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Matter of King

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jan 23, 1906
76 N.E. 584 (N.Y. 1906)

Opinion

Argued November 27, 1905

Decided January 23, 1906

William A. Boyd for appellants.

Franklin Bartlett for Hattie K. Hilton, respondent. Nathaniel S. Smith and James F. McNaboe for Mamie K. Smith, respondent.



The trustees, Vincent C. King, Jr., and Anna Louise King, appeal from the order of the Appellate Division affirming the decree of the Surrogate's Court of the county of New York, charging them with upwards of seven thousand dollars for expenses incident to the care and preservation of property, No. 49 West Eighty-eighth street, in the city of New York, and of other property bequeathed in the fifth subdivision of the will; also, for incidental damage to estate.

A proper understanding of the questions presented by this appeal requires a careful consideration of the scheme of the will. The testator was a man of wealth and a well-known merchant in the city of New York. He left him surviving a widow and four children, three daughters and a son, all of whom were of full age. The testator was twice married. There was no issue of the second marriage. The second subdivision of the will gives to the son, Vincent C. King, Jr., the testator's undivided half interest in the capital and other property in his business. The third subdivision gives to the son the testator's half interest in the property known as the "Factory property," situate in the city of New York, subject to testator's liability on a mortgage for twenty-five thousand dollars on the property; also subject to the payment of twenty-five hundred dollars per annum, in equal monthly payments, to the widow during the term of her natural life, or until her re-marriage. The son was to be freed from this annual payment as soon as the real estate was relieved from mortgages, so that the net income of five thousand dollars to be paid the widow could be realized from the general estate. The fourth subdivision devises and bequeaths to the son the testator's farm of two hundred and thirty acres at Wilton, Saratoga county, in this state, known as "The King Homestead," with all its stock and implements of husbandry, etc. The fifth subdivision devised and bequeathed to the executors and trustees the premises in which the testator resided at the time of his death, which proved to be the house and lot No. 49 West Eighty-eighth street, in the city of New York; also the horses, carriages, etc., which belonged to testator at the time of his death. "In trust, to collect the rent arising therefrom, and to pay the same to my wife during her natural life, or as long as she shall remain my widow; but my wife, in case she desires, may occupy the said house without payment of rent and may have the free use and enjoyment of said furniture which may belong to me at the time of my death, and said horses, carriages, etc., during her natural life, or as long as she shall remain my widow." Then follows a provision that in case the widow elects not to live in the house and enjoy the personal property named, the same may be sold and the amount realized from the sale thereof to be invested in real or personal property and the income paid to the widow. The sixth subdivision devises and bequeaths to the executors and trustees all the rest, residue and remainder of the personal estate, and all the real estate, except that which was specifically devised in the fifth subdivision, in trust for certain purposes as follows: (a) "To collect the rent and income arising therefrom and to pay out of the same the taxes, assessments and charges, including repairs in and about my real estate;" (b) provides for the payment to the widow of twenty-five hundred dollars a year so long as his son, Vincent C. King, Jr., paid a like amount, as provided in the third subdivision, and in case of his default, to pay to the widow the entire sum of five thousand dollars. The testator at this point uses this significant language: "It being my desire that my wife shall receive the sum of five thousand dollars per annum, payable in equal monthly payments, and the use of the house in which I may reside and be the owner of at the time of my death, and the use of the furniture which may belong to me in the house in which I may reside at the time of my death, and my horses, carriages, etc., during her natural life, or as long as she shall remain my widow." (c) After the payment of the taxes, assessments, repairs, interest on mortgages, insurance and all charges against his estate, and the payment of the income to the widow, the testator directed the application of any balance of income to the payment and discharge of any and all incumbrances or liens of any kind upon his property, and when this was done if a balance remained of surplus income it should be equally divided among his four children; (d) contains provisions not material on this appeal. Reference need not be made to the other provisions of the will at this time. These various provisions for the widow are in lieu of dower.

The will was executed on the 13th of January, 1896, and the testator died on the 2nd of July following, residing with his wife at that time in the premises 49 West Eighty-eighth street, in the city of New York. The widow elected not to occupy the premises 49 West Eighty-eighth street under the provisions of the will and, thereupon, the executors and trustees placed the real property in the hands of several different agents for sale.

In December, 1896, Virginia K. Hascall, one of the daughters of the testator, began an action against the executors and trustees of her father's will, joining therein as defendants her brother and two sisters, which had for its object the construction of certain portions of the will of testator and for the partition of the real estate. The single question litigated in that case was the validity of so much of the sixth subdivision of the will marked (c), which directed the executors and trustees to apply the balance of the net income of the estate, after the payment of repairs, interest, insurance, etc., to the payment and discharge of any and all incumbrances or liens of any kind upon the same. The Special Term sustained the validity of the clause, but dismissed the complaint; the Appellate Division affirmed the judgment; the Court of Appeals decided ( 162 N.Y. 134) that the application of part of the income of the trust of the residuary estate to the payment of mortgages and other liens, thereby increasing the capital of the estate by decreasing the burden thereof, constitututes an unlawful accumulation within the meaning of the Revised Statutes (1 R.S. 726, §§ 37, 38), prohibiting the accumulation of rents and profits of real estate, except during the minority and for the sole benefit of minors, and is invalid notwithstanding such accumulation takes the form of an extinguishment of indebtedness, and is limited to the surplus income remaining after the payment of an annuity and restricted to the lifetime of the annuitant. It was further held that the primary object of a testamentary trust being to provide an annuity for testator's wife, and being separable from a secondary object and ulterior provision for the payment of mortgages out of any income remaining after paying such annuity, is valid and will be sustained, although the secondary provision be void. The judgment dismissing the complaint was modified in accordance with this decision and as so modified affirmed. In brief, the direction to pay and discharge incumbrances or liens out of a balance of income was held an unlawful accumulation, but the direction to pay an annuity to the widow was permitted to stand. No other question was considered or decided by the court.

The following language is found in the opinion of the learned Appellate Division ( Hascall v. King, 28 App. Div. 291): "With respect to the premises occupied by the testator at the time of his death, which are admitted to have been No. 49 West Eighty-eighth street, and which by the fifth clause of the will were given to the widow, it is evident that, as the devise was entirely apart from the provision made for her by the sixth clause and was expressly excepted from the operation thereof, it is to be treated as a separate and distinct piece of property, and that in dealing with it the trustees are to pay to the widow only the net rent of the premises and that the taxes, assessments and charges, including repairs upon the house, are to be deducted from the gross rent and are not to be paid out of the income derived from the property bequeathed and devised in the sixth clause of the will." The following sentence appears in the opinion of this court: "In all other respects we agree with the views expressed in the opinion written by the Appellate Division." ( 162 N.Y. p. 153.) On these two expressions of opinion, which were purely obiter dicta, the respondents insist that the question presented by the present appeal has been decided in their favor. It is a sufficient answer to this contention to say that what is decided by the court is settled by its order and judgment and not by its opinion. The Supreme Court, at Special Term and Appellate Division, sustained the validity of the clause providing for the payment of incumbrances and liens out of income, but dismissed the complaint as to plaintiff's claim that the will was void and the real estate should be partitioned. This court held the said provision to be void as an unlawful accumulation, but sustained provisions for annuity to the widow. Motions were made in the Special Term, Appellate Division and this court after final judgment to amend the proceedings so as to make the obiter dicta of the Appellate Division a part of the decision. These motions were denied. Judge ANDREWS in an application at Special Term handed down an opinion, in which he said: "The judgment of the Special Term dismissed the complaint and construed the will in certain particulars, but not in regard to the premises 49 West 88th street. That judgment was affirmed by the Appellate Division, and according to the opinion delivered in the Court of Appeals was affirmed there, except in regard to the accumulation."

In the present proceedings the surrogate appointed a referee to inquire into the necessary jurisdictional facts, to examine the account and objections, to hear and determine the questions arising upon the settlement of the account, which the surrogate had the power to determine and report to the court. The referee in his opinion uses this language: "The main contention is over the true meaning of the fifth paragraph of the will. That meaning was not determined by any adjudication in the proper sense of the word in Hascall v. King ( 28 App. Div. 280; 162 N.Y. 134)." After commenting upon the weight to be given to obiter remarks of the court, generally, etc., he further said: "I do not think that it would be proper for me to reconsider upon the merits the question which has been thus deliberately, although, obiter, considered and passed upon by the higher courts, and, therefore, I must hold the expenditures made of the residuary property on behalf of the widow's property to have been improper." It thus appears that the single question presented by this appeal, as to whether the trustees were authorized to pay out of the income of the trust created by the sixth subdivision of the will the taxes, interest, assessments and charges, including repairs in and about 49 West Eighty-eighth street, was not considered by the referee, and the judgment entered upon his report was affirmed by the Appellate Division without opinion.

The testamentary scheme of the testator is clear and exceedingly simple. At the time the will was executed the testator's three daughters were married and settled in life, and he was living with a second wife by whom he had no issue. He evidently determined that his only son should be his successor in the business interests that he controlled, and he provides for this abundantly in the second, third and fourth subdivisions of the will where he vests him with the title of the real estate connected with his business, including the valuable farm in Saratoga county. The next object of his bounty was the widow, and he provides for her in two ways, to wit: First, by the fifth subdivision of the will, wherein he creates an express trust in his executors and trustees for her benefit, making her the beneficiary of certain real and personal property, vesting in her the right to reside upon the real estate so held in trust free of rent, using horses, carriages, furniture, etc., without charge; or at her election to lease the same, the rent to be paid to her by trustees; or to have the real estate and personal property sold and the proceeds invested in other real estate or personal property, and she to receive the income thereof, and at the termination of the trust the entire property, real and personal, to fall into the residuary estate. The second provision contemplated a sufficient income for the widow should she elect to reside upon the premises in question, or go elsewhere, and it was fixed at five thousand dollars a year. One-half of this sum was to be paid from the income of the residuary estate and the other half by the son, Vincent C. King, Jr. It was, however, provided that if the son defaulted in his payment the whole amount should be paid from the income by the trustees.

As before stated, soon after the widow elected not to reside upon the premises 49 West Eighty-eighth street, and the same were placed in the hands of real estate agents for sale, the action of Hascall v. King was begun and a lis pendens filed. The natural result of the filing of this lis pendens was to prevent the sale or rental of the property until it was canceled of record. The lis pendens was not discharged until the 25th of June, 1900, the action having been begun December 9th, 1896, three years and a half prior to that time.

Reading the fifth subdivision by itself we find that the testator employs no language indicating his intention that the widow should in case of leasing receive only the net profits, nor does he provide in any way for the payment of taxes, assessments, repairs and interest upon the twenty-five thousand dollar mortgage on this real estate. On the contrary, he directs that the widow may occupy the house "without payment of rent," and if premises are rented the trustees are to collect the rent "and pay the same to my wife." The testator's general scheme for the widow in this connection presented to his mind evidently two contingencies, to wit: That if she decided to reside upon the premises and use the personal property she could do so without charge, and he arranged for a fixed income of five thousand dollars a year. If she preferred to have the property sold she was entitled to receive the income of the sum realized on such sale when re-invested. This, with the five thousand dollars income, would then constitute her interest under the will. The income of the re-invested fund on sale of real estate and personal property stood in lieu of her occupying the real estate, rent free, and using the personal property without charge. It is quite inconceivable that the testator intended that if she occupied the premises she should pay out of her annual income of five thousand dollars the interest on the twenty-five thousand dollar mortgage and the various disbursements for taxes, assessments, repairs, etc. If the widow had been compelled to do this there would have remained to her a sum absolutely insufficient to live upon in the mode of life contemplated by the testator.

It is clear that in order to discover the real intention of the testator the fifth and sixth subdivisions of the will must be read together. The sixth subdivision opens with these words: "I give, devise and bequeath to my executors and trustees hereinafter named and the survivor of them all the rest, residue and remainder of my personal estate and all the estate of which I may die seized or possessed (except only the premises in which I may reside and be the owner of at the time of my death and which I have specifically devised in the fifth clause of this my will) in trust as follows: (a) To collect the rent and income arising therefrom and pay out of the same the taxes, assessments, charges, including repairs in and about my real estate." These closing words are general and embrace all the real estate. It is argued that this cannot be the proper construction, as he expressly excludes the real estate devised in trust in the fifth subdivision from this trust. When the intention of the testator is made clear this exception is quite consistent with the claim that he here provides for the payment of those charges on all his real estate, including that embraced within the express trust of the fifth subdivision, where, as already pointed out, he made no provision for meeting these disbursements. In turning to clause (c) of the sixth subdivision we have a confirmation of this construction. That clause provides as follows: "After the payment of the taxes, assessments, repairs, interest on mortgages, insurance and all charges against my estate, I direct," etc. It will be noted that the testator speaks of interest on mortgages, using the plural. It is in evidence that at that time there were but two mortgages on the real estate embraced within the fifth and sixth subdivisions of the will, to wit, twenty-five thousand dollars on 49 West Eighty-eighth street and fifteen thousand dollars on 131 East Fifteenth street. The use of the plural clearly shows that he had in mind both of these mortgages when drawing clause (c) of subdivision sixth.

The reading of the fifth and sixth subdivisions of the will together is essential in order to sustain the intention of the testator as disclosed by his testamentary scheme. As the testator under the fifth subdivision allowed his widow the free use of the real estate and the personal property employed in and about it, or, if leased, the rent when collected, or the income of the proceeds of the sale of real and personal property without incumbrance or charge of any kind, she could not enjoy that degree of financial independence which it is evident he intended to confer upon her, unless resort is had to the sixth subdivision. When the fifth and sixth subdivisions are read together, the intention of the testator is clear and all the provisions of the will are harmonized.

The position of the respondents is that the fifth subdivision of the will must be read by itself; that the widow, by the terms of the express trust, became a mere life tenant; that under the general rule the life tenant must pay the taxes, interest, insurance, ordinary repairs, etc. The existence of this general rule is undoubted, but assuming that the widow became a life tenant under the fifth subdivision, the provisions of the will as already commented upon release her from the burden ordinarily imposed by the rule.

The testator's intention in drawing the fifth and sixth subdivisions may be thus summed up: I do not put 49 West Eighty-eighth street and personal property connected with it in the trust of the residuary estate, as it forms no part of that estate, until my widow dies or marries. During the term indicated she either uses the property, rent free, or receives the rent as collected, or on sale of property the income of the proceeds when re-invested. In order to secure all this to my widow I provide for the payment of mortgage interest and all charges on 49 West Eighty-eighth street out of the income of the residuary estate.

The exception was well taken by the trustees to the ninth conclusion of law in the report of the referee, whereby they were charged $7,213.80, by reason of the payment of taxes, interest on mortgage, insurance, repairs, etc., on 49 West Eighty-eighth street, amounting to $6,407.78; and also for the balance consisting of $759.55, being made up of interest paid as a penalty on taxes, the payment of which had been deferred by reason of the alleged improper use by the trustees of the income of the residuary estate in paying charges, etc., on 49 West Eighty-eighth street, thereby leaving no funds with which to pay taxes.

As the trustees are the only appellants from the decree settling the account below, and as the amount of $7,213.80, with which the trustees have been improperly charged seems to be unchallenged by any of the parties in interest, there is, apparently, no necessity for re-stating the account.

The order of the Appellate Division should, therefore, be reversed and the proceedings remitted to the Surrogate's Court to conform the trustees' account and the decree entered thereon to the views expressed herein, with costs to the appellant trustees in all the courts to be paid out of the estate.

CULLEN, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, HAIGHT, VANN, JJ. (and GRAY and WERNER, JJ., in result), concur.

Order reversed, etc.


Summaries of

Matter of King

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Jan 23, 1906
76 N.E. 584 (N.Y. 1906)
Case details for

Matter of King

Case Details

Full title:In the Matter of the Accounting of VINCENT C. KING, JR., et al., as…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Jan 23, 1906

Citations

76 N.E. 584 (N.Y. 1906)
76 N.E. 584