
    Matter of Zwickert, Infants.
    (Surrogate's Court—New York County,
    October, 1893.)
    Since the passage of chapter 175 of the Laws of 1893, amending the Revised Statutes relating to the rights of parents to dispose of the custody, etc., of their children, a testamentary guardian can only be appointed under the will of a surviving parent. No reference is made in the act to the rights of such guardians to dispose of their estates. Held, notwithstanding such omission, the words “ custody and tuition,” employed in the statute, include guardianship of the estate as well as of the person.
    Testator died since the passage of the act, chapter 175 of the Laws of 1898, leaving a will in which he nominated his wife guardian of the persons and estates of his two children,.
    
      The widow applied for letters as testamentary guardian of the estates of said minors, claiming that the act applied only to guardians of their persons, and that the law remained unaffected as regards to the guardianship of their estates.
    
      Ullo, Ruebsamen & Cochran, for the petitioner.
   Ransom, S.

Chapter 175 of the Laws of 1893 amends section 1, title 3, chapter 8, part 2 of the Revised Statutes by substituting, with another provision not now necessary to consider, the following: “ Upon the death of either father or mother, the surviving parent, whether of full age or a minor, of a child likely to be born or of any living child under the age of twenty-one years and unmarried, may by deed or last will, duly executed, dispose of the custody and tuition of such child during its minority, or for any less time, to any person or persons.” A testator who died since the passage of the chapter mentioned has attempted by his last .will and testament, which has been duly admitted to probate, to appoint their mother the guardian of the estate of his children. His authority to make the appointment is insisted upon because of the omission of any reference in the provision quoted to the rights of disposition of the minors’ estate. Such reference is wholly unnecessary, as the language custody and tuition,” used by the statute, includes guardianship of the estate as well as of the person, and the provisions referred to were unquestionably intended to embrace both. §§ 2, 3, 20, 21, title 3, chap. 8, part 2, R. S.; Corrigan v. Kiernan, 1 Bradf. 209, 210 ; Hagerty v. Hagerty, 9 Hun, 177, 178.

Application must be denied.  