Willets v. Willets

42 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 401
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 42 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 401 (Willets v. Willets) 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
Willets v. Willets, 42 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 401 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1885).

Opinion

Davis, P. J.:

It is impossible to read the will of the testator Samuel Willets,. without being impressed with profound respect for the charitableness of his nature. It is shown in the care with which he provides for his family, his relatives, the servants of his household, the poor, and the numerous institutions of charity and learning, which he makes the objects of his bounty. It is apparent that he was a man, who not only took in his lifetime great interests in the many public charities named in his will, but who bore, through his kindness and bounty, close and tender relations toward the poor and the needy.

In construing the provision of his will brought under our consideration by this appeal, it is proper, in seeking for the intention of the testator, not only to bear these facts in mind, but also to observe, what is equally apparent from that instrument, that the testator fully understood the subject of trusts, and the proper modes of creating them, and the distinction between gifts in trust and such as are intended to be personal or direct and not charged with any trust. There are numerous trusts created by the will for various purposes, the validity of none of which are disputed. And so there are various devises and bequests to his executors in their official capacity, or as trustees for purposes indicated, which show that he fully understood the distinction between them as persons and as executors or trustees. It is in the light of all these several facts as they are disclosed by the will, that we come to the consideration of the clause which the court below has adjudged to be void as creating an illegal trust.

That clause is in these words: “I do give'and bequeath to my son Eobert Willets, my friends William H. Macy and Charles GrifEen, and my nephews John T. Willets and Eobert E. Willets, and Ed'ward B. Willets, and my son-in-law Edward Merritt, the sur[403]*403vivors and survivor of them, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars, relying upon them to dispose of the same for the benefit of such charitable and benevolent and educational purposes as they shall judge will most promote the comfort and improve the condition of the poor; or in case any of my descendants should become poor and needy, then to apply, in whole or in part, to such descendants.”

The first thought that is suggested by the reading of this provision is that the testator’s heart was full of an intense desire that his death should not be, so to speak, at the expense of the poor and needy who had been in life the subjects of his care. He meant to prevent that affliction to others, which often attends the decease of such a benefactor, when death closes his own hand against them, and withdraws forever the kindly ministrations upon which their necessities had more or less depended. This is by no means an unlawful intention, although the policy of our statutes prevents its execution by the creation of general trusts.. It can be lawfully carried out by absolute gifts and bequests to donees and legatees who are thus made almoners of the dead, but only in fore consoientiae. Of this fact Mr. Willets was doubtless well informed, when he set about putting $100,000 of his large estate in a position of confidence and hope which, while it should not conflict with the enactments of law, would as he believed enable him to continue even in his grave to be the friend and helper of his clientage of poverty. It is apparent from the provisions of the will touching the trusts he had created, that he well knew he could not do this by the creation of any trust not expressly sanctioned by the laws of the State; and he understood also that he could not give any sum for that purpose to his executors as such, or to them as trustees, or in any other mode than by making them absolute donees, and in some form indicating to them his wish and hope that they would apply the money thus donated to his cherished purposes. In selecting the same persons whom he afterwards nominates as his executors, and frequently creates in other provisions of his will his trustees, he was careful to name them in this provision only as his relatives and friends. They were persons who were largely objects of his bounty in other provisions of his will. They were men in whose integrity and honor he doubtless had unbounded faith, and "to whom he was will[404]*404ing to hand over the large sum of $100,000 as an absolute gift, untrammeled by any trust or legal obligation that could, if valid, be enforced by suit at law or equity, accompanied only with a simple expression of his desire that it might be applied by them, to benefit whatever “ charitable, benevolent and educational purposes they shall judge will most promote the comfort and improve the condition of the poor,” or relieve the necessities of any of his descendants who might become poor and needy. He doubtless felt that they were gentlemen upon whom the simple expression of his wish would impose a moral obligation stronger than any bond of the law. He had a right so to feel and to act in that belief, provided he did not impress upon the gift itself the conditions of an invalid trust. The sole question for the court to determine is whether in seeking to accomplish his purpose he has wholly defeated it, by creating a trust .which is condemned by the statutes of the State. If he have not, then the court, since in testamentary cases it “ accepts the will for the reason,” will not be in haste to condemn provisions which aim to carry out intentions commendable in morals if of doubtful'expediency. The words of gift in the provision in question are clear and positive: “I do give and bequeath to my son * * * and my friends * * * and my nephews * * * and my son-in-law * * * the survivors and survivor of them the sum of $100,000.” These are the operative words of the bequest, and they are words of absolute gift. to the donees named;' and if the provision stopped with them there would be no question but that the persons named, or the survivors of them living at the testator’s death, would have taken the sum named as personal bequests. It is well settled in this State that the words “ survivors and survivor ” used, as in this case in connection with the persons named as donees, have relation solely to the death of the testator. (Moore v. Lyons, 25 Wend. 119 ; Weed v. Aldrich, 2 Hun, 531; 2 Redf. on Wills, 488, and cases there cited.) We think it is undoubtedly so in this case, and that the well settled rule controls their construction. The' gift was therefore one to the individuals named or such of them as should survive the testator; and as they all survived him it is a gift to the several persons named of the whole sum in equal shares. In making the bequest the testator is careful to avoid naming the donees as “ executors ” [405]*405or as “ trustees,” or using the word “ trust ” in any form. The ques- ' tion then is whether in the language that follows the words of gift there is any manifest intention to impose a limitation upon the gift which cuts down the estate given by the preceding language to one of mere trust for any purpose whatever. Unless such a purpose is manifest a court will not thrust one into the provision for the purpose of defeating the wishes of the testator. It is not a legitimate province of a court of law or equity to create trusts by construction for the mere purpose of destroying them by adjudging them illegal. Plain words of gift are not to be cut down by implications which do not arise from necessary construction. It wa-s said in Parsons v. Best (1 N. Y. Sup. Ct. [T.

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

Related

Bascom v. . Albertson
34 N.Y. 584 (New York Court of Appeals, 1866)
Levy v. . Levy
33 N.Y. 97 (New York Court of Appeals, 1865)
Foose v. . Whitmore
82 N.Y. 405 (New York Court of Appeals, 1880)
Roseboom v. . Roseboom
81 N.Y. 356 (New York Court of Appeals, 1880)
Prichard v. . Thompson
95 N.Y. 76 (New York Court of Appeals, 1884)
Jackson ex dem. Pearson v. Housel
17 Johns. 281 (New York Supreme Court, 1820)
Moore v. Lyons
25 Wend. 118 (New York Supreme Court, 1840)
In re Pennock's Estate
20 Pa. 268 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1853)
Hess v. Singler
114 Mass. 56 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1873)
Gilbert v. Chapin
19 Conn. 342 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1848)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willets-v-willets-nysupct-1885.