Stoiber v. Stoiber

40 A.D. 156, 57 N.Y.S. 916
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 A.D. 156 (Stoiber v. Stoiber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoiber v. Stoiber, 40 A.D. 156, 57 N.Y.S. 916 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Cullen, J.:

This action was brought for the construction of the will and 1st codicil thereto of Felix Stoiber, who died in the city of New York ■on November 12, 1889, leaving him surviving his widow and five [158]*158'children, all of age except Clara M. Stoiber, an infant. By the 7th. clause of the will the testator gave all the residue of his estate, real and personal, to certain trustees “for and during the following-period, viz., so long as my said wife shall live and until my daughter Clara M. shall have reached the age of twenty-one years, unless my wife shall be living when my .daughter Clara M. shall have reached the age of twenty-five, then only until my said daughter shall reach the age of twenty-five,” in trust, to receive the rents and profits and apply the same, first, to the payment of certain provisions made in favor of his widow; second, to the payment of other bequests made by the testator, and the discharge of any incumbrances on the property ; third, to divide the surplus equally among his children or their issue per stirpes. At the expiration of the trust period, the .trustees were directed to sell and convert, the trust property and divide the proceeds equally among all the testator’s children or their issue per stirpes, except that the share of the daughter Clara M. should go to a trustee upon trusts subsequently prescribed in the will, to which- it is unnecessary to refer, as they have no bearing on this controversy. The will also provided that the trustees might at any time, with the consent of the children who should be of full age, sell any or all of the trust property, in which case the testator gave and bequeathed the net proceeds thereof to his children then living or their issue per stirpes (with the exception of the share of the daughter Clara), thus terminating the trust. By the 1st codicil to-the will, the testator declared that it was his intention that his son Edward G-. should receive only the income and not the principal of any part of his estate, and that, therefore, he revoked and annulled any and all devises and bequests to him contained in the 7th clause of. his will, and in lieu thereof gave his share to a trustee, in trust, to pay over the rents and the'net income to said Edward G\ during his natural life, and upon his death without issue him surviving, then absolutely to such of the testator’s sons as might survive-him (Edward) and the trustee of the trust created for his daughter-Clara, the share of such of his said sons as may -have died to go to their issue; but upon the death of Edward leaving lawful issue him surviving, then he gave the trust property to- said issue absolutely, subject to a small pecuniary charge. It is the validity of this provision of the codicil- that is attacked by the plaintiff. The-[159]*159learned judge at Special Term held that the trust attempted to be created by the testator in favor of his son Edward and in substitution of the previous devise to him, taken in connection with the provisions of the will, was void as effecting an unlawful suspension of the power of alienation, and that Edward took any interest that might accrue to him under the will unaffected by the terms of the codicil. From that judgment Louis Stoiber, the trustee for Edward,, appointed by the will, has appealed.

If it were not for the discretionary power granted to the trustees to dispose at any time of the trust property and terminate the trust,. • it would be unquestionable that the. trust created by the codicil suspends the power of alienation for three lives. The Ith clause of the will suspends the whole residuary estate for two lives, that of the widow and that of the daughter Clara; for in ease the widow should die before Clara reached the age of twenty-one, then the estate was to be held in trust for the further time until Clara should arrive at that age; while in case Clara should die before the age of twenty-one, the trust would continue during the lifetime of the widow. The codicil continues the share of Edward, already held in trust for two lives under the will, in another trust during a third life, that of Edward himself. "We do not understand that the appellant controverts this proposition. The contention of his learned counsel is that the clause in the will does not suspend the power of alienation for any period whatever, because it is within the power of the' trustees, with the consent of the adult children of the testator, to convey the trust property and terminate the trust at any time. In support of his contention the counsel relies upon the cases of Robert v. Corning (89 N. Y. 225) and Henderson v. Henderson (113 id. 1). In these cases it was held thi%under the statute a power of alienation is suspended onlyíwlaere there are no persons in being by whom an absolute fee in possession can be conveyed, and that “ where the^frustee is empowered to sell the land, without • restriction as to tiiye, ^ the power of alienation is not suspended, although the alienation in fact may be postponed, by the non-action of the trustee, or, in consequence of a discretion reposed in him, by the creator of the trust.” We do not see that the present case can be logically taken out of the rule quoted by the fact that the trustees require the consent • of the adult children of the testator to [160]*160effect a sale. Those adult children, though not trustees, are certainly persons who, in connection with the trustees, can comply with the terms of the statute and convey an absolute fee in possession. The statute places no limit on the number of persons whose action is requisite to make the conveyance. If a discretion vested in three whose unanimous consent to act is requisite to make a.conveyance, is a sufficient compliance with the statute, the same rule must obtain when the discretion is vested in thirty. It may be that the courts will ultimately limit the doctrine of the Robert and Henderson cases, even in the direction in which we have expressed our doubts whether it cannot be logically done. For the purpose, however, of -disposing of the case before us, we shall assume the doctrine of those cases in its broadest form and extended to its greatest limits; ■and shall concede for the argument that no trust which can be terminated at any time at - the discretion of’ a number of persons, however great, and no matter for how long a period that discretion may be given, can constitute a suspension of the power of alienation under our statute. This concession, however, does not dispose of the question before us.

The provision that the absolute power of alienation cannot be suspended by any limitation or condition whatever .for a longer period than two lives in being at the creation of the estate is by no means the only limitation placed by statute on the power of testators or donors to fetter or tie up estates. The statute prescribes (1 R. S. 773, § 1) that the absolute ownership of personal property shall not be suspended by any limitation or condition whatever for more than two lives in being at the date of the instrument or death of the testator; and as to real property (Id.

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Bluebook (online)
40 A.D. 156, 57 N.Y.S. 916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoiber-v-stoiber-nyappdiv-1899.