages to the amount of $140,000, and were valued at about the sum of $150,000. The houses were badly out of repair, and in that condition they were incapable of yielding a rent sufficient to pay the taxes and accruing interests on the mortgages. At that date Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E. 965, 152 N.Y. 551, 6 E.H. Smith 551, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-melcher-ny-1897.