This appeal involves the construction of the 5th clause of the will of John A. Haggerty, which created trusts in the residuary estate for the benefit of his six nieces therein mentioned. The 5th clause of the will reads as follows:
“Fifth. I give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real as well as personal to my executors hereinafter mentioned and to the survivor of them, In Trust, and with power to sell and convert the same into money, and for that purpose to execute good and sufficient conveyances of the same, to vest the title in the purchasers, and upon the Further Trust and with power to divide the net proceeds of my residuary estate into six equal shares and to invest each share separately in such securities as they, and the survivor of them shall deem prudent, and to receive the income of each share and apply the same as follows, of one of each said shares to the use for life of my niece Anna Knee-land Haggerty, daughter of my brother Ogden, of another of said shares to the use for life of my niece Clemence Haggerty daughter of my said brother Ogden, of another to the use for life of my niece Maria Haggerty Draper, daughter of my sister Frances S. Draper, of another to the use for life of my niece Fanny Draper daughter of my said sister Frances S., • of another to the use for life of my niece Jessie Draper daughter of my sister Elizabeth Anna Draper, and of the other to the use for life of my niece Maria Haggerty Dehon daughter of my sister Maria Louise Dehon.
“ In the event that either of my said nieces shall not survive me, but shall leave issue surviving me, then the principal of the share designed for her use shall go to such issue absolutely, if she shall leave no issue surviving me then such share shall *144form a part of my said residuary estate and the said number of shares into which my said residuary estate shall be divided shall be reduced accordingly.
“ And upon the further trust, upon the death of any one of my said nieces who shall survive me, leaving issue her surviving to pay and deliver the share which had been set apart for her use, and any addition thereto that may have been made as hereinafter provided, to such her issue, if more than one issue then share and share alike, if she shall leave no issue surviving her then the said share so set apart for her use shall be divided and added in equal parts to the remaining shares and such addition to each share shall at the death of the takers thereof respectively without issue surviving be divided equally among the then survivors of said nieces, the issues then living of any of said nieces then dead to take the share the parent would have taken if then living, and as to the share of the last survivor of said nieces, in case she shall die leaving no issue her surviving, but issue of any or either of the other deceased nieces shall survive her, then I give the last mentioned share, with any addition that may have been made thereto, to such surviving issue of such other nieces (the issue to represent the parent and to take the same share the parent would have taken if then living), if no issue of either of such other nieces shall so survive then I give said last mentioned share, with said additions to such person or persons as such last surviving nieces shall by her last will direct and appoint, and in default of such will I give the same to my next of kin under the laws of the State of New York as if I had died intestate.”
All of the nieces survived the testator. The first niece to die was Anna Kneeland Haggerty, who died without issue in March, 1907. The second niece to die was Maria Haggerty Draper, who died March 16, 1911, without issue. The third to die was Clemence Haggerty, who after marriage was known as Clemence H. Crafts. She died in February, 1912, leaving four daughters, who together with their issue are defendants in the action. The fourth niece, Fannie Draper, died on January 10, 1914, without issue, leaving surviving two of the original six nieces, the defendants Maria H. D. Polk and Jessie Draper Bowne.
*145The will in its entirety gives evidence of intention to treat the nieces on the basis of absolute equality, without any preference either for those leaving issue or dying without issue. For example, the 4th clause, which bequeaths an annuity to, the testator’s friend Collison, provides, upon the death of Collison, as follows: “ I give the principal of said investments to such of my six nieces hereinafter mentioned as shall survive the said Christian Collison and to the issue, if any, then living, of any of my said nieces then dead, share and share alike, the issue to take only the share the parent would have taken if then living.” Further, in the 5th clause creating the trusts in question, the following provision is made in the event of any of the nieces not surviving the testator: “ In the event that either of my said nieces shall not survive me, but shall leave issue surviving me, then the principal of the share designed for her use shall go to such issue absolutely, if she shall leave no issue surviving me then such share shall form a part of my said residuary estate and the said number of shares into which my said residuary estate shall be divided shall be reduced accordingly.” This clause was inoperative because all the nieces survived, but this reduction in the number of the shares makes it clear that it was intended, so far as the interests of the nieces were concerned, that the estate should be divided into an equal number of shares, one for each niece and her issue.
The questions presented at Special Term affected, first, the sums which were added to the principal of the share of Fannie Draper by reason of the death of her sister and cousin without issue; and, second, the disposition of the original principal of her share in view of the fact that she was predeceased by Mrs. Crafts, who left surviving four children. As to the first question, there was scarcely occasion for dispute, and the Special Term correctly held, as all agree, that the additions should be divided, one-third to the fund held in trust for Jessie D. Bowne, one-third to the fund in trust for Maria Polk, and the remaining one-third divided per capita among the surviving issue of Mrs. Crafts. The appeal is from the decision of the Special Term holding that as to the principal of the original share held in trust for Fannie Draper, *146one-half should be added to the trust for Jessie D. Bowne, and one-half to the trust for Maria Polk, excluding from any present participation in such share the surviving issue of Mrs. Crafts. As we have seen, the will provided that in the contingency of a niece dying without issue surviving “ the said share so set apart for her use shall be divided and added in equal parts to the remaining shares.” The question then is, what were the “ remaining shares ” when Fannie Draper died without issue? Respondents contend that “ remaining shares ” means shares of the surviving nieces. The will is not so written, and the draftsman was evidently a skilled lawyer. If such had been the intention it would have been very obvious and simple to have written “ added in equal parts to the shares of the surviving nieces.” The reason why it was not so written was that it would have tended to create gross inequality, whereas the scheme of the will is absolute equality, the number of equal shares of the residuary estate being determined by the number of the testator’s nieces, children of nieces taking a vested remainder in their mother’s share. For example, if Mrs. Crafts had died first, the share set apart for her and her children would have been approximately $56,000. Then if four of the nieces died childless (three of them have) and the sixth to die left issue surviving, the share of the sixth, to be enjoyed by her children, would have had added to it the entire original principal of the fifth niece, and would also have shared in additions from the shares of three other nieces, whereas the children of Mrs. Crafts would have received nothing whatever on the death of the second niece and would have merely shared in the additions to the shares of the third, fourth and fifth nieces. A calculation shows that in such event, if original principal were to be shared only by surviving nieces the share of the testator’s estate inherited by the children of the last survivor would be more than double the share of the children of the first survivor. No such result was intended.
When a niece died without issue, the number of the “ remaining shares ” was reduced by one. Such share was completely distributed and extinguished. Not so, however, when a niece died leaving issue, as in the case of Mrs. Crafts. The estate continued to have as many shares as before. The chil*147dren not only took their mother’s original share but became entitled to a division of additions to the share of any niece who subsequently died. For the purpose of such distribution of additions to shares, the will expressly provides that the issue of a deceased niece shall take the share the parent would have taken if then living. No reason is apparent why the testator, in a will whose scheme is equality, should provide that the children of a deceased niece should share with surviving nieces in distribution of additions and yet intend that, for the purpose of distributing original principal, their interest in the estate should not be reckoned as one of the “ remaining shares.”
The will has been construed as though the vesting in a child of- its mother’s share which, on the mother’s death, became the absolute property of the child, extinguished the share. But a share paid over in part is just as much a share as is a share continuing in the hands of trustees. Convincing evidence that the testator did not consider that any such contingency extinguished a share is found in his expressly keeping the share alive and intact to receive distribution of additions. No legal reason compelled this, and if the scheme of the will had been merely to swell the shares of the surviving nieces, to the exclusion of children of deceased nieces, it seems reasonable to assume that he would have given surviving nieces all of the additions to the share of a deceased niece as well as all of the original principal of the share.
Much is made of the express disposition of the additions so as to include children of a deceased niece, as contrasted with the simple provision for adding the principal to the “ remaining shares,” without specifying that this was meant to include children. The obvious reason for making an express provision for the distributing of additions after two lives was to make the trust valid and not leave it to be saved by construction, as in Vanderpoel v. Loew (112 N. Y. 167). Why, in the case of principal, “ the remaining shares ” were not particularized so as to include specifically children of a deceased niece can only be conjectured. The most likely reason is that the meaning was sufficiently obvious. If it meant only “ surviving nieces,” it is much more difficult to determine why the draftsman did not say so, especially *148in view of the inequalities that such a construction would tend to bring about.
It seems to us that the plain and natural construction of clause 5 is that upon the birth of children of a niece, the remainder of the original share held in trust for the mother of such children vested in them, and such vesting became absolute when they survived the mother; further, that there also vested in them an interest, subject only to the intervening right of beneficial enjoyment by their own parent, in the shares of the other nieces.
It follows that the part of the judgment below which provided for the disposition of the original share held in trust for Fannie Draper should be modified so as to provide that there should be distributed among the issue of Mrs. Crafts one-third thereof, and that another third should be paid over to the plaintiff, as trustee of the trust created for the benefit of Maria H. Dehon Polk and remaindermen, and the other third thereof paid over to the defendant Grosvenor S. Hubbard, as substituted trustee of the trust created for the benefit of Jessie Draper Bowne and remaindermen. Costs payable out of the estate to all parties appearing and filing briefs herein.
Scott and Davis, JJ., concurred; Laughlin, J., and Clarke, P. J., dissented.