Thorn v. . De Breteuil

71 N.E. 470, 179 N.Y. 64, 17 Bedell 64, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1071
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 71 N.E. 470 (Thorn v. . De Breteuil) 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
Thorn v. . De Breteuil, 71 N.E. 470, 179 N.Y. 64, 17 Bedell 64, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1071 (N.Y. 1904).

Opinion

Gray, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, as the sole surviving executor and trustee under the will of William T. Garner, deceased, to obtain a judgment, which should finally settle his accounts, discharge him from all further responsibility and permit him to resign his office of trust in favor of a certain trustee named. lie joined as parties defendant the testator’s three daughters, who were his only children, their husbands and their children. By his will the testator, after directing the payment of his debts, liad provided, in the second clause, as follows: “Second. I direct that my execu *68 tors hereinafter named, or such of those named as shall qualify as such, their survivors or successors, shall prosecute and carry on with my estate and property, my present business under the firm name of Garner & Go., for and during the lifetime of my wife, Mary Marcellite, and my daughter Florence, and the survivor of them, and that all profits and gains arising from said business shall, after the sums set apart for the support of my wife and children, as hereinafter provided, are deducted, be added to and form a part of the working capital of my estate.” In the third clause, the will directed the executor to pay “out of the income and profits” of his estate to his wife, during her life, annually, the sum of $70,000. lie gave to her all liis household furniture, beds, bedding, pictures, books, jewelry, horses, carriages, silverware and plate and “ the use and occupation, rent free, during her lifetime,” of his residences in Hew York city, and at Staten Island ; which provisions were to be in lien of her dower right. By the fourth clause he provided as follows: “Fourth. From out of the surplus income of my estate my executors will support, educate and maintain my child or children surviving me and such as may be born alive of my said wife within nine months after my decease, until they severally attain the age of twenty-five years. Up to such age such executors may advance any child or children such moderate sum or sums of money as, in their best judgment, will benefit or promote the happiness or comfort of such child or children, such advances to be charged against them. As each child attains the age of twenty-five years, said executors shall pay over to such child or children the full proportionate sum per annum to which she or he may be entitled from out of the profits of said business, after my wife’s amount is paid her, with expenses thereof, and my executors will so apportion and divide such income and profits that my sons shall receive twice the sum per annum that my daughters receive. * * "x" Upon the death of my said wife and my daughter Florence, the said business shall be closed and my entire estate settled and- divided among my children or their descendants, if any have died leaving children, per *69 stirpesP He appointed four persons as the executors of his will, among whom was this plaintiff, and in August, 1876, letters testamentary were issued to all, save one of them who had previously deceased.

The testator and his wife died, as the result of an accident, on July 20th, 1876, leaving them surviving these three daughters, Marcellite, Florence and Edith; then infants of about eight, seven and two years of age respectively. At the time of the commencement of. this action, in 1899, they had, each, attained the age of 25 years. After the executors had qualified, they assumed the management of the business of Garner & Co., under which name the testator had done a vast business in the manufacturing and selling of cotton goods and they have continued it, themselves, and the survivors, to the present time. The testator was the proprietor of, or possessed the controlling interest in, cotton mills and print works in this state and elsewhere ; whose sales and financial transactions were conducted by, or with, Garner & Co. The plaintiff, also, asks that the accounts and transactions of Garner & Co. shall be judicially settled. The daughters of the testator and their husbands, in their answers, have demanded affirmative relief. They ask that the court shall construe the will and that it shall be adjudged that each of them is entitled to receive from the estate in the plaintiff’s hands an amount,' in addition to all other sums properly corning to them, equal to the difference between one-third of all the income up to tiré time each attained the age of 25 years and the amount which has been received by her. It was stipulated upon tire trial that the amount thus claimed by the daughters as distributable amóng them is $3,748,314.84. They, also, claim that each is entitled to one-third of the proceeds of the sales of the real estate and household effects. The infant defendants, the children of the testator’s daughters, appear hy their guardian ail litem and have pleaded decrees of tire Surrogate’s Court upon accountings and judgments of the Supreme Court in actions by the executors, to which the testator’s daughters were parties; alleging that they were bound thereby. They *70 say, in substance, that by such decrees and judgments the provisions of the will now called in question by the adult defendants had been adjudged to be valid; that the conduct of the executors, in adding all surplus profits and gains and income arising from the business of Garner & Co. to the working capital, had been approved and confirmed and, by reason thereof, that those defendants are now estopped and are barred from claiming in this action that those provisions should be declared to be invalid, or that the accumulations in question should be paid to them. Upon the issues thus made, the important questions for determination related to the lawfulness of the direction to the executors and trustees of the will to add to the working capital of the testator’s business all profits and gains arising from the conduct thereof, after making provision for the maintenance, etc., of the testator’s children ; to the right of those children, now, in this action, to claim the direction to be invalid and the payment to them by the plaintiff from the estate of the excess of income added to the capital of the business, which each would, otherwise, have become entitled to, and to the right of the executors to include in the testator’s estate and property, which they were to use in carrying on the business, his real estate and the household furniture and other personal property given to his wife in the third clause of his will.

Upon the trial proof was made of the actions and proceedings, which had been instituted by the executors and trustees in the courts: starting with their first accounting, which charged them, as trustees, with an estate amounting to upwards of $7,000,000. In 1879 they brought an action to obtain a judicial construction of the will and set forth in their complaint its provisions. They alleged that since the testator’s death “ the business of Garner & Go. has been carried on by the plaintiffs in the manner and as directed in and by the will; ” that the personal estate was, mainly, in the business of Garner & Co., or in the stocks of manufacturing companies, used as incident to, or as part of, the business of Garner & Co.; that it was difficult to know, or ascertain, *71

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.E. 470, 179 N.Y. 64, 17 Bedell 64, 1904 N.Y. LEXIS 1071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorn-v-de-breteuil-ny-1904.