The plaintiff, under the will of her husband, who died in February, 1892, was entitled during her life or until her remarriage to the income of a trust fund consisting of one-third of his estate. Under the will as construed by a decree of the court in an action brought to determine the validity and effect of its provisions, the remainder, upon the death or remarriage of the plaintiff, was indefeasibly vested in the children of the testator and herself. The defendant is the trustee under said will. On February 11th, 1903, the remaindermen, all of whom were of age, conveyed their title and interest in the trust fund to the plaintiff who then duly released to herself as entitled to the remainder in said trust fund all her right to the income thereof. Thereafter the plaintiff demanded of the defendant a surrender of the principal of said fund, which demand was refused by the trustee on the ground that the trust had not been terminated and that a release from the plaintiff would not protect it from liability. The trustee, however, was willing to submit the question to the court and to relinquish the corpus of the estate if the court should decide the trust had terminated. On this *Page 52 state of facts the Appellate Division held that the trust had not been terminated and that the plaintiff was not entitled to the fund.
The claim of the plaintiff is based on section 3 of the Personal Property Law (Chap. 417, Laws of 1897) as that section stood at the time of her demand. The section after prescribing that the right of a beneficiary to the income of a trust of personal property cannot be transferred by assignment or otherwise, provides: "Whenever a beneficiary in a trust for the receipt of the income of personal property is entitled to a remainder in the whole or a part of the principal fund so held in trust, subject to his beneficial estate for a life or lives, or a shorter term, he may release his interest in such income, and thereupon the estate of the trustee shall cease in that part of such principal fund to which such beneficiary has become entitled in remainder, and such trust estate merges in such remainder." The learned Appellate Division denied the plaintiff's application for a transfer of the trust fund to herself on three grounds.First, that if the provision of the Personal Property Law quoted applied to trusts created before the enactment of that statute or its predecessor, the law of 1893 (Chap. 452) would be unconstitutional. Second, that the statute should be construed as prospective only, and, therefore, not to apply to the case of the plaintiff, in whose favor the trust had been created in 1892, and, third, that the plaintiff did not own the life estate absolutely, but only conditionally upon her remaining unmarried. In my opinion none of these grounds is tenable.
If it is to be regarded as an original question, I am entirely clear that the statute is constitutional as applied to trusts created before its enactment; but I deem the proposition settled by authority both in this court and in the Supreme Court of the United States. The constitutionality of the statute can be assailed only on two grounds, that it impairs the obligation of a contract and that it deprives some person of property without due process of law. Most of the decisions to which I allude were made in litigations arising out of the *Page 53 sale, under acts of the legislature of this state, of certain lands devised by Mary Clark to trustees in trust to receive the rents and profits and pay the same to the testator's grandchild during his life, and upon his death to convey the land to his issue in fee, and, in default of issue, then to another grandson of the testator. The lands being vacant and returning little or no income, the legislature discharged the trustees and authorized the sale of the lands by the equitable life tenant under certain restrictions and subject to approval by the Court of Chancery. After the death of the life tenant his issue sought to recover the lands sold under these statutes. A number of actions were brought both in the courts of this state and in the Federal courts. Many objections to the validity of the sales were taken for alleged failure to comply with the requirements of the act of the legislature, none of which are material here. But the objection that the act was unconstitutional, both as impairing the obligation of a contract and as invading rights of property, was distinctly made and overruled by the Supreme Court inClarke v. Van Surlay (15 Wend. 436) and by the Court of Errors in Cochran v. Van Surlay (20 Wend. 365). In the Court of Errors the chancellor, writing for affirmance of the Supreme Court, said: "If the laws are unconstitutional, it must be either because they impair the validity of a contract, and thus conflict with the Constitution of the United States, or because they are inconsistent with the State Constitution in taking the property of infants and applying it to purposes not previously authorized by law, and which could not benefit them. There is not any contract which has been violated in this case by the legislature, within the meaning of that clause of the Constitution of the United States which prohibits the state legislatures from passing any laws impairing the obligation of contracts." Senator VERPLANCK, while voting for reversal of the judgment below on the ground that the statute had not been complied with, said: "I concur with the Supreme Court in supporting the constitutionality of the acts under which the sale, now impeached, was made. * * * But a will absolute in its terms, and *Page 54 unconditional, cannot, by any stretch of terms within the limits of legal or of ordinary language, be termed a contract; still less can an estate absolutely vested under a decree, or if contingent, yet contingent only on the causalities of life, not on any condition to be performed, be considered as an executed contract." In Towle v. Forney (14 N.Y. 423) this court again upheld the validity of the sales made under the statutes referred to. The litigation in the Federal courts has a different history. The case first came before the Supreme Court of the United States in Williamson v. Berry (2 How. [U.S.] 495) on a certificate of division of opinion between the judges holding the Circuit Court. The judges of the Circuit Court agreed that the statutes were constitutional, so that question was not presented to the Supreme Court, which court held the sales bad for failure to comply with the requirements of the statute. The case again went to the Supreme Court, (reported under the title of Suydam v.Williamson, 24 How. [U.S.] 427) which retracted its former ruling and held that on a question of title it should follow the law as declared by the state courts. So far the question of the constitutionality of the statute had not been presented to the Supreme Court. The case, however, was again taken to that court and is reported in 6 Wallace, page 723. There the objection was distinctly taken and overruled that the discharge of the trustees by the legislature of New York contravened the provision of the Federal Constitution prohibiting the enactment of any law impairing the obligation of a contract.
Though the will of the plaintiff's husband did not constitute a contract within the provisions of the Federal Constitution, no rights of property acquired thereunder could be divested by an act of the legislature. Such a statute would be a deprivation of property without due process of law and violate both the Federal Constitution and our own. Every beneficial interest in the trust fund is now vested in the plaintiff. The remainder, upon her death or remarriage, in the hands of her children, was, at all times, under our law, alienable, devisable and descendible, and those children have conveyed to her. As the law stood *Page 55 at the time of the creation of the trust she could not alienate or anticipate her income and it was not liable to creditors save for any excess beyond what was necessary for her support. These provisions of law were for the benefit and protection of the equitable life tenant solely. As she wishes to be relieved from these restrictions and the legislature grants her that privilege, who else has ground for complaint? In Leggett v. Hunter (19 N.Y. 445) it was held (460): "It was certainly competent for the legislature to relieve the daughters from the prohibition contained in the 63rd section of the statute (1 R.S. 730), that no person beneficially interested in a trust for the receipt of the rents and profits of lands, can assign or in any manner dispose of such interest. The acts already referred to provide for the conveyance of the rights of the daughters, and obviate any objection under the section just cited. So far then they are constitutional and valid." In Cochran v. Van Surlay (supra) it was said by the chancellor: "By the first section of the Act of March, 1815, the equitable life estate of T.B. Clark in the premises was converted into a legal estate, which was perfectly proper, as its conversion from an equitable to a legal estate could not affect the rights or interests of any other person." The learned court below following Oviatt v. Hopkins (20 App. Div. 168) placed its decision on the ground that the statute operated to deprive the trustee of his property and, therefore, was unconstitutional. It is doubtless true that oftentimes a trustee may assert his title to property with the same force and effect as an individual might, that is to say, when he represents beneficial interests which it is his duty to protect. The case before us is of an entirely different character. He is not asserting a right to protect those for whose benefit the trust was created, but in hostility to them. The question, therefore, is, has a trustee any such personal, not representative, right to the mere possession of the trust fund as to constitute property within the provisions of the State and Federal Constitutions? Of that possession he cannot avail himself in any respect for his own advantage. His sole right is *Page 56 to his commissions if he does his work properly. The right to such commissions in this case, however, is solely statutory, no provision having been made therefor in the will (Matter ofSchell, 53 N.Y. 263), and the statute may at any time be amended or repealed. Moreover, there is no difficulty in obviating any question of this kind by allowing the trustee commissions when he turns over the property. The tenure by a trustee of his office clearly shows that he has no property right therein. He may be removed at any time by a court of equity for causes entirely insufficient to justify depriving one of his property. "It may be stated generally that if the conduct or circumstances of trustees is such as to render it very inconvenient, improper or inexpedient for them to continue in the trust the court will exercise its discretion and relieve them and appoint others in their place, as where the trustees * * * so disagreed among themselves that they could not act, or where co-trustees refused to act with one of their number." (Perry on Trusts, 276.) InMatter of Morgan (63 Barb. 621) and in Deraismes v. Dunham (22 Hun, 86) the court removed a trustee because of the hostility existing between him and his co-trustees without entering into the merits of the controversy between the parties. Under our law when the position of trustee becomes vacant for any reason the trust devolves upon the Supreme Court. It seems to me, in view of these principles, idle to argue that a trustee has personally any property right in the trust fund. He is in reality the mere custodian of the fund for the purpose of executing the trust, though in dealing with third parties the law vests the legal title in him. Finally it may be said that at common law such trusts as the one before us, the income under that law being alienable except in the case of a trust for a married woman, could be terminated by the decree of a court of equity on the consent of all parties in interest where those interests were vested and indefeasible (Perry on Trusts, § 920), and that it is the provision of our Revised Statutes rendering the income inalienable that has changed the law in this state. (Lent v.Howard, 89 N.Y. 169, 172.) *Page 57 It was casually remarked by this court in Cuthbert v. Chauvet (136 N.Y. 326, 328) that the assent of the trustee was essential to the exercise by a court of equity of jurisdiction to terminate a trust. The statement does not seem justified by the authorities cited. (2 Perry on Trusts, § 920; Bowditch v. Andrew, 8 Allen, 341.) On the contrary, it seems settled in Massachusetts that a trust will not be continued for the benefit of the trustee (Slater v. Hurlbut, 146 Mass. 308); but that the beneficiaries may terminate the trust. (See, also, Whall v.Converse, 146 Mass. 345; Inches v. Hill, 106 Mass. 575;Smith v. Harrington, 4 Allen, 566.) There has, in the later cases, been a disposition to refuse to terminate a trust where there is a provision against anticipation or alienation by thecestui que trust, but this limitation, not the assent of the trustee, is the controlling factor affecting the action of the courts. The rule is the same in England, that except where the income is inalienable the trustee can be compelled to convey. (Lewin on Trusts, XXVI, p. 674 et seq.) It must also be borne in mind that this court in the Chauvet case was discussing the power of a court of equity to decree a termination of a trust without legislative authority, not the power of the legislature to provide for the termination of trusts, an entirely different question. As to this branch of the case I concur in the discussion of my brother GRAY.
In an opinion delivered on this appeal by Judge BARTLETT a ground is taken much in advance of that of the learned Appellate Division. It is asserted that even with the consent of both trustee and beneficiaries the legislature cannot authorize the abrogation of the trust. It is argued that the legislature having at the time of the testator's decease provided by law for the creation of trusts, authority subsequently given by the legislature to the trustee to unite with the beneficiaries in disposing of the trust estate would be taking property without due process of law. In answer to this it may be first suggested that the retention of the property by the trustee would be wholly inoperative to prevent the evils anticipated by the learned judge, the dissipation by an improvident or *Page 58 extravagant child of his support, if such child were allowed to anticipate or sell the income of the trust fund. Therefore, it is incumbent to go further and to establish that it was beyond the power of the legislature as to existing trusts to repeal the law which forbade the alienation or disposition of the income of a beneficiary, and I understand this to be the position my brother BARTLETT assumes. It does not seem to me possible that any person can have a property right in a limitation that another shall not anticipate or alienate his income when he can in no event succeed to what the other may leave unexpended. But waiving this and accepting what seems to me the entirely untenable assumption that the testator's will operated as a contract either with his widow or with the trustee, or with both, that the widow should not alienate or anticipate her income, the obligations of which contract the legislature could not impair, the question remains, who has succeeded to those contract rights? Certainly when the testator died he took with him from this world nothing of property or property rights. All his property, including the rights acquired under the supposed contract, at once passed either to his widow and next of kin, and heirs at law, or to his legatees and devisees under his will, who are the very persons upon whom the burden of fulfilling the obligations of that contract rested. To speak accurately, as the will became operative only on the testator's death, the right to enforce the trust never vested in him, but accrued first and solely to the beneficiaries. A man may convey property to a corporation on condition that the property shall be used only as a church, and the corporation may covenant to that effect, but after his death his heir at law or devisee may release the condition and covenant and the property be used for a theatre. The argument of Judge BARTLETT'S opinion seems necessarily to lead to the proposition that there can be a property right in the dead beyond the power of all the living interested therein to dispose of though with the authority of the legislature. I should be the last to deny that a wise government will properly respect to some extent the wishes of preceding generations *Page 59 even in regard to the present management of estates that they have left. That is a matter solely of public policy to be determined by the legislature with reference to how far compliance with those wishes will affect favorably or unfavorably the welfare of the state. It is a subject with which the courts have no concern. When, however, a statute is assailed as unconstitutional in taking property without due process of law, there must be pointed out some person at present existing or that may hereafter exist whose rights are invaded. A conveys land to B in trust to apply the rents and profits to his (A's) wife C during life, and on her death to his only child D in fee. All the parties are adults and all interests are indefeasibly vested. Thereafter the legislature enacts that all the parties named, A, B, C and D, may unite in selling the property and in terminating the trust. There is no inhibition in the Constitution against the destruction of trusts or against setting aside wills. There is, however, a provision that no person shall be deprived of property without due process of law and, therefore, if the effect of the abrogation of the trust is to deprive any one of a property right the statute would be unconstitutional and void. But injuria non fit volenti and it is entirely plain that where every one in interest consents, no one is deprived of any property. If that is not so, who is it whose rights are invaded? Name the person. Now I shall assume for the discussion only that the right of A to have the trust enforced is absolute, and that the legislature could not authorize its termination without his consent. A dies leaving the other parties surviving. This right of A being property (if not property, it is not within the constitutional provision under discussion) on his death must have devolved on somebody with as plenary power as A possessed in his lifetime to assent or to refuse assent to the changed legislation. If not, then there has remained in A, though dead, some property right. Under our notions as to the devolution of property on the death of the owner it is impossible that there should be vested in the dead any property right within the constitutional safeguards, State or Federal. There are certain rights, such as a cause *Page 60 of action for personal injuries, that do not pass on the death of the holder to his representatives or successors, but in all such cases the right itself ceases and ends. This subject received some attention in the famous Dartmouth College Case (4 Wheaton, 518), where Chief Justice MARSHALL said that the question upon whom the contract rights acquired by the founders of the college devolved had given the court more trouble than all the questions in that case argued by counsel. It was held that those rights passed to the corporation and it was decided, not that the original charter granted by the crown to Doctor Wheelock and his associates could not be altered, but that it could not be altered without the consent of the corporation.
The next position of the learned court below is that the Personal Property Law should not be construed retrospectively so as to include the case of a trust executed before its enactment. To bring the case of the plaintiff within the section it is not necessary to construe it retrospectively. The section does not deal with the creation of trusts, but with the existing tenure of property. The provision is "whenever a beneficiary in a trust for the receipt of the income of personal property is entitled to a remainder in the whole or a part of the principal fund so held in trust," etc., he may by a certain method abrogate the trust. The plaintiff at the time of the enactment of the statute was entitled to the income of property held in trust and thereafter became entitled to the remainder in the corpus and thereupon executed the release prescribed by the statute to terminate the trust. She sought to terminate the trust only after the statute had authorized her so to do, and in giving effect to that action in her case I see nothing of a retrospective character. Nor is there any argument to be drawn from the change of phraseology between the present law and that of 1893 which preceded it, in the omission of the words "heretofore and hereafter created." The new law is not a mere re-enactment of the old law with those words omitted, but the whole verbiage of the old law, which was cumbrous and prolix in the extreme, has been *Page 61 abandoned and a single short provision substituted for it. The construction given to the present law by the learned court below would lead to this incongruous result. From the enactment of the law of 1893 to its repeal, by the Personal Property Law, unquestionably, trusts created during that period were subject to be abrogated by a life tenant owning the remainder. On what principle, if the policy of the legislature authorizing the abrogation of such trusts was to be continued at all, would trusts created since the law of 1893 be omitted from the operation of the new statute? If the statute impaired no vested right and it was the interest of the equitable life tenant that a loan was effected by its provisions, how is it at all material at what time the trust was created?
Lastly, the learned court below thought the plaintiff did not fall within the statute because her right to the income was conditional on her remaining unmarried, and referred to the case of Matter of United States Trust Company (175 N.Y. 304). In that case the beneficiary was not entitled either to the whole or any definite part of the income of the trust fund, but only such portion thereof as might be necessary for his support, which would vary from time to time. In the present case the plaintiff is entitled to the whole of the income as long as she remains unmarried, and the condition against remarriage is a limitation solely on the time of her enjoyment of it. The statute in terms applies to the case of an income "for life or lives or a shorter term;" as the plaintiff must marry during her lifetime, if at all, a bequest dun viduitate is necessarily either for life or for a shorter term.
It was said below: "The intention of the testator is that she shall cease to be entitled to the income on her remarriage. That intention, lawful, enforcible and subject to no limitation at the time the will was made, cannot be destroyed. If effect were given to the statute and the fund were transferred to the widow she might marry the next day and thus defeat the plain testamentary intention of her husband." I think that the effect of a statute in a particular case should not control its construction, though doubtless the result of a particular construction *Page 62 in a whole class of cases is justly deemed a potent factor in determining the proper interpretation of the law. I doubt, however, whether the decision of the Appellate Division in this case does conduce to effectuate the desire of the testator, by no means an uncommon one, that his widow should remain unmarried. Under that decision the plaintiff cannot now take the principal of the property, but the day on which she marries the trust terminates and under the assignment from her children to her she is entitled to the whole fund. The title of the present case on appeal would seem to indicate that this pecuniary temptation has as yet proved insufficient to induce the plaintiff to thrust aside the memory of her deceased husband.
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and judgment awarded for the plaintiff for the delivery of the fund less the commissions thereon due the defendant.
O'BRIEN, J., concurs with GRAY, J.; HAIGHT and WERNER, JJ., concur with GRAY, J., in result on last two grounds; VANN, J., concurs with BARTLETT, J.; CULLEN, Ch. J., reads dissenting opinion.
Judgment affirmed.