Opinion
June 25, 1924.
Charles W. Philipbar, for Anna Adelaide Bahrenburg, executrix and sole legatee and devisee under the last will and testament of William H. Bahrenburg, deceased.
Andrew F. Van Thun, Jr., for George W. Bahrenburg, successor trustee.
Thomas Kelby, for Florence L. Leslie.
It becomes necessary in order to make a decree of distribution herein to construe paragraph 5 of decedent's will, which is as follows:
"Upon the death of my said wife or upon my said wife marrying again, if any youngest child then living shall have arrived at the age of twenty-one years, or as soon after the happening of either of said events as my youngest child then living shall arrive at the age of twenty-one years I direct that my said trustees shall convey all the remaining part of my estate, hereinbefore conveyed to them, together with any income of the same remaining in their hands, share and share alike among my children then surviving and the issue of any child who may have then deceased, such issue taking the share to which such deceased child would be entitled if living."
This provision is attacked as endeavoring to create an unlawful suspension of the ownership of personal property. A careful analysis, however, will disclose that the longest period of suspension would be the lifetime of the wife and the lifetime or minority of the youngest child of decedent living at the death of the wife, i.e., one life in being determined at the testator's death, and a second life in being at testator's death but determined at the death of the life tenant. This suspension, as to principal, seems to be valid. ( Van Cott v. Prentice, 104 N.Y. 45; Schermerhorn v. Cotting, 131 id. 48; Chaplin Susp. Alien. [2d ed.] § 79.)
The direction to suspend until "my youngest child then living shall arrive at the age of twenty-one years," or a similar direction, has been frequently before the courts for construction, and has been commonly treated as not requiring a suspension until the youngest child to live to attain the age of twenty-one years shall attain such age.
"The settled rule," says SCOTT, J., in Appell v. Appell ( 177 A.D. 570; affd., 221 N.Y. 602), "is that where a trust is limited upon a certain person attaining a given age it is to be construed as if it was in terms provided that the trust was to continue until the person upon whose life it is limited attains the given age, or sooner dies," citing Sawyer v. Cubby ( 146 N.Y. 192); Burke v. O'Brien ( 115 A.D. 574); Coston v. Coston (118 id. 1); Matter of Lally (136 id. 781; affd., 198 N.Y. 608). (See, also, Matter of Rounds, 105 Misc. 273.)
But the direction to pay to the remaindermen any income of the trust remaining in the hands of the trustees is void as to income which has accrued during the period of the suspension. ( Matter of Keogh, 112 A.D. 414; Matter of Lamb, 182 id. 180, 188; affd., 224 N.Y. 577.)
The wife has died and all the living children of decedent are of age, so that the trust fund is now to be distributed. The gift in remainder is to a class of persons living at the death of the wife, and not to a class determined as of decedent's death. The indications of futurity are the directions to "convey" rather than direct words of gift; the naming of beneficiaries indeterminately by words of description of groups, rather than by nomination of individuals; and a limitation of benefits to groups of children "then surviving," i.e., at the termination of the period of suspension, and to groups of issue of "children who may have then deceased."
The decree will direct distribution of the principal of the trust fund, together with such income as has accrued since the death of the widow, to decedent's living children and to the living descendants of deceased children, in equal shares, per stirpes, including Florence L. Leslie among the beneficiaries; and will further direct payment of income in the hands of the trustee, if any, which had accrued during the lifetime of the widow to her personal representatives. ( Matter of Keogh, supra; Matter of Lamb, supra.)
Settle decree on notice.