
    William Minot, as Executor, etc., of George R. Minot, Deceased, Plaintiff, v. Francis Minot, an Infant, by George Waddington, his Guardian ad Litem, Appellant; Harriet J. Minot and Others, Respondents.
    
      Will — what provision for an after horn child does not leave it- “ unprovided for by any settlement and neither provided for, nor in any way mentioned in such will”
    
    Where a testator provides, by his will, “ I give the reversion of all said residue and remainder hereinbefore given in trust for the benefit of my wife for life, to those persons who, if my death occurred at the time of her death, would then be my heirs at law by blood,” and leaves his wife and a son born after the execution of the will surviving him, the child acquires a vested estate in remainder under the will at his father’s death (subject to be divested in the event of the son’s death before his mother), and the case is not one of a child “ unprovided for by any settlement and neither provided for, nor in any way mentioned in such will,” specified in 3 Revised Statutes, 65, section 49.
    Appeal by the defendant, Francis Minot, an infant, by George Waddington, his guardian ad Utem, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the defendants Harriet J. Minot and others, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 1st day of March, 1897, upon the decision of the court rendered after a trial at the New York Special Term.
    
      George Waddington, for the appellant.
    
      George G. Holt, for the respondents.
   Rumsey, J.:

On the 23d day of March, 1891, George R. Minot, a resident of the State of Massachusetts, and the owner of property in that State and in the State of New York as well, executed his will. At that time Mr. Minot was married but had no children. The appellant, Francis Minot, his only son, was horn in. November, 1891. George R. Minot, the father, died on the 24th day of January, 1894, never having revoked his will or changed it in any way. The plaintiff, who was the executor and trustee named in the will, duly qualified and assumed the duties of his office. He brings this action for the construction of the will, and asks for the judgment of the court upon certain questions. All these questions, however, involve but one inquiry, and that is whether the appellant, Francis Minot, who was born after the making of his father’s will, was provided for in the will, so. thát he takes under it, or whether he succeeds to the same portion of his father’s real and personal estate as he would have received had his father died intestate. It was adjudged at the Special- Term that the appellant was provided for by the will, and the appeal is from that judgment.

The statute upon which the rights of the appellant depend • is as follows: “Whenever a testator shall■ have a child horn after the making of a last will, either in the lifetime or after the death of such testator, and shall die leaving such child, so afterborn, unprovided for by any settlement, and neither provided for, nor in any way mentioned in such will, every such child shall succeed to the same portion of such parent’s real and personal estate, as would have descended or been distributed to such child, if such parent had died intestate, and shall be entitled to recover the same portion from the devisees and legatees, in proportion to and out of the parts devised and bequeathed to them by such will.” (2 R. S. 65, § 49.) It will be noticed that, this statute does not direct what provision for a child born after the making of a will is sufficient to require him to take under the will. The statute simply requires that if the child is unprovided for by a settlement he must either be provided for in the will or in some way mentioned therein. It is fair to assume from these expressions of the statute that it is not necessary that any particular provision shall be made, but it is sufficient if it can be inferred from the terms of the will that the testator had in mind the possibility of the birth of such child and made a provision in the will to which the child when born would be entitled. Such provision need not be made otit of property in any particular locality nor out of any particular kind of property, nor is it necessary that the provision should be such as would be thought by the courts to be adequate. All that is necessary is such a provision as would enable the courts to say that it was intended by the testator that that particular child, should take under the will, and should not take a distributive share as though the parent had died intestate. If the provision is made by the giving of property in another State than this, it is; sufficient,, although, .the will should -be so construed that the child would not take property situated in the State of New Y ork.

It is alleged in the complaint-in this action and made to appear by the record, that the executor of George It. Minot’s will filed his petition in the Supreme Court of the State of Massachusetts on the 31st of May, 1894, asking for instructions as to whether Francis Minot, the son of the testator, was entitled to anything under the will; and that the wife of the testator and the son, Francis Minot, were made parties to the proceeding and appeared therein. Such steps were taken in that proceeding that it was finally decided by the court that the provisions of the will of George It. Minot had reference to such children as might be born after the making of the will, and that Francis Minot, the only child of the testator, was provided for in the will. We have, therefore, this state of facts: Considerable property of the testator is situated in the State of Massachusetts where he resided at the time of his death. It has been adjudged by the Supreme Court of that State with reference to property situated therein, that the will contained a provision for the son of the testator. The appellant, therefore, was provided for by the will of his father, and he comes into this court with that fact appearing in' the case. As he was provided for in the will, he necessarily takes under it and does not take a distributive share, as though his father had died intestate.

But all the court do not concur in this view of the case, and it becomes necessary, therefore, to examine the will of George It. Minot with a view to ascertain whether, upon a fair construction of it in accordance with the statutes of the State of New York, it can be said that his son is not unprovided for therein.

The will, in the first place, after some bequests to the wife of the testator, gives all the rest and residue of his estate to William Minot, in trust, to receive the income and pay it to his wife, Agnes Minot, during her life. Then follows the clause of the will which it is necessary to construe in this action, and which is as follows : “ I give the reversion of all said residue and remainder hereinbefore given in trust, for the benefit of my wife for life, to those persons who, if my death occurred at the time of her death, would then be my heirs at law by blood.” It is agreed upon' all hands that the necessary construction of this devise is to give to the son of Francis Minot a remainder of some sort in the estate of his father. It is also agreed that the statute requiring that the son should be provided for' by the will is not complied with if' the son acquires under the will a mere contingent remainder, which may or may not take effect during his life, but is practically a possibility and nothing morebut that to- constitute a sufficient provision it is necessary that, he should have an estate vested in him which arises at the time. when the will takes effect. It is necessary, therefore, to consider ■ and decide whether under this will the estate given to Francis Minot was a vested or a contingent remainder, because it is agreed that if the estate is a vested remainder it Constitutes a sufficient provision for the son, so that he shall take under the will, and is not entitled to a distributive share of his father’s estate as though the father had died intestate. This question must be decided purely -upon a consideration of the statutes of the State of New York, and we are not aided by the decision of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts .in this case (In re Minot, 164 Mass. 38), except, so far, perhaps, as that case contains an adjudication that tile clause of the will in question includes within its terms the son of the testator, which would be sufficiently evident.

A remainder is said to he vested when, there is a person in being who would have an immediate right to the possession of the lands upon the ceasing of the intermediate or precedent estate. (1 R. S. 123, § 13.) The inquiry is simply whether this gift to Francis Minot constituted a vested remainder under the provisions of that statute. It is not necessary to consider in this connection the nature or definition of a vested remainder at common law before the statute was enacted, because the statute was enacted for the express purpose of fixing the nature of a vested remainder with a view to avoid many of the distinctions and refinements which had been engrafted upon this branch of the common law.' All that we need to do is to inquire for the pr'ecise'*meaning of‘this definition and -apply it to the .terms of the will-in question. That meaning has been several times the subject of investigation and decision by the courts of this State, and there has been a substantial unanimity in all -the cases, so that, in our judgment, what .constitutes a vested remainder under this definition has been established by the great weight- of authority. The leading case on that subject is Moore v. Littel (41 N. Y. 66). In that case it appeared that a grant had been made to one John Jackson for and during his natural life, and after his death to his heirs and assigns forever, and the question presented was whether the children of John Jackson took under that grant an alienable estate during the life of their father. It was claimed on the part of the persons who insisted that their estate was not alienable that they took simply a contingent and not a vested remainder; and, on the other hand, it was claimed that their estate under the grant constituted a vested remainder, and for that reason was an alienable estate. The opinion of a majority of the court was delivered by Judge Woodruff, who examined fully the definition of a vested remainder contained in that section of the Bevised Statutes quoted above, and concluded that the estate given to the heirs of John Jackson hy the grant constituted in them a vested remainder. Five of the judges concurred in this opinion, three dissenting upon that point and insisting that the remainder was contingent. The case has been the subject of considerable examination since it was decided, and it has been construed as holding that the estate created by this grant constituted a vested and not a contingent remainder. (House v. Jackson, 50 N. Y. 161.) It has been said that the rule laid down in the case of Moore v. Littel is a rule of property. ■ (Chinn v. Keith, 4 T. & C. 126.) As such it should he followed and has been followed- in this State, and it is not necessary in our judgment to discuss it further. It may he said, however, that the same construction which was given to the statute in the case of Moore v. Littel had been adopted a long time before in the case of Coster v. Lorillard (14 Wend. 302), although the decision of Chief Justice Savage in that case stated that the definition of the statute was not a controlling feature of the case. It remains, therefore, simply to see whether, under the definition as interpreted by the courts of this State, the devise to Francis Minot gave him a vested remainder in the land in the State of New York.

There was no uncertainty as to the fact of the determination of the precedent estate upon which .the remainder to Francis Minot was founded. That estate would determine at the death of Mrs. Minot, an event certain to take place at some time. The persons who were entitled in the remainder after the determination of the life estate in Mrs. Minot were those who, as expressed by the will, would be the heirs at law of the testator by blood, if his death occurred at the time of her death. While this expression- is a little complicated, its meaning, in view of all the facts, is not at all in doubt. George B. Minot died in .January, 1894, and his will, then took effect. At the same time those persons who were his heirs at law by blood were then ascertained. The right of each one of those persons to take the estate, under the clause of the will in question, then depended upon the condition of affairs at the death of Mrs. Minot, tenant for life, because her death not only put an end to the precedent estate, but it designated the person who would then be the heir at law of George B. Minot by blood, so. that the identical occurrence which determined the precedent estate would also fix the person who would succeed to the fee when that occurrence took place. The statute provides that if there is a person in being who would have an immediate right to the possession of the lands upon the Ceasing of the precedent estate, then the remainder is vested. As is said by Judge Woodruff : “It is not ‘ a - person who now has a present fixed right of future possession or enjoyment/ but a person who would have an immediate right if the precedent estate were now to cease.” It is said that “ if you can point to a human being and say as to him that man or that woman, by virtue of a grant of a remainder, would have an immediate right to the possession of certain lands if the precedent estate of another therein should now cease/ then the statute says he or she has a vested remainder.” There can bé no doubt that, if Mrs. Agnes Minot had died on the very day that her husband died, her son would have had an immediate right to the possession of the estate granted by the clause of the will in question; and so, to-day, he is the person who answers the description of one who would have an immediate right to that estate if the precedent estate should determine at this instant. Argument could not make plainer the proposition that, within that definition of the statute as so construed, he has a vested remainder in the estate, of his father after the life estate to his mother. It must be remembered that the law favors vested estates, and no remainder will be construed to be contingent which- may, consistently with the intention of the testator, be deemed to be vested. (4 Kent, 203.) In every case the question is whether, upon a fair construction of the instrument creating the estate, that estate can be brought within the definition of a vested remainder as contained in the statute. If it can, then the policy of the courts in all cases is to so construe it.

We have been referred to but one case which in any way can be said to contain a different construction of the definition of a vested remainder than that adopted by the majority of the court in Moore v. Littel. That case is Hennessy v. Patterson (85 N. Y. 91). The remainder in question there was created in these words: Should my said daughter Margaret die without leaving any issue, then the said property shall be left to my nephew, John Foley.” It was held by the court that the remainder in question in that case was a contingent and not a vested remainder. This estate is precisely within the definition of a contingent remainder, as given by the Revised Statutes, which is whenever the person to whom, or the event upon which the future estate is limited to take effect, remains uncertain. (1 R. S. 123, § 13:) It was certain, of course, in that case that the daughter Margaret would die, but it was uncertain whether she would die without issue, and, so long as she lived, that uncertainty continued. The event then upon which the remainder to Foley was limited to take effect was and must have been, in a legal sense, uncertain ; and while Foley was undoubtedly the person who would have an immediate right to the possession of the land upon the ceasing of the precedent estate, yet the certainty of his designation did not do away with the uncertainty of the event upon which alone his estate would vest, and, therefore, the remainder to him was clearly contingent. This is. referred to by Judge Finch, at page 101 of the reported case, in which he says: “ The contingency named by the testator was, should she die without issue living at her death. That was the uncertainty to which he referred and for which he meant to provide, and the word ‘ then ’ plainly refers to the event; to the happening of that contingency; and not to the time at which Foley’s right should commence.” Judge Finch, in that opinion, does not suggest that the case of. Moore v. Littel was not properly decided. Considerable stress has been laid upon this point because we find that it has been suggested by a learned text writer that the case of Moore v. Littel is not decisive of the law'in this State, but has been practically repudiated and disapproved. (Chaplin on Susp. of Power of Alienation, § 52.) In this we do not concur. The case is authority and has been accepted as such by the courts and profession, and it should not now be questioned. Within the definition laid down in that case, and for the reasons above stated,, we conclude that the estate to Francis Minot, by the will of his father, gave to him a vested remainder. It is quite true. that this remainder was subject to be divested by his death before the death -of his mother, but none the less during his life is it vested in him, and the fact that it may be divested does not deprive him of thé interest which is given to him by his father by the plain terms of the bequest.

For these reasons we think that upon a construction of the clause in question, under the laws of the State, of New York, Francis Minot was provided for in the will, and that the judgment of the court to that effect was correct and should be affirmed, with costs to the respondents to be paid out of the estate. ■

Parker, J., concurred ; Williams, J., concurred in affirmance; Patterson,- J., concurred in result; Van Brunt, P. J., concurred upon last ground.

Judgment affirmed, with costs to the respondents to be paid out of the estate.  