Opinion
01-23-2002
Conway Lavelle & Finn, Albany (Matthew W. Ryan of counsel), for petitioner.FitzGerald Morris Baker Firth P.C., Glens Falls (Shannon L. Stockwell of counsel), for Philip Albright and others.
Conway Lavelle & Finn, Albany (Matthew W. Ryan of counsel), for petitioner. FitzGerald Morris Baker Firth P.C., Glens Falls (Shannon L. Stockwell of counsel), for Philip Albright and others. John C. Welsh, Albany, for David Albright and others.
OPINION OF THE COURT
GEORGE J. PULVER, JR., S.
Factual Background
The last will and testament of decedent Philip A. Goodwin (hereinafter referred to as decedent) was admitted to probate in the Greene County Surrogate's Court on June 22, 1937. Pursuant to this document, which was executed on January 14, 1937, two trusts were established. The first trust named Mechanics & Farmers Bank Albany as trustee with the rents, income and profits of such trust being for the benefit and use of decedent's wife, Eva M. Goodwin, during her lifetime. Upon Eva M. Goodwin's death, the trust was to continue with the rents, income and profits being paid to decedent's son John H. Goodwin (date of birth: Mar. 23, 1917) during his lifetime. Upon the death of decedent's son John H. Goodwin, the trust was to cease with the fund assets being distributed to "the descendants of the said John H. Goodwin, share and share alike, if he have any and if he have none at that time, * * * to my daughter, Jean Elizabeth Goodwin, if she be living at that time, and if she be dead at that time * * * to her descendants, share and share alike, if she have any living at that time, and if she have none living at that time * * * to my [six named] cousins * * * absolutely, share and share alike" (decedent's last will and testament ¶ 9). The second trust established by decedent's will also designated Mechanics & Farmers Bank Albany as trustee and named decedent's wife, Eva M. Goodwin, as lifetime beneficiary of the rents, income and profits of such trust. However, upon the death of Eva M. Goodwin, this trust was to continue with decedent's daughter, Jean Elizabeth Goodwin (date of birth: Feb. 29, 1920), as the successor lifetime beneficiary. Upon the death of decedent's daughter Jean Elizabeth Goodwin, the trust was to cease and the fund assets be distributed to "the descendants of the said Jean Elizabeth Goodwin, share and share alike, if she have any and if she have none at that time, * * * to my son, John H. Goodwin, if he be living at that time, and if he be dead at that time * * * to his descendants, share and share alike, if he have any living at that time, and if he have none living at that time * * * to my [six named] cousins * * * absolutely, share and share alike" (decedent's last will and testament ¶ 9). On February 24, 1987, decedent's wife, Eva M. Goodwin, died. Decedent's son, John H. Goodwin, having predeceased Eva M. Goodwin and having left no descendants, the first trust was terminated and the assets ($256,832.05 plus interest) were distributed to Jean Elizabeth Goodwin (married name Albright) on March 16, 1988. The second trust continued in its existence until the successor lifetime beneficiary, Jean Elizabeth Goodwin, died on January 21, 2001 survived by her four adult children: Philip Albright, Eugene Albright, Mary Jane Sotanski, and Elizabeth Ring; six adult grandchildren: David Albright, Bonnie Pelenur, Marcia Wood Sotanski, Frances Sotanski, Sean Ring, and William Ring; and four minor great grandchildren: David Albright, Bryan Albright, Yael Pelenur, and Kayln Ring. Petitioner Trustco Bank, National Association, which is the successor trustee of the trust benefitting Jean Elizabeth Goodwin, filed a motion with this court seeking guidance and a determination as to what decedent intended when he directed, in his last will and testament, that the trust property be devised and bequeathed "to the descendants of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin share and share alike." In essence, petitioner, which seeks to terminate the trust and distribute the corpus, is unsure whether the assets should be divided equally among the four children of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin or among all 14 aforementioned survivors. The corpus of the trust was at or about $844,810 as of January 2, 2002. Finding that an ambiguity exists relative to the interpretation of the pertinent language, the court appointed John C. Welsh, Esq.
as guardian ad litem on behalf of the four great grandchildren of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin and caused all 14 interested parties to be served with a citation for a construction hearing on January 3, 2002. On the return date, the court heard oral argument from John C. Welsh, Esq. on behalf of the four great grandchildren of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin and Shannon L. Stockwell, Esq. on behalf of the four children of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin. Counsel for petitioner, Matthew Ryan, Esq., was also present but took no position of the petition instead demurring to the court. At the conclusion of oral argument, and after inquiring if the parties had anything further which they wanted the court to consider, the court reserved decision.
Issue Presented
The issue before this court is whether decedent's devise of the trust corpus "to the descendants of the said Jean Elizabeth Goodwin, share and share alike if she have any" was a direction for there to be either a per stirpital or a per capita distribution.Definition of Terms Per Stirpes
To distribute property in a per stirpital fashion, the property is divided into as many equal shares as there are (i) surviving issue in the generation nearest to the deceased ancestor which contains one or more surviving issue, and (ii) deceased issue in the same generation who left surviving issue, if any (see, EPTL 1-2.14). Each surviving member in such nearest generation is allocated one share (see, id.). The share of a deceased issue in such nearest generation who left surviving issue shall be distributed in the same manner to such issue (see, id.). In this case, then, insofar as the four children of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin are the closest generation to decedent with surviving issue, and insofar as there are no deceased children on their level, the four surviving children would each receive one fourth of the trust corpus while the grandchildren and great grandchildren of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin would receive nothing.Per Capita
When property is distributed in a per capita fashion, each person takes, in his or her own right, an equal portion of the property (see, EPTL 1-2.11). In this case, then, insofar as at the time of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin's death the class of descendants included 14 people, each person would receive one fourteenth of the trust corpus.A Review of the Statutory Law
At common law, the presumption was that a devise to either "issue" or "descendants" meant for them to take per capita (see, Matter of Gardiner, 20 Misc 2d 722; see also, New York Life Ins. & Trust Co. v Winthrop, 237 NY 93; Schmidt v Jewett, 195 NY 486; Soper v Brown, 136 NY 244). This common-law presumption was abolished in 1921, however, with the enactment of Decedent Estate Law § 47-a (L 1921, ch 379, eff Apr. 30, 1921) which provided that, "If a person * * * shall devise or bequeath any present or future interest * * * to the `issue' of himself or another, such issue shall, if in equal degree of consanguinity to their common ancestor take per capita, but if in unequal degree, per stirpes, unless a contrary intent is expressed in the will." Notably, although the common-law presumption had applied equally to either "issue" or "descendants," the statutory codification in Decedent Estate Law § 47-a only included the term "issue." Thereafter, Estates, Powers and Trusts Law § 2-1.2 (a), which became effective on September 1, 1967, provided that, for instruments executed prior to September 1, 1992, "[w]henever a disposition of property is made to `issue', such issue, if in equal degree of consanguinity to their common ancestor, take per capita, but if in unequal degrees, per stirpes, unless a contrary intention is expressed." Again, the statute has no mention of the term "descendants" which, at common law, had the same meaning as "issue."The Position of the Four Children of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin
Counsel for the four children of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin urges this court to interpret the disputed language "to the descendants of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin share and share alike" as evidence of decedent's intent for there to be a per stirpital distribution of the trust corpus. This would result in the trust corpus being distributed solely to the four children of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin, one fourth each, and to the exclusion of her grandchildren and great grandchildren. Several arguments are advanced in support of this position.A. Wishes of the Surviving, Interested Parties
As stated previously, there are 14 interested parties who survived Jean Elizabeth Goodwin and stand to receive money if the court determines that decedent intended for there to be a per capita distribution to all of his daughter's descendants. The four children of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin have each filed sworn affidavits urging the court to interpret the ambiguous language to mean that the trust corpus should be distributed in a per stirpital fashion. This is not surprising, insofar as these four parties greatly benefit from this interpretation in that they would receive a significant amount more money than if the corpus is divided between 14 parties. What is somewhat surprising is that the six adult grandchildren of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin have also each filed an affidavit averring that, with full knowledge of the issues before the court, s/he requests a per stirpital distribution of the trust corpus to the four children of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin; each affiant also acknowledges that, pursuant to such an interpretation, s/he would not receive any of the trust corpus. Additionally, in their capacity as parents to the four minor great grandchildren of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin, each avers that it is his/her understanding, and desire, that a per stirpital distribution be ordered and that such an interpretation would preclude his/her offspring from receiving any money from the trust.B. The Statutory Presumption of Per Stirpital Distribution to "Issue" is Not Rebutted
Arguing that a distribution to "descendants" should be treated exactly as a distribution to "issue," the four children of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin argue that both the statute in effect at the time that decedent executed his last will and testament (Decedent Estate Law § 47-a) and the present controlling statute (EPTL 2-1.2 [a]) contain presumptions for per stirpital distribution in the absence of any contrary intent. According to the four children, decedent's use of the phrase "share and share alike" is not a clear expression of an intent contrary to the aforementioned statutory presumption but, rather, is evidence of intent to require a per stirpital distribution with equal sharing among descendants in equal degree of consanguinity to their common ancestor (see, In re Estate of Kingsley, NYLJ, Jan. 6, 1992, at 23, col 3; Matter of Wilhelm, 60 AD2d 32; In re Russell's Estate, 133 NYS2d 52). Therefore, according to the four children, the trust corpus should be distributed in a per stirpital fashion with each of them taking one quarter and no distributions being made below the generational line of the four surviving children.C. Case Law Relying on Common-Law Presumption is Erroneous
The four children also assert that the guardian ad litem inappropriately asks this court to rely on cases which were decided pursuant to the common-law presumption of per capita distribution (see, Matter of Phares, 38 Misc 2d 1; Matter of Gardiner, 20 Misc 2d 722) because the surrogates held the Decedent Estate Law's statutory presumption of per stirpital distribution to be inapplicable insofar as the bequests in question were to "descendants" while the statute, although mentioning bequests to "issue," did not explicitly contain the term "descendants." It is the contention of the four children that, insofar as "descendants" and "issue" are synonymous, these cases were erroneous and should not be relied upon by this court.D. Evidence of Decedent's Intent to Overcome the Common-Law Presumption
Finally, the four children argue that, in the event that this court applies the common-law presumption of per capita distribution, a reading of decedent's will, in its entirety, provides sufficient evidence of his intent to overcome such presumption and to provide for a per stirpital distribution. Specifically, they point out that the residuary clause of decedent's will which established the two trusts, of equal amounts, for the benefit of his two children is evidence of per stirpital intent contrary to the common-law presumption of per capita distribution. Additional evidence of per stirpital intent, they claim, is the will's provision that should one of decedent's children die that child's money is to go to that child's descendants and only if the child dies leaving no descendants is such child's share to be distributed to the other surviving child.E. Equity
Finally, the children assert that basic equity and fairness supports a per stirpital distribution because one of the children of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin has no offspring and would, therefore, receive one fourteenth of the trust, while another of the children has several children and grandchildren and therefore his immediate offspring would take six fourteenths of the trust corpus. Indeed, this is why the Legislature enacted Decedent Estate Law § 47-a (see, Matter of Union Trust Co., 170 App Div 176, 183 ["It certainly would not be equality to give seven shares to one granddaughter having six children and one share to a granddaughter having no children"]).The Position of the Guardian ad Litem on Behalf of the Four Great Grandchildren of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin
The guardian ad litem, John C. Welsh, Esq., advanced two theories to this court both of which support a per capita distribution of the trust corpus equally to all 14 living descendants of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin. The guardian ad litem's first argument is that the terms "descendants" and "issue" are neither synonymous nor interchangeable and that the Legislature's failure to include the term "descendants" in Decedent Estate Law § 47-a and the subsequent EPTL 2-1.2 (a) should be interpreted to mean that a bequest to "descendants" does not fall within the statutory presumption of a per stirpital distribution between persons of unequal degrees (Matter of Phares, 38 Misc 2d 1; Matter of Gardiner, 20 Misc 2d 722). Under this theory, decedent's use of the term "descendants" rather than "issue" would be evidence of his intent for his bequest to fall outside the scope of the per stirpital statutory presumption and for there to be a per capita distribution (i.e., share and share alike) to the class of descendants in any degree of Jean Elizabeth Goodwin in accordance with the common-law presumption. Second, and alternatively, the guardian ad litem urges this court to interpret the terms "issue" and "descendants" to be synonymous and both encompassed by the per stirpital statutory presumption in existence at both the time decedent's last will and testament was drafted (see, Decedent Estate Law § 47-a) and presently (see, EPTL 2-1.2 [a]). Therefore, decedent's use of the term "descendants" would mean that the bequest was controlled by the presumption of per stirpital distribution (see, Matter of Schoellkopf, 21 Misc 2d 564). However, relying on hornbook law that a person may assure per capita distribution by specifically providing for "per capita distribution" or by including the words "share and share alike" or by stating that "all class members shall take in equal shares" (see, 3 Powell, Real Property § 30.18), the guardian ad litem asserts that decedent's inclusion of the words "share and share alike" is sufficient evidence of his intent to rebut the per stirpital presumption and to require a per capita distribution among all class members.