Opinion
November 18, 1910.
Charles E. Hunter, for the appellants.
Leander B. Faber, for the respondent Percy Hinchman.
Frank H. Platt, for the respondent Mortimer L. Hinchman.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Surrogate's Court of Queens county settling the accounts of an administrator with a will annexed and providing for the distribution of the estate. The only question brought up for consideration on this appeal arises from the interpretation of certain trust clauses in the will. The testator provided first that his widow should have the interest and income of his entire estate for life. On her death he bequeaths and devises his entire estate in trust to his executors. He directed the division of the estate into three equal shares. Then he provides that as to two of these equal shares the income from each share should be paid to his sons William A. and Douglas Hinchman, respectively, during their lives, with the remainders over to their issue, respectively. The income on another share he directs to be paid to his son George W., and his grandchild, the son of George W., in equal portions during the life of George W., and on the death of George W. the remainder is to be paid to the specified grandchild, whom the testator calls "William." Realizing that there would be an intestacy in case the life tenants were not survived in each case by the designated remaindermen, that is, the issue of the sons of William A. and Douglas and the grandson, William, respectively, he set out to provide for such contingencies in the following language: "Should my said son George W. survive his said son whom I call William, then he said George W. is to receive the whole income of said share during his natural life, and should either of my said sons William A. and Douglas die without leaving lawful issue, and my said son George W. die without leaving him surviving his said son whom I call William, then and in that event, the share of which such deceased received the income shall be paid to the survivors or survivor, the issue of either of my sons William A. and Douglas, if deceased, however, to receive the share to which the parent would be entitled if living, and the said son whom I call William, of my said son George W. to receive the share to which said George W. would be entitled if living."
The appellants contend that the foregoing provisions constitute an illegal suspension of the power of alienation or of the absolute ownership of the personal property for more than two lives "in being," and that the trusts created by the will are, therefore, void. It is perfectly plain that there is no suspension of the trust estates for more than two lives "in being," as each of the trust estates terminated necessarily on the death of the life tenant, and passed to certain prescribed, though contingent, remaindermen. The scheme of the will is simple enough. If either of his sons, William A. or Douglas, died without issue, then the remainders in the separate trusts held for their respective benefits would go to the survivors or the survivor of the three brothers, with the qualification, however, that if one or other of these, who might have been survivors, had died leaving lawful issue, then that issue were to have by substitution the rights which their parent would have had had he survived. As to the son George W., however, the testator had a special purpose, for he expressly limited the remainder of that separate trust estate to one person only, the grandson, called William, and to this person alone he limited the right of substitution as to survivorship which would have accrued to George W. if alive. It was the apparent motive to exclude from any share of his estate any issue which George W. might have except the son called "William," and hence the seemingly involved provision. The intent, however, is clear enough. Under these provisions it would have been impossible for any one of these trust estates to have been suspended beyond the death of the life tenant, and hence there was no unlawful suspension.
Of course, at the time of the death of the testator, there was an uncertainty as to just which persons might be in being to take at the termination of each of the separate trusts, and the remainders limited were contingent in nature, but there was no uncertainty whatever about the time of the termination of each of the three separate trusts as being on the death of each of the three separate life tenants.
The whole argument of the appellants proceeds apparently upon a confusion of ideas. If the whole estate was to be held in trust in solido, instead of in three equal shares, then there would be some basis for their contention. They urge, however, that the use of the word "and," in the sentence which reads as follows, "should either of my said sons William A. and Douglas die without leaving lawful issue, and my said son George W. die without leaving him surviving his said son whom I call William," indicates a purpose upon the part of the testator to suspend the absolute ownership of the shares held in trust during the lives of the other two sons upon the contingency of the death in the meantime of the son George W. without leaving him surviving his son, called William. To adopt this construction would be to render the trust void as suspending the absolute ownership for three lives. ( Ward v. Ward, 105 N.Y. 68.) To give to the testator's language this meaning because he used the word "and" in the connection above noted, would be wholly inconsistent with the plain scheme of the will as a whole. It was used clearly in a disjunctive sense, as is quite common both in spoken and written language. No court would resort to overliteralness simply to destroy a testamentary provision. Where the word "and" appears from the context to have been used in the sense of the word "or," a court will so interpret it, whether it be in a will or a statute. ( Scott v. Guernsey, 48 N.Y. 106.)
It is a well-settled rule of interpretation of wills that even where there are two permissible constructions of the language of the testator, that will be adopted which will uphold rather than destroy the will. ( Jacoby v. Jacoby, 188 N.Y. 124, 130; Matter of Lally, 136 App. Div. 781.)
The decree of the Surrogate's Court should be affirmed, with costs.
WOODWARD, BURR, THOMAS and RICH, JJ., concurred.
Decree of the Surrogate's Court of Queens county affirmed, with costs.