132 Ind. 163 | Ind. | 1892
— Peter Short died testate. By his last will he bequeathed to a granddaughter $200, to a grandson $300, to another granddaughter $300, to another grandson $200, and to his daughter Theresa $1. Following these bequests of stipulated amounts the will contains a residuary clause giving and bequeathing to his son, Peter Short, Jr., and his daughter, Mary Ann Galluly, “ all the balance or residue of his estate, real and personal, wherever situate, in equal parts, share and share alike.” Further provision is made that should the legatees to whom the legacies were given die before arriving at full .age, the sums so bequeathed to them should go to the residuary legatees.
The appellee was duly appointed administrator of the estate with the will annexed, and files his petition in this case for the sale of the real estate. The appellant was made a party, it being alleged in the petition that it claimed some interest in the real estate.
The facts stated in the petition show the amount of the bequests, the costs of the administration, the amount of the 'indebtedness owing by the estate, showing that the debts and costs of administration amount to $402.57, legacies $1,001, making a total of $1,403.57, and that the personal estate amounted to $1,092.20, leaving a deficiency of ,$311.37 in the personal estate to pay legacies, debts and costs of administration.
There was a trial and finding for the appellee, and an order for the sale of the real estate.
The question presented is, there being sufficient personal estate to pay the debts and costs of administration, but not sufficient to pay the $1,001 bequests, can the real estate be sold to make assets with which to pay the same ?
It is a well settled doctrine that a will must be so interpreted as to give effect to the intention of the testator. It is clearly apparent from the will in this case that it was the intention of the testator to dispose of his entire estate, both real and personal, in a like manner, treating all as a com-
In 3 Jarman on Wills (5th Am. Ed., p. 426), it is said : “It is also clear that where legacies are given and then all of the residue of the real and personal estate the legacies are charged on the realty.”
It is further contended on the part of the appellant that even if the legacies are a charge on the real estate there is no authority for the administrator with the will annexed to make sale of the real estate for the payment of the legacies ; there being sufficient assets arising from the sale of personal property and costs of administration, that the administrator has no authority to sell to realize a fund to pay off the legacies.
In Gould v. Steyer, 75 Ind. 50, it is held that “ The proper person to pay a legacy is the executor, or the administrator with the will annexed. For a failure to pay it he may be sued on his bond.”
This undoubtedly enunciates the proper theory. The testator provides that certain named amounts shall be paid out of his estate to certain named persons. The purpose of the appointment of an executor or administrator is to make set
Section 2332, R. S. 1881, provides for the sale of the real estate for the payment of the liabilities of the estate, when the personal estate shall be insufficient, and, by section 2336, it is made the duty of the executor and administrator to file a petition for the sale of the real estate to make assets for the payment of the liabilities, as soon as he shall discover the personal estate is insufficient; and section 2378 provides for the payment of legacies, and the order in which they shall be paid.
In the case of Davidson v. Coon, 125 Ind. 497, the will gave to one son of the testator $800, and to another $300, to be made out of the testator’s estate, and then provided that when said amounts shall have been paid, the remainder of his whole estate should be divided among his heirs, and it was held that the whole estate was charged with the payment of the legacies, and that the heirs, taking by the residuary clause in the will, acquired their interest subject to the legacies charged upon the land, and that the legatees had a right to establish against the land, the equitable lien created by the will. There is no distinction in principle between that case and the one at bar, notwithstanding the use of the words to be made out of the testator’s estate, for it is evident by the terms of the will that the testator intended to charge his whole estate with the payment of the legacies, as there is no specific devise of any real estate to the residuary legatees or devisees. They are given the remainder of his real and personal estate. By the language of the will, in the residuary clause, it is, we think, clearly apparent that
The doctrine we have announced is not in conflict with the general rule, that the personal property supplies the fund out of which legacies are to be paid, and when a specific devise of land is made, and a general legacy is bequeathed, without charging the legacy upon the land devised, that it is incumbent on the legatee, or person enforcing the lien, to show that the testator had no personal estate at the time the will was executed, out of which the legacy could be paid, for in this case the testator classed his estate, real and personal, as a whole, first bequeathing certain legacies, and then disposing of the remainder of his estate, real and personal, to certain persons by a residuary clause in the will. By the terms of the will, the legacies were made a charge on the real estate, creating an equitable lien thereon, and were such a liability as authorized the sale of the real estate for their payment, the persons named in the residuary clause taking such portion of the estate, real and personal, only as remained after the payment of the legacies previously' bequeathed.
We think there is no error in the record for which the judgment should be reversed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.