The decedent, by his last will and testament, gave, devised and bequeathed his entire residuary estate to trustees in trust "to pay over to, or to apply to the maintenance, comfort and support of my wife Louise Bruce Hills during her life, the remaining net rents and income therefrom." After the death of his said wife the decedent bequeathed $50,000 to the Century Association and the remainder of the trust fund, after all other legacies are paid in full, to the Anna Jacques Hospital of Newburyport, Massachusetts. The testator further directed in his will that "the provisions herein made for my wife are in lieu of her dower and of all other claims on my estate."
At the testator's death his wife was almost eighty-four years old. She has been declared incompetent by the Supreme Court of the State of New York. Her committee has petitioned the Surrogate to construe the will and to determine, among other things, (a) The extent, if any, to which the bequest to Anna Jacques Hospital is invalid. (b) The rights of Louise Bruce Hills in her husband's estate. The Surrogate has made a decree determining that "the devise and bequest to the Anna Jacques Hospital is in violation of section 17, Decedent Estate Law, and is valid only to the extent of one-half of said decedent's gross estate less his debts, as may be fixed on the accounting," and that the decedent "died intestate as to all property in excess of said sum of one-half of his gross estate less his debts and the noncharitable cash bequests, which amount to $64,000," and that all of such excess passes to testator's widow as intestate property subject to her intervening life estate and to an annuity provided by the decedent in his will for his wife's sister. The decree also provides that the *Page 353 trustees shall pay to the committee of the wife so much of the income of the trust fund as may not be applied by them to her maintenance, comfort and support.
The trustees have appealed from those parts of the decree which adjudge that the devise and bequest to the Anna Jacques Hospital is valid only to the extent of one-half of the testator's estate after the payment of his debts and that the excess passes to the widow as intestate property. The partial invalidity of the bequest cannot be disputed. The question remains whether the committee of the wife has shown a right to contest the invalidity of the charitable bequest. It claims for the wife the benefit of the trust created for her, and the Surrogate has sustained that claim. The trustees urge that since the wife, if competent, might have elected to accept the provision which the testator made for her and not to avail herself of the statutory right to contest the validity of the bequest to the charitable corporation, the committee had no power to make the opposite choice in her behalf.
Where an incompetent has a personal privilege to elect between alternative and inconsistent rights or claims, it has been held that the privilege does not pass to the committee of the property of the incompetent. The committee's function is confined to the management of the property of the incompetent. So where a widow is given by a will an election to demand dower or to accept the provisions of the will in her favor, the committee has no power to exercise such election in her behalf. (Camardella v.Schwartz, 126 App. Div. 334.) There assertion of the right to dower requires the abandonment or destruction of an alternative right. A court of equity, through its general jurisdiction over fiduciaries and its function of guardianship of incompetents, may, in proper case, direct the committee to act in behalf of the incompetent in accordance with what the court finds would, in all probability, have been the choice of *Page 354 the incompetent if he had been of sound mind. (Matter of Lord,227 N.Y. 145; Matter of Flagler, 248 N.Y. 415.) Where the incompetent has a personal privilege between demand for dower or acceptance of a bequest in lieu of dower, the Supreme Court may act in place of the incompetent in exercising the choice. (Matter of Brown, 212 App. Div. 677; affd., 240 N.Y. 646.) Here the Supreme Court has not acted. The committee has contested the validity of the residuary bequest without prior application to that court.
The right to contest the validity of a bequest to certain corporations of more than one-half of the estate of a testator is confined to the class for whose protection the statutory limitation of testamentary power was imposed. (Decedent Estate Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 13], § 17.) We have said that the persons who have rights to contest may "waive or retain [them] at their election." (Amherst College v. Ritch, 151 N.Y. 282, 335.) That is true wherever a right is given for the protection of particular individuals rather than the general public. Then choice of waiver or assertion of the right rests with the individual upon whom the right has been conferred by law or by contract.
It may be that power to waive has not passed to the committee of the incompetent wife. Waiver of a right results in its destruction, and the committee's duty is to protect, not to diminish or destroy, the rights and property of the incompetent. The right remains and may be asserted where there has been no waiver of the right.
A committee, in the exercise of its duty to protect, has undoubtedly the power to assert the rights of the incompetent. That may call for exercise of discretion in regard to choice of remedy, or even in regard to whether assertion of the right will benefit the incompetent's property. The exercise of discretion in the performance of its duties is not denied to a committee. Choice whether to assert or not to assert a right thus ordinarily comes *Page 355 within the scope of a committee's functions and powers; though a waiver or abandonment of a right of the incompetent may be outside of that scope and may require a direction from the Supreme Court.
The statute does not require any election in order to contest the validity of the charitable bequest. Election is the choice between two alternative and inconsistent rights. "The party, who is to take has a choice; but he cannot enjoy the benefits of both." (2 Story's Eq. Juris. [10th ed.] § 1075 et seq. Cf.Matter of Blumenthal, 126 Misc. Rep. 603.) The choice between assertion of the right or its waiver is not conferred by the statute. It is inherent in all property rights and personal causes of action, and a committee has ordinarily the power to assert such rights.
Testamentary powers may be limited by law. A testator cannot deprive any person of the benefit of those limitations. Within those limitations a testator may dispose of his property as he sees fit, and he may use his testamentary power to induce a person to abandon rights conferred by law. He may provide that a person accepting his bounty shall abandon other rights to his estate. The testator here could not make a valid gift to a charitable corporation of more than one-half of his estate if his wife contested the bequest, nor could he deprive his wife of her dower in his real property. He could, however, make other provision for his wife on condition that she abandon her right of dower or her right to contest the validity of the charitable bequest. Then the wife could not enjoy both; nor could her committee. There must in such case be election between acceptance of the conditional testamentary provision and assertion of invalidity in the will.
The committee here has made no such choice. It asserts that no such choice is required by the terms of the will, though the will provides that "the provisions herein made for my wife are in lieu of her dower and of *Page 356 all other claims on my estate." If the words "claims on my estate" include a claim that the wife is entitled to a portion of the testator's estate as intestate property, then the wife must elect between the benefit of the testamentary provision and her statutory right. (Chamberlain v. Chamberlain, 43 N.Y. 424;Matter of Benson, 96 N.Y. 499.)
The language of the will should not be construed beyond its plain meaning. The juxtaposition of the words "dower" and "all other claims" shows that the testator had in mind not only claimsagainst the estate but claims to the estate. So we have construed similar language in Matter of Benson (supra). Moreover, a testator who has made provision of income for an aged wife beyond the amount which she can probably use, and desired that the principal should go to charity after her death, would reasonably impose such condition. It follows that the wife may not assert the invalidity of the charitable bequest until there has been an election to reject the testamentary provision in her favor, and this election must be made by the Supreme Court.
The orders should be reversed and the proceedings remitted to the Surrogate's Court to proceed in accordance with this opinion, with costs in all courts to both parties payable out of the estate.
POUND, Ch. J., CRANE, O'BRIEN, HUBBS and CROUCH, JJ., concur.
Ordered accordingly. *Page 357