
    Julius Almstaedt, Respondent, v. Isabella Bendick and Others, Respondents; Hulda Bendick and Others, Infants, Appellants.
    
      A trust to.continué for the lines of four children of the testatrix is mid.
    
    
      A will by which a testatrix gives all her real and personal property to her executors in trust for her four children, and directs “the principal of my entire estate, both real and personal, to be kept intact, whole and unsold, by my said executors in trust until the decease of my last surviving child, then to be .without any unnecessary delay divided equally among their children, share and share" alike,” unlawfully suspends the power of alienation beyond the period of two lives in being.
    Appeal by the defendants, Huida Bendick and others, by Lewis S. Goebel, their guardian ad litem, from an interlocutory judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Richmond on the 23d day of August, 1899, upon the decision of the court rendered after a trial at the Kings County Special Term.
    
      George M. S. Sohutz, for the appellants.
    
      William M. Mullen, for the plaintiff, respondent.
   Goodrich, P. J.:

The action is for partition of real estate which the ■ Complaint alleges was owned by the plaintiff and certain of the defendants, as tenants in common, having descended to them as heirs at law of one Rachael Almstaedt. Rachael left her last will containing the following clauses :

“ Y. I give and bequeath unto my executors in trust for my four children, namely, Isaac, Isabella Bendick, Johanna Bach and Julius, to and for the uses, interests and purposes herein described and declared, all the real and personal property owned by me, and which I die seized of, consisting in part of money in bank arid real estate situate on Richmond turnpike and Tompkins avenue, in the town of Castleton aforesaid, and more particularly described in a certain deed made and. executed by Isaac Almstaedt to Rachel Almstaedt, dated May 20, 1886, and recorded in the office of the clerk of" the county of Richmond, in liber 166 of Deeds, page 296, May 25, 1886.”
“'VIII. The principal of my entire estate, both real and personal, to be kept intact, whole and unsold, by my said executors in trust until the decease of my last surviving child, then to be without any unnecessary delay divided equally among their children, share and share alike; and for that purpose I hereby authorize and empower my executors to sell at public auction or private sale my real estate to the highest bidder, as they may deem best for the interest of my heirs, and to give proper and legal deeds for the same.”

The plaintiff contends, that these clauses are void, as being in contravention of the statute forbidding the suspension of the power of alienation beyond the period of two lives in being. We are clearly of opinion that this contention is.correct. In Colton v. Fox (67 N. Y. 348) a will with clauses strikingly like these quoted was under ■consideration. It is necessary only to refer to that case as authority for holding, as we do, that the .testatrix attempted to suspend the power of alienation of the property and to vest the title thereto in her executors, in trust, during the lives of her four children, and until the death of the survivor of them, and that her will, to that “extent, is nugatory. This being the case, and there being no residuary clause, it follows that the testatrix died intestate as to the premises in question, and that they descended to her four children as tenants in common.

The interlocutory judgment should be affirmed, without costs of this appeal.

All concurred..

Interlocutory judgment affirmed, without costs of this appeal.  