Vanderbilt v. Balsan

190 Misc. 824, 77 N.Y.S.2d 403, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2154
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1948
StatusPublished

This text of 190 Misc. 824 (Vanderbilt v. Balsan) 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
Vanderbilt v. Balsan, 190 Misc. 824, 77 N.Y.S.2d 403, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2154 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

Isidor Wasservogel,

Referee. This action is brought by Harold S. Vanderbilt, as substituted trustee and as sole surviving executor of the will of William K. Vanderbilt, under an indenture of trust, dated November 6,1895, for judgment settling and allowing the accounts of William K. Vanderbilt, Ivor Churchill Guest and Harold S. Vanderbilt, as trustees, for a construction of said trust indenture, for instructions respecting the several matters referred to in the complaint and for other relief.

The indenture of trust is embodied in a marriage settlement entered into on November 6, 1895, between Charles Richard John, the Ninth Duke of Marlborough, William K. Vanderbilt individually; William K. Vanderbilt and Ivor Churchill Guest, as trustees, and Consuelo Vanderbilt (now Consuelo Vanderbilt Balsan and who for convenience of identification is herein referred to as Consuelo).

The marriage settlement, executed upon the marriage of the Duke and Consuelo, provided for the transfer to the trustees of 50,000 shares of Beech Creek Railroad Company stock valued at $2,500,000, in trust, to pay the income thereof to the Duke for his life and upon his death, to pay the income to Consuelo for her life. Upon the death of the survivor of the Duke and Consuelo, the trustees were to stand possessed of the trust fund and the income thereof for the successor of the Duke, provided that he was an heir male of his body. In the event that the Duke left no heir male of his body him surviving, then to all or such one or [826]*826more of the children or issue of the said marriage as the Duke might by deed or will appoint.

Upon the death of the Duke in 1934, the defendant John Albert Edward William Spencer Churchill, son of the late Duke and Consuelo, succeeded to the Dukedom.

The Issues.

The plaintiff, as substituted trustee, seeks instructions as to his authority and responsibility in respect of payment of English estate and succession duties claimed to have become payable upon the death of the Ninth Duke; as to whether the English or New York law governs in the construction of the trust; and whether the defendant, Tenth Duke of Marlborough, acquired a vested remainder in the trust on his accession to the Dukedom in 1934.

The present Duke, as defendant, maintains that the laws of England apply; that he was vested with an indefeasible remainder upon his father’s death, and prays that the trustee be directed to pay or otherwise discharge the English duties (Claimed to have become payable upon the death of the late Duke.

Since the issues to be determined require a consideration of the nature of the limitation contained in the indenture, the relevant portions thereof are set forth in full:

“It is hereby agreed and declared that the said Trustees their executors administrators and assigns shall stand possessed of the said sum of Two million five hundred thousand dollars of the capital stock’of the Beech Creek Railway Company * * #. And shall during the joint lives of the said Duke of Marlborough and Consuelo Vanderbilt pay the income of the said sum of Two million five hundred thousand dollars * * * unto the said Duke of Marlborough for his life and from and after the death of the said Duke of Marlborough shall pay the income of the said trust funds unto the said Consuelo Vanderbilt for her life and from and after the death of the survivor of them the said Duke of Marlborough and Consuelo Vanderbilt the said Trustees shall stand possessed of the said trust fund and of the income thereof in trust for the successor of the said Duke of Marlborough in the Dukedom provided that he shall be an heir male of the body of the said Duke of Marlborough party hereto but if the said Duke of Marlborough shall leave no heir male of his body him surviving then in trust for all or such one or more of the children or issue of the said marriage in such proportions and subject to such provisions as the said Duke of Marlborough may by Deed or Will appoint.”

[827]*827 Additional Trust.

The marriage settlement provided for the establishment of an additional trust not here directly involved. Thus, William K. Vanderbilt covenanted to pay to the trustees for the use of his daughter Consuelo, during the joint lives of himself and of Consuelo, the yearly sum of $100,000 and further undertook that, within a year subsequent to his death, his executors would pay the trustees the sum of $2,500,000, the income of which was to go to Consuelo for life; and upon her death, to the Duke for his life. Upon the death of the survivor, the corpus was to be distributed to their children subject, however, to any contrary provision made by the Duke and Consuelo jointly, by deed or appointment and, in default of appointment, as Consuelo should appoint by her will. In the event of no issue, the fund was to go to such person or persons as Consuelo might by deed or will appoint and, in default of appointment, to her next of kin.

It should moreover be observed that some months prior to the marriage settlement, viz., on February 19,1895, William K. Vanderbilt and Alva E. Vanderbilt," his wife, established a trust which provided that upon the marriage of Consuelo with the consent of her parents, the trustees were to transfer to Consuelo out of the corpus of the trust, 50,000 shares of Beech Creek stock for her sole and separate property. These are the securities which were made the subject of the marriage settlement.

Background of This Proceeding.

Upon their marriage, the Duke and Consuelo, then the Duchess of Marlborough took up their residence in England. Two sons were born of the marriage, John Albert Edward William Spencer Churchill and Ivor Charles Spencer Churchill.

In 1911, the Duchess of Marlborough separated from her husband, and in 1921 was divorced from the Duke. In the same year she remarried and has ever since been the wife of Colonel Jacques Balsan. In 1941, she reacquired her United States citizenship and is presently a resident of Nassau County, in the State of New York.

On June 30,1934, the Duke of Marlborough died and the elder son of the marriage succeeded his father in the Dukedom, becoming the Tenth Duke of Marlborough. He is married and has five children now living. His brother, Ivor Charles Spencer Churchill, is living, but has no children.

Since the death of the Ninth Duke, the income of the trust under consideration was and still is being paid to Consuelo, as the second life tenant.

[828]*828 The English Adjudication.

The instant trust was the subject of a proceeding in the Chancery Division of the English High Court of Justice in 1944. It was there held that upon the death of the Ninth Duke, succession and estate duties became payable under the English Succession Duty Act of 1853 and the English Finance Act of 1894. The parties there were the Attorney-General on behalf of the Commissioner of Inland Revenue and the Tenth Duke of Marlborough. Harold S. Vanderbilt, then sole surviving trustee under the marriage settlement, was not a party and did not participate in the proceeding. That decision, holding that succession and. estate duties were payable, was subsequently affirmed by the English Supreme Court of Judicature, Court of Appeal, on December 11,1944. (Marlborough [Duke] v. Attorney-General, [1945] Ch. 78.) No appeal was taken therefrom and the time within which to appeal has since expired.

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Bluebook (online)
190 Misc. 824, 77 N.Y.S.2d 403, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanderbilt-v-balsan-nysupct-1948.