The residuary estate of this testator was given by his will to his executors in trust to pay to his widow out of the rents, income and profits thereof the sum of $300 annually during her life or "widowhood, and during the same period to distribute the rents, income and profits in excess of that sum as follows : one third part to his (the testator’s sister Mary, or in case she should die prior to the death or remarriage of his widow, then to her children ; another third part to his sister Eliza, with a similar substitution of her children for herself in a contingency analogous .to that just specified, the remaining one third part “ to the children of my deceased sister Ann Davis, equally.”
On September 26th, 1883, a decree was entered in this court whereby the account of the acting trustee of this estate was settled and determined, and whereby it -was adjudged and decreed that he had theretofore received from his predecessor in office, and then held in his hands, the sum of $2,465.71, belonging to the children of Ann Davis, aforesaid, and that there were aliso due to said children certain other sums by
The decree aforesaid directed the payment to Margaret D. Brewster, one of the daughters of the said Ann Davis, deceased, of one third of the said sum of $2,465.71 and interest, and the retention by said trustee of the remaining two thirds thereof until the further order of the Surrogate. On June 20th, 1885, John Caspar Ross filed a petition in this court, wherein he alleged among other things, that Annie M. Davis, another of the children of said Ann Davis, deceased, had become his wife in the year 1862, and had died intestate in March, 1883, and that in June, 1885, he, the said petitioner, had obtained letters of administration upon her estate from the Surrogate of this county. He asked that, in view of the foregoing premises, the trustee of this estate be directed to pay him one third part of the said sum of $2,465.71, with interest, etc., being the same amount theretofore ordered to be paid Margaret D. Brewster,' and being parcel of the surplus income as aforesaid that had accrued during the lifetime and widowhood of the wife of the decedent, who is still living and has never remarried.
This application and the answer thereto were sub-' mitted to a referee whose report in favor of the petitioner I am now asked to confirm. Certain of the findings of the referee involve the determination that, by the terms of his will, the testator contemplated that, in the event of the death of any child of his deceased sister Ann during the continuance of the trust
I doubt whether such an intention should be attributed to the testator, unless it is very clearly expressed in his will, or unless some rule of law or principle of construction applicable to the situation forbids any other interpretation of that instrument.
His executors are directed upon the death or remarriage of his widow, to convert the entire estate (which seems to consist of real property exclusively) into money, and, after the defrayment of certain expenses thereout, to divide the proceeds into three equal parts, and to make distribution as follows : “ one third part to the children and descendants then surviving of my sister Mary, another third part to the children and descendants then surviving of my sister Eliza, and the other third part to the children and descendants then surviving of my deceased sister Annie.”
From this disposition of the remainder it may be claimed, not unreasonably, that no children of Ann, save those who shall be living at the time the estate is directed to be converted, will be entitled to share in the proceeds of the conversion, and that that proposition is sound, irrespective of the question whether the children of Ann are given merely a contingent interest in such proceeds, or whether each of them is given a vested interest therein, defeasible by reason
The cases cited in behalf of the petitioner, upholding the claim of the representative or heir of a deceased cestui que trust of income bequeathed by a will, to income that had accrued subsequently to the death of his decedent, were cases where such decedent was declared to have had°an indefeasible vested interest in the principal or corpus of the trust estate (see Lyons v. Mahan, 1 Dem., 180; affi’d, 98 N. Y., 372; Rauchfuss v. Rauchfuss, 2 Dem., 271). And such, too, was the situation in Thompson v. Conway (23 Hun, 621), and in Embury v. Sheldon (68 N. Y., 227).
In opposition to the claim that all the children of the testator’s sister Ann, who were living at his death, took a vested interest in the surplus income that should accrue before the termination of the trust estate, it may be urged with some force that such surplus income is given to the three children of Ann as a class or as joint tenants, so that the share of any one of them who might die during the subsistence of the trust would go at once to the survivors.
I shall not now declare what in my view is the true construction of the provision here in controversy. I have made the above suggestions merely to indicate that the claim of this petitioner is of doubtful validity,
One of the children of Ann Davis has voluntarily appeared in this proceeding by her attorney and makes no opposition to the petitioner’s application. The other, a son, is not before the court. He should be cited to attend the proceeding, and when he shall have appeared, or, after due service of citation, shall have failed to appear, his rights and the rights of all other persons interested herein will be adjudicated.