Tooker v. Tooker

64 A. 806, 71 N.J. Eq. 513, 1 Buchanan 513, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 28
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 4, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 64 A. 806 (Tooker v. Tooker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tooker v. Tooker, 64 A. 806, 71 N.J. Eq. 513, 1 Buchanan 513, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 28 (N.J. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The suit is brought by Edmund C. Tooker against his three infant children to obtain a decree against them declaring the [514]*514complainant to be the absolute owner in fee of a considerable fund consisting of personal securities in his hands as surviving executor of and trustee under the last will of Frank H. Tooker, deceased, who was his brother.

The rights of the parties depend upon the true construction of the will of the testator.

The cause has been well argued on each side, the complainant having very properly caused his children to be well and faithfully represented by counsel.

The deceased by his will, which was written wholly by himself, in its second item sets apart a sum of $10,000 to be invested and the interest applied to the support and maintenance of his father and mother during their lives.

By the third item he gave his watch and chain to his nephew, Harold, one of the defendants herein, and his diamond studs to his niece Mildred, also one of the defendants, and to each of them $500.

By the fourth item he gave all his household furniture to his wife, Catherine, “for her sole use and disposal.”

Then by the fifth item he directed that all the rest and residue of his estate should be invested for the sole use of his wife during her life, in lieu of dower, the same to include, after their death, the fund previously set aside for the benefit of his father and mother.

It is quite evident that he expected his wife to survive his parents, and he proceeds in the sixth item to direct that on the death of his wife (which occurred before that of his father) $1,000 should be paid to a church in Connecticut and a like amount to a church in Montclair, N. J. •

Then comes the clause upon the true construction of which the rights of the parties herein depend, thus—■

“the balance of nay estate to be invested for the benefit of nay father and mother, or either of them, but in case they have both died, then all to go to my brother, Edmund C. Tooker, and at his death, what remains, to his children equally, my intention being that, after the death of my wife, Catherine A. Tooker, and my father and mother, that my brother should receive all that remains, and after him his children.”

[515]*515The claim of the complainant is that under this language the father took an absolute estate, and hence that the bequest over is void.

Now, it is the duty as well as the pleasure of a court, when called upon to effectuate the intent of a testator, to give effect, if possible, to every part of the testator’s will.

His desire in this case, that the children of his brother, Edmund, should have his estate at the death of their father is just as clear, on the face of the will, as is his. desire that the father should have ,it. Hence, in my judgment, nothing short of a clear and imperative necessity should prevent the court from giving effect to that desire.

The obstacle which the complainant puts in the way of the accomplishment of this desired result is that an unlimited power of disposition is given to the brother by the will, and that power being coupled with an indefinite gift of the legacy to him creates an absolute estate, which absolute estate is entirely inconsistent with the gift to his children. This inconsistency is based on the old principle that a fee cannot be limited after a fee.

Now, I repeat, that before we come to the unwelcome conclusion that we cannot carry out this part of the will of the testator, we should feel very sure that the important element of an unlimited power of disposition lias been intentionally given by the testator in apt words to the complainant, his brother.

In such a case it seems to me that to be in doubt is to be resolved, since, in the absence of a gift of such a power of disposition, the intention of the testator to limit the estate of his brother, the complainant, to a life estate is perfectly clear. ’ Quite as clear, in my judgment, as if he had said, in so many words, that his brother was to enjoy the estate for life only.

The particular language in the will relied upon by the complainant for that purpose is comprised in the two magic words, “what remains;” thus “then all to go to my brother, Edmund C. Tooker, and at his death what remains to his children equally.” The. argument is that these two words, “what remains,” necessarily imply an unlimited power of disposition.

It must be conceded that there are authorities which go to that length, and I will take occasion to examine them farther [516]*516on, but, of course, we must take the whole will together, and that part upon which complainant relies is immediately followed by a clause of the'same sentence in which the testator makes his own explanation of what precedes it, and states what his intention is, as follows:

“my intention being that, after the death of my wife, Catherine A. Tooker, and my father and mother, that my brother should receive all that remains, and after him his children.’.’

Now, it seems to me, there can be no difficulty about the construction of this member of the sentence. He had given certain legacies to be paid after the death of his wife, which he supposed would take place after the death of his parents, hence he used the words “what remains.” His brother is to receive all that remains after the death of his wife, his-father and his mother, and after his brother his children. That means, of course, that his children should receive on the death of their father all that their father received.

Now, this is not an instance of two different dispositions of property found in different parts of a will and giving rise to the question which shall prevail, and calling for the application of the rule that the last expressed wish of the testator should prevail, the learning of which is spread through numerous decided cases cited in the books. But it is a gloss or interpretation put by the testator himself in his oto language and found in the final clause of disposition in his will. He seems to have thought there might be some misapprehension in what he had already written arising out of the somewhat confused way in which he had dealt with the probability of his wife surviving both his father and his mother and in the use of the words “what remains,” and so he deliberately construed his own will in the language last above quoted, and says, in effect, that he did not mean the words “what remains” to refer to the death of his brother, but to the death of his wife.

I might rest the conclusion at which I have arrived on' that explanatory member of the sentence alone. Brrt respect for the very able argument addressed to me by counsel for complainant [517]*517induces me to say something as to the proper effect of the words relied upon.

Undoubtedly in construing a will we must strive'to give every word effect, and it is in obedience to this canon that the courts have been led in a very few instances to the conclusion that a testator by the use of the words “what remains,” or their equivalent, must have contemplated that his estate would be diminished in the hands of the tenant for life, or his trustee for the time being, and from that notion the courts have concluded that the testator must have intended to give the tenant for life a power of general disposition over the principal of the estate.

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Related

Trafton v. Bainbridge
1 A.2d 2 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1938)
Briggs v. Faulkner
183 A. 712 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1936)
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151 A. 275 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1930)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A. 806, 71 N.J. Eq. 513, 1 Buchanan 513, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tooker-v-tooker-njch-1906.