Thompson v. Clendening

1 Sand. Ch. 387
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 31, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Sand. Ch. 387 (Thompson v. Clendening) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Clendening, 1 Sand. Ch. 387 (N.Y. 1844).

Opinion

The Assistant Vice-Chancellor.

The important question in this case, is upon the validity of the devise of the testator’s real estate to his executors, upon the trusts expressed in the will. They are to receive the rents and profits, to lease the lands, and to improve them by building and otherwise, and to mortgage them, if necessary, for any of the purposes of the will. They are not authorized to sell the real estate for any purpose, until some one of the four minor children attains the age of twenty-one years. They are required to sell and convert it into money, when the youngest of the children living shall have attained that age. And they are clothed with a discretionary power to sell all or any of the real estate, on the arrival of any one of the children at lawful age, if in the opinion of the executors it shall be advantageous to do so, and the conduct and character of such child should in their opinion justify them in so doing. The whole estate was to be kept accumulating as far as practicable ; and whenever such sales were made, the executors were to pay and distribute all the rents, income, [393]*393and proceeds of the sales, to and among the four children, and the issue of such as were dead.

It is contended by the complainants, that these provisions of the will contravene the statute which limits the inalienability of estates, and that they are therefore void.

The result of the devise undoubtedly is, that in the event of the three elder children dying during their minority, the alienation of the estate would be suspended beyond the limit of two of the lives in being that were principally interested in the trust. So in the more probable event that the two elder children should die during their minority, the effect would be the same. Should all the children live till one becomes of age, the suspension of the power to sell might then be terminated, in the discretion of the trustees; and they may all live until the youngest of the four attains his majority, and the estate must then be sold.

The mere statement of these various contingencies, (and I have mentioned but a few of the combinations of events which might reasonably be suggested,) will suffice to show that the determination of the suspended power of alienation, depends partly upon the four lives of the children, and partly upon the time when the youngest surviving child shall become of age ; and its utmost limit, is the number of years interveningbetween the death of the testator and the date when the youngest child, if he lives,- will attain the age of twenty-one years. The latter period is the only one which admits of any definite limitation; because, if we rest it upon the event of the youngest survivor becoming of age, we place it upon a contingency that, may never happen, if he should die while a minor, but after his brothers and sisters were of age, the power to sell would become operative immediately.

The case appears to me, after full consideration, to fall directly within the decision of the Court for the Correction of Errors on the will of William Jamés. Hawley v. James, (16 Wend. 61.) There the trust term was to continue until the youngest of the testator’s children'and grandchildren, living at the date of the will and attaining- the age of twenty-one years, should have attained that age.

At the date of the will, the testator had thirteen children and [394]*394grandchildren1 who were minors, one of whom wanted ten days of being a year old at the testator’s death. The duration of the trust term therefore, could not in that case, continue beyond twenty years and ten days from the death of Mr. James. Its termination might occur in a much shorter time by the deaths of the younger portion of the thirteen. Thus like the case before me, it depended upon the lives of the beneficiaries,, bounded as its utmost limit, by the majority of the youngest surviving child.

The Court of Errors held the limitation to be void, as repugnant to the fifteenth section of the statute relative to the creation o and division of estates.

Mr. Justice Bronson, in his learned and most able judgment in Hawley v. James, said that “the term was limited by the continuance of the minorities, but as those might cease by death as well as by lapse of time, it necessarily depended in part on the continuance of life. There is no possible form in which the case can be fairly stated, without showing that the duration of the term depended upon lives, and' as there were thirteen minors in the class, it depended on more than two lives. This trust then might continue and the power of alienation be suspended for a longer period than the statute allows.” (pp. 167, 168.)

He says farther, the question is, not whether the trust probably will, but whether it can transgress the statute rule.” “ The statute has given- lives as the measure, and nothing else, (p. 171.) Life must in some form, enter into the limitation. No absolute term, however moderate, or however short, can be maintained ; and no uncertain term, the utmost limit of which is not bounded by lives, can be sustained.”

The same result was reached by the Chief Justice in a well reasoned argument, and he thus states his conclusion : “ The trust term is void,. 1. Because it is an estate limited to depend upon thirteen lives, as well as upon minorities, and may postpone the power of alienation for a longer period than is allowed by law. 2. That if it should be considered properly, a term for 20 years and 10 days, determinable upon thirteen minorities, it is still void because the power of alienation may be suspended for more than two lives of the thirteen individuals upon which [395]*395it depends; and 3. Because the trust term is not limited to depend upon one or two specified lives in being within the true construction of the 15th section; the only measure for the suspension of the power of alienation since the adoption of the Revised Statutes, being a life or lives,” (p. 133,134.) Two other members of the court of last resort, pronounced opinions concurring with those which I have stated; and the judgment of the court in that case, appears to have established that by the 15ih section of the statute referred to, the suspension of the power of alienation must be limited by two lives in being, designated either by naming two persons, or as the two first lives which shall fall, in a class of several individuals named or definitely described. That the limit may be for any term of years, or on any contingent event, expressing that it is on condition that the two lives shall so long continue; but it cannot be made upon an event or condition which by possibility may suspend the power of alienation beyond the two lives specified. (See decree of the court in Hawley v. James, (16 Wend. 274.)

The Chancellor, in the case of Gott v. Cook, (7 Paige, 521, 540,) says that the decision in Hawley v. James, settles the construction of the statute to be that an estate is void in its creation, if it is so limited that it can by any possibility continue beyond two lives in being at the creation of the estate.

(And see Van Vechten v. Van Veghten, 8 Paige’s R. 104, affirmed in the Court for the Covv'ction of Errors, in December, 1841.)

In Hone’s Executors v. Van Schaick, (7 Paige’s R. 221,) the Chancellor stated the result of the decision in Hawley v. James,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hone's Executors v. Van Schaick
20 Wend. 564 (New York Supreme Court, 1838)
Gott v. Cook
7 Paige Ch. 521 (New York Court of Chancery, 1839)
Hawley v. James
16 Wend. 61 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1836)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Sand. Ch. 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-clendening-nychanct-1844.