Opinion
12-01-1904
Mr. Booraem, for complainant. Alan H. Strong, for defendants.
Suit by Elizabeth N. Roll against Melford N. Roll and others. Heard on bill, answer, replication, and proofs. Decree for complainant.
The bill is filed by the widow of Albert Roll, deceased, against his executors, and also against the devisees and legatees under his will, other than the complainant, for the payment of a legacy bequeathed to complainant, and to compel the sale of the real estate for the payment of the same. The facts material to the decision of the question are as follows:
Albert Roll, the testator, by the first clause of his will, dated January 13, 1894, directed as follows: "It is my will and I do so order that my just debts and funeral expenses be duly paid and satisfied as soon as conveniently may be after my decease." The second clause provides directly for his widow, in these terms: "I give and bequeath unto my beloved wife Elizabeth Roll in lieu of dower, if she should so elect, the house that I use as a residence at the time of my decease, and the sum of fifty dollars per month, to be paid on the first day of each month (or at such times as my wife Elizabeth Roll, may agree to with my executors) during her natural life." By the third clause, the testator's household furniture, etc., goods of every description, were bequeathed to his wife, and the remaining clauses were as follows:
"4. It is my will and I do so order, and invest my executrix and executors, or the survivors of them, with full power and lawful authority to sell any personal property or real estate excepting that given to my wife that they may think best, and the monies remainingin their hands shall be invested by them to the best advantage for my estate.
"5. It is my will and I do so order that whenever the income from my estate shall exceed one hundred and fifty dollars per month, all over the fifty dollars per month given to my wife and other expenses to my estate may be equally divided between my three children Milford N. Roll, Cecelia A. Bergen, and Edith S. Bergen, or their heirs.
"6. It is my will and I so order that at the death of my said wife all my personal and real estate be equally divided between my three children, Milford N. Roll, Cecelia A. Bergen wife of A. H. Bergen, and Edith S. Bergen wife of C. J. Bergen share and share alike."
Testator's wife, his son, and his two sons-in-law were appointed executrix and executors. The testator died on March 28, 1898, leaving personal estate valued at about $900, the homestead property, and considerable other real estate; the improved property, other than the homestead, consisting of a dwelling house and printing office, now occupied by his son, one of the executors, and three small houses and lots at Mechanicsville. The balance of testator's real estate was unimproved property, part of which is land at Melrose, in or near the city of South Amboy, laid out in building lots. In some of this land testator had only an undivided one-half interest. At the time of the testator's death the gross rental value of the houses other than the homestead was about $300 per year, as appears from the executor's accounts. The debts of the testator, outstanding at the time of his death, and his funeral expenses, amounted to more than the personal estate. Since the testator's death the executors have sold the small houses, and have also sold some unimproved lots. The complainant alleges that the unimproved real estate unsold has increased largely in value since testator's death, and that the executors neglect and refuse to sell the real estate, or enough of it to enable complainant to receive from the proceeds invested the $50 per month. The executors deny any increase in value, and estimate the entire value of the real estate unsold, exclusive of the homestead, at about $6,000, and deny that they have been negligent in selling. No proofs upon this question of values, or breach of duty in failing to sell, has been offered; it being agreed by the parties at the hearing that the question first to be determined was the right of the complainant to require payment from the corpus of the estate, which right the executors deny. Up to the time of rendering their accounts in the Middlesex orphans' court (May 6, 1902), the executors had received from the proceeds of sale of lands sold since the testator's death about $2,800, and from rents and interest about $1,250. Prom the entire estate which has come to their hands, they have paid $2,728.72 for debts at testator's death, and charges against the estate claimed to be payable out of principal in their hands, and the sum of $931.38 for charges against the estate since testator's death, and for interest, taxes, insurance, and repairs, which they claim to be chargeable against the gross income. The balance remaining in their hands from all sources was about $1,250, from which the expenses of administration are to be deducted. Complainant has elected to take under the will, and occupies the homestead, but nothing has been paid to her by the executors on account of the money legacy. The executors claim that, the entire balance now in their hands represents the principal of the real estate under the will, and that none of it is applicable to the payment of the legacy. Complainant, on the other hand, claims that the legacy is chargeable upon the corpus of the estate, and, on a deficiency in income, is payable out of the corpus, and that, if necessary, the remaining real estate, other than the homestead, should be sold to pay the legacy.
Mr. Booraem, for complainant.
Alan H. Strong, for defendants.
EMERY, V. C. (after stating facts and issues). The general direction of testator, in the first clause of his will, that his debts be paid, charges them upon his real estate (Shreve v. Shreve, 17 N. J. Eq. 487, 494; Suydam v. Voorhees, 58 N. J. Eq. 157, 165, 43 Atl. 4 (Vice Chancellor Reed, 1899); the personal estate being, however, the primary fund. The devise and bequest to the widow being in lieu of dower, and there being no other provision for her support, she becomes, upon the acceptance of the estate, in accordance with the testator's wishes, a purchaser for value. Wiggins v. Wiggins (N. J. Ch.) 56 Atl. 148 (Vice Chancellor Pitney, 1903), cases cited page 151; Borden v. Jenks (1886) 140 Mass. 562, 564, 5 N. E. 623, 54 Am. Rep, 507. Her status as such purchaser for value is favored by the courts against legatees and devisees who claim as mere volunteers. Thus the legacy in lieu of dower is not subject to abatement with other general legacies. Dey v. Dey's Adm'r, 19 N. J. Eq. 137, 141 (Zabriskie, Ch., 1868); 2 Wms. Executors (R. & T. Ed.) 669, 670, note 9. As to the priority of the legacy in lieu of dower over the devises of real estate, the question is purely a question of the intention of the testator, to be gathered from the will itself; reading this, when difficulties or ambiguities arise from the will itself, in connection with the situation of the testator's property and the persons taking. In determining the intention from the will itself, some authorities hold that, in view of the valuable consideration paid by the widow by relinquishing her dower, she is a quasi creditor, and, in the absence of any indication of a contrary intention, a legacy directed to be paid in lieu of dower is payable out of all testator's estate, as his debts would be, and marshaled as in case of debts payable. Borden v. Jenks, 140Mass. 567, 5 N. E. 623, 54 Am. Rep. 507. At the original hearing of the cause, this was my view of the rule of construction to be applied; and, if the question is an open one in this state, it is the rule which I would apply in the case. On the application for rehearing, it is claimed by defendants' counsel that an early decision in our own courts—Paxson v. Potts' Adm'r, 3 N. J. Eq. 313 (Chancellor Vroom, 1835)—applied the opposite rule of construction, and held that a legacy coupled with a devise of land in lieu of dower was not chargeable on lands devised to beneficiaries, in the absence of an intention to charge declared expressly or by necessary implication, and so clearly as not to admit of a reasonable doubt. Id. 320, 321. This is undoubtedly the rule still generally applied as against heirs at law, who must be clearly disinherited, and as between legatees or devisees who are all merely volunteers; but the question now is whether this is the rule to be applied to the present case, where the legacy to the widow in lieu of dower must be taken as also for her support. The payment is to be made monthly, and she does not appear to have any other source of income. In Paxson v. Potts (pages 324, 325), the equity to charge the legacy because given in lieu of dower seems to have been considered as depending on the relative value of the dower right and the legacy and devise in lieu thereof; and, in the absence of any proof on this subject, the chancellor considered that the supposed equity would be based on mere conjecture, and he declined to charge the lands. The question of the intention of the testator to provide for the support of his widow, appearing by positive directions for payment made by the will, and the situation of his property showing that the legacy was given for support, was not involved in the case. It seems clear that relative values of the legacy or devise and of the dower cannot in such cases be made the sole test of the existence of the equity to charge lands, for these provisions in lieu of dower are manifestly not made by way of bargaining with the widow for a sale of her rights. The testator, in disposing of his estate and in discharging the moral obligation to provide for the support of the widow, has the right to fix in her favor his own price as the equivalent for the release of her dower. Parnum v. Bascom, 122 Mass. 282, 289 (1877); Borden v. Jenks, 140 Mass. 566, 567, 5 N. E. 623, 54 Am. Rep. 507. Chancellor Vroom, in Van Winkle v. Van Houten, 3 N. J. Eq. 172, 190 (1835), had just previously considered the question whether a legacy given to a child for support was charged upon lands, and held that this circumstance distinguished the legacy from a purely voluntary legacy, and was entitled to great weight in determining that the legacy was charged. The cases referred to by him charged the lands, in the absence of express words or necessary implication, other than that arising from the condition of the estate and the situation of the persons taking. It is difficult, I think, to distinguish, upon principle, between the effect of a legacy for support to a child and to a widow; ana I do not think that the learned chancellor, in deciding this point in Paxson v. Potts' Adm'r, 3 N. J. Eq. 313, intended in any way to question the principles laid down by him in the previous decision. In Snyder v. Warbasse, 11 N. J. Eq. 463 (1857), the legacy was in lieu of dower; and Chancellor Williamson gave that fact consideration in connection with the other facts in the case, and held the legacy chargeable. In the later case (Corwine v. Corwine, 24 N. J. Eq. 579), the Court of Errors and Appeals considered Paxson v. Potts' Adm'r, 3 N. J. Eq. 313, but not on the point now in issue. Taking the question, therefore, to be still an open one, my view is that, in the absence of a contrary intention appearing, a legacy directed to be paid in lieu of dower, and given for the support of the widow, should, as between the widow and the other devisees, be deemed to be payable out of the entire estate, and be charged upon the lands.
It is admitted by the executors and devisees that the legacy is chargeable on the income of the lands and personal estate, and the main question is whether the legacy is payable out of the corpus, or only out of the income of real estate. In my view, taking the will itself in connection with the situation of testator's property and the persons taking, it sufficiently appears that the intention of the testator was that the legacy to the wife was to be paid out of the corpus of the estate, real as well as personal, and not merely from the income of the real estate. The direction for payment of $50 per month to the widow, by the second clause of the will, was absolute, and the only matter left open for agreement between the executors and the widow was a change in the time of payment fixed by the testator. This general direction for payment did not limit the source of payment to the personal estate, and the testator must be taken to have known that his personal estate would be exhausted by the payment of debts. That the payment thus generally directed was intended to be made from other sources than the personal estate appears from the subsequent clauses of the will. Having directed the payment of debts, funeral expenses, and this legacy to the wife, the testator in the fourth clause orders and authorizes the executors to sell both personal and real estate, and directs that the moneys remaining in their hands shall be invested. The "moneys remaining" means, I take it, remaining from the proceeds of sale after deducting something. This deduction can be only of payments previously directed, which were three in number, viz., the debts, funeral expenses, and the payments to the wife. Counsel for the executors contend that the clause means remaining after only debts and funeral expensespaid, but this limitation to two of three payments previously directed does not seem to be justified. So far as relates to the proceeds of sale of real estate, the legacy is by this clause made payable out of the corpus; and, if this be true, then this mingling of the proceeds of sale of real and personal estate directed and authorized to be sold, and the disposition of the proceeds as a common fund, are strong indications that the legacies as well as the debts are chargeable on the corpus of the entire estate. The power to sell the lands to create this common fund is also evidence of an intention to charge the corpus of the estate with the payment of debts and legacies which the executors are directed to pay. The fourth clause, read with the second clause, would seem, therefore, to make the legacy chargeable on, and payable out of, the corpus.
The fifth clause is relied on as limiting the effect of the previous clauses so as to confine the charge to the income only. This clause provides that, whenever the income exceeds $150 a month, all over $50 to the wife and other expenses are to be divided among testator's children. It is insisted that by this fifth clause the testator indicates that only the income of the real estate is chargeable with the annuity; but this clause, I think, was not intended to limit the effect of the previous general directions for payment and the previous charges upon the proceeds of sale of the entire estate, but was intended solely to provide for the possible contingency of an income more than sufficient to pay the legacy and other current expenses of the estate. This is the plain effect of the direct language of this clause, and it is only indirectly and by inference that any gift at all to the widow out of the income is made by this clause. The clause, that is, proceeds on the assumption that the widow, by the previous direction of the will, in the second clause, is entitled to receive payment from the income, either gross or net, and was not inserted for the purpose of securing the income to her as an additional source of payment, which the testator supposed she did not have under the second clause. In view of his debts and the rental value of his property at the time of his death, the testator could not have been taken to intend that the monthly payment should at all events be made from net income only.
The last clause of the will gives all the real and personal estate together to testator's three children—one son, who is the executor, and two daughters, the wives of two other executors. A residuary clause devising real and personal property together is now considered as indicating an intention to charge general legacies upon the real estate. Corwine v. Corwine (Err. & App. 1874) 24 N. J. Eq. 579, qualifying on this point the views expressed in Paxson v. Potts' Adm'r. This clause is not in terms a residuary clause, but it is a blending of the real and personal estate into a common fund for the purpose of division by the executors between the devisees after the death of the widow, and after the payments previously directed have been made. The devise of the property is made to three devisees, one of whom is one of the executors who are directed to make the payment, and the other two devisees are the wives of the executors directed to make the payment. Where the executors and devisees are the same persons, land devised immediately to them is considered to be charged with the legacies directed to be paid, and this whether there was a deficiency of personal estate or not. The reason is that in such case the meaning of the devise is that the devisee holds on condition that he do pay. Wyckoff v. Wyckoff, 48 N. J. Eq. 113, 119, 21 Atl. 287 (Vice Chancellor Pitney, 1891), affirmed on appeal, for reason stated, 49 N. J. Eq. 344, 25 Atl. 963. And in Van Winkle v. Van Houten, 3 N. J. Eq. 172 (1834), Chancellor Vroom considered that, where the wives of the executors who were directed to pay the legacy were the devisees, the circumstance was entitled to weight on the question whether the land was charged with the legacies.
The conclusion I reach is that the monthly payment to the wife in lieu of dower was to be paid in any event, and that it was chargeable upon the corpus of the estate. It was payable out of the proceeds of the real and personal estate sold, after payment of the debts and funeral expenses; and, so far as these proceeds have been taken for other purposes, the executors must account to complainant. The annuity will be declared to be chargeable on the corpus of the estate, but as the executors, under the will, are invested with a discretion as to the time of sale, no sale should be directed unless it appear that the executors are, as alleged in the bill, improperly delaying the sales of real estate, or that a sale is necessary for the payment of the annuity.
The cause will stand over for further hearing upon the questions of the amount in the executors' hands applicable to the annuity, and of directions for sale.