Stevens v. Stevens

30 N.Y.S. 625, 80 Hun 514, 87 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 514, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 599
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 30 N.Y.S. 625 (Stevens v. Stevens) 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
Stevens v. Stevens, 30 N.Y.S. 625, 80 Hun 514, 87 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 514, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 599 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

The will of Paran Stevens, out of which this litigation grows, was executed July 10, 1869, and admitted to probate shortly after the testator’s death, which occurred April 25, 1872. Such portions of it as are essential to a consideration of the questions presently to be discussed will now be stated. The first clause contains a bequest to the testator’s wife, Marietta R. Stevens, of $100,000, “to be paid to her out of my estate as soon as practicable .after my decease.” The fifth clause contains, among other provisions, the following:

T give and devise unto Charles G. Stevens, of Clinton, in the state of Massachusetts, and George F. Richardson, of Lowell, in said state, and -to the survivor of them, the sum of one million dollars, in which sum, "however, shall be included, at their fair value at my decease, the premises known as the ‘No. 1 Store, State Street Block,’ on State street, in the city of Boston, Massachusetts, now held in trust by said Charles G. Stevens, in trust, •nevertheless, to hold, invest, and manage the same as a trust fund and estate for the benefit of my said wife during her natural life, and to collect the income and receipts therefrom, and pay the same over to my said wife into "her own proper hand, and upon her sole receipt, and, upon her decease, to divide the principal of said fund and estate among my children in equal •proportions, the issue of any deceased child to take the share their parent •would have taken if living.”

•The testator left, him surviving, his widow, Marietta R. Stevens, ¡and three children, Ellen S. Melcher, Mary Fiske Stevens (since intermarried with Arthur F. Paget), and Henry Leiden Stevens, who died in the year 1885, without issue, but leaving a will. Other provisions of the will of Paran Stevens preceding the eleventh clause gave certain legacies, which are not of moment in this controversy, and therefore need not be referred to; but the [627]*627last-named clause directed, in effect, that the rest, residue, and remainder of his estate, real and personal, should be divided by his executors into three equal parts. One of these parts he gave to Charles G. Stevens and George F. Richardson, in trust for his daughter Ellen, wife of John L. Melcher, for life, with remainder over after her decease to her children, including her husband, for life. In case there should be no descendants of Ellen, then one-half to the testator’s widow, if living; but, if not, the whole to go to the persons who are ultimate remainder-men under the fifth clause. The twelfth clause gave another of the said parts to trustees, in trust for the benefit of Mary Fiske Stevens for life, with remainder to her issue, or, in the event of a failure of issue, then to his daughter Ellen and son Henry and their descendants. This clause contained further provision that, in case there should be no descendants of the testator then living, one-half of the principal fund should go to Marietta R. Stevens, and, in case of her death, the whole to go to the remainder-men under the fifth clause. The thirteenth clause gave the remaining one-third of testator’s estate to trustees, in trust for the benefit of Henry Leiden Stevens, with direction to apply so much of the income as should be necessary for his support and education during minority, after which, and until he should be 25 years of age, to pay the entire income to him, and at the latter period to pay to him the whole of the principal sum and accumulations, except $400,000, which they were directed to keep invested for his benefit during his natural life, unless the principal of the son’s share of the residuary estate should amount to less than $400,000, in which case they were directed to pay him $100,000 upon his becoming 25 years of age. At his death the principal was given to his children, or, if he should leave no descendants surviving him, then to testator’s daughters, Ellen and Mary, and their descendants; in the event of there being no descendants of testator living at such time, then to Marietta R. Stevens and the ultimate remainder-men under the fifth clause of the will. The fourteenth clause authorized the executors to make conveyance to the trustees of the several trust funds, in order to divide the estate, and to erect the several trust estates; and it further authorized the trustees of the trust estates and their survivors “to sell, convey, and make, execute, acknowledge, and deliver all proper and necessary deeds of conveyance of any and all real estate that may at any time form part of such trust estates,” and to reinvest the proceeds in other real estate, or United States, city, or state securities upon the same trust. The fifteenth clause directed that the income of the several trust estates should not be paid in anticipation, but only after it has accrued and been received by the trustees. By the seventeenth clause, Marietta R. Stevens, John L. Melcher, and Charles G. Stevens are appointed executors, and specially empowered—

“To carry into effect any and all agreements contained in the different partnership articles I may have entered into, or may hereafter enter into, in partnerships existing at the time of my decease, and particularly to retain in such partnerships such part of my estate as may be invested therein. [628]*6281 until the end and the determination of said partnerships, respectively, and collect the share of the profits and income thereof belonging to me or my estate, for the benefit of said estate, and to form part thereof; or, when best for the interest of my estate, in their opinion, to withdraw from said copartnerships, or any or either of them, and close and wind up the same, or dispose of my interest and property therein, upon such terms as they shall deem most proper; and I invest them with all the rights, powers,, and authority in me vested under or by virtue of said copartnership articles, any or either of them.”

The eighteenth clause declared that:

“The provisions herein made for the benefit of my said wife are to be, and are to be accepted by her, in lieu and stead of all dower and thirds and right of dower and thirds in my 'estate.”

Before the widow, elected to take under the will, a suit was . brought in this court for a construction of it, which resulted in an adjudication that the will authorized the executors to retain the hotel interests, and continue the portion of the estate invested therein, if they should elect so to do. He had a ten-twentieths interest in the firm of Darling, Griswold & Co., proprietors of the Fifth Avenue Hotel, in the city of New York; six-sixteenths in the firm of Wetherbee, Chapin & Co., as proprietors of the Revere and Tremont Houses, in the city of Boston; and seven-sixteenths in the firm of J. E. Kingsley & Co., as proprietors of the Continental Hotel, in the city of Philadelphia.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 N.Y.S. 625, 80 Hun 514, 87 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 514, 62 N.Y. St. Rep. 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-stevens-nysupct-1894.