133 Wis. 325 | Wis. | 1907
A vigorous attack is made on the decision that the doctrine of equitable conversion applies to the will, .giving all of the testator’s property the character of personalty. The decision is manifestly right if the testator expressly or by necessary implication directed his estate to be administered and distributed in the form of money. Dodge v. Williams, 46 Wis. 70, 1 N. W. 92, 50 N. W. 1103; Ford v. Ford, 70 Wis. 19, 33 N. W. 188; Harrington v. Pier, 105 Wis. 485, 82 N. W. 345; Becker v. Chester, 115 Wis. 90, 91 N. W. 87, 650. The trial court probably came to the conclusion that such was the case; moreover, that the will could not be executed without treating the property as personalty, therefore that such express direction is reinforced by an implied one, and with that we quite agree.
The words “put on interest,” “the interest of my property shall be paid annually,” “the principal shall go,” etc., have a plain, unmistakable meaning. They all relate, in their ordinary sense, to dealing with money, the value of the use of money, measured by interest, and securities dischargeable by the payment of money. The only way an estate could be put out at interest, within the ordinary meaning of words, would be to convert the same into interest-bearing securities.
It is not a legitimate answer to the foregoing to say that the words under consideration do not, necessarily, under all circumstances mean what their literal sense suggests, unaccompanied by some convincing reason that such was not intended. The familiar rule that “words which are plain and in their literal sense lead to no inconsistent or absurd consequences must be presumed to have been used in their common and ordinary meaning, and such presumption must absolutely prevail,” precludes ascribing to a written instrument a meaning out of the ordinary sense thereof, and renders all efforts to do so wholly illegitimate, in advance of ambiguity appearing. Judicial construction cannot properly commence except in the face of uncertainty of sensed
Far too often the salutary principles mentioned seem to be overlooked, especially in the treatment of wills, they being approached as if, as matter of course, they should be viewed in the light of rules for judicial construction varying the common, ordinary sense of words, and thus ambiguity is, at the outset, read out of instruments, instead of unavoidable uncertainty being solved by such rules. In re Moran's Will, 118 Wis. 177, 196, 96 N. W. 367. We may well repeat what was said in Mitchell v. Mitchell, 126 Wis. 47, 49, 105 N. W. 216, 217:
“A will is not to be read in the light of rules for judicial construction merely because its meaning is challenged, and the phallenge supported by reasoning on the assumption that such meaning is obscure. Often obscurity claimed to exist in such an instrument is but the mere creation of the mind of the claimant, not one originating with the maker of the paper. The first duty in examining a will to discover its purpose is to proceed as if it was unambiguously expressed. If, taking the will as a whole in the light of the subjects with which it deals, its meaning is plain, there is no legitimate room for judicial* construction, and none should be attempted.”
We are unable to discover any uncertainty such as above suggested in the words in question. The learned counsel for appellant argue that, the testator having acquired his property by farming, it is not reasonable to suppose he intended to have the farm land, comprising a large part of hÍ3 estate, converted into money and administered in that form, and in that view the words of apparent direction to that effect appear ambiguous. The reasoning seems to be illogical, in that important premises are omitted while the conclusion from those suggested does not necessarily follow. The testator’s scheme plainly was, as before indicated, that the value of the use of the property, measured by the interest obtainable, should be paid to his two sons; that the eorpust
It follows logically from the foregoing that the testator’s intention was that the one appointed by the court to administer the estate should convert the same into money, put the available funds out at interest, and act as trustee in the complete execution of the will. The instrument expressly provides that the property “shall be put on interest by some ope appointed by the county judge,” etc. The appointee under that provision, in legal effect, is the appointee of the testator. Wolbert v. Beard, 128 Wis. 391, 397, 107 N. W. 663.
It is the opinion of the court that the decision respecting the disposition of the interest derived from the invested fund so long as either of the sons shall survive, is right, viz.: That it shall be equally divided annually between the two while they both live, and after the death of one that all shall be paid to the other so long as he shall survive. That would
What has been said disposes of the question in the negative, in harmony with the decision of the trial court, of whether the testator intended that the title, absolute, to any part of the invested funds should vest in any grandchild prior to the termination of both life estates. The meaning of the words at this point, viz.: “After the death of my sons the principal shall go,” etc., is regarded as unmistakable.
We now come to the only part of the will which in our opinion is ambiguous. Did the testator mean by the words, “After the death of my sons the principal shall go to their living children, at the age of twenty-one,” that the corpus of the property upon the termination of- the two life estates should go in right to their living grandchildren, share and
The rule is often stated thus:
“When a future time for the payment of the legacy is defined by the will, the legacy will be vested or contingent according as, upon construing the will, it appears whether the-testator meant to annex the time to the payment of the legacy, or to the gift of it.” 2 Williams, Ex’rs (7th Am. ed.)-515.
in Everitt v. Everitt, 29 N. Y. 39, 75, phrased the rule thus:
“If futurity is annexed to the substcmce of the gift, the vesting is suspended; but if it appear to relate to the time-of payment only, the legacy vests instanter.”
See, also, Scott v. West, 63 Wis. 529, 24 N. W. 161, 25 N. W. 18; Stark v. Conde, 100 Wis. 633, 76 N. W. 600.
It is very evident that the idea in the testator’s mind, which he intended to embody in the last clause of the will, is very imperfectly stated. Nothing appears, expressly, as to disposing of interest after the termination of the life estates. That it was expected such interest would accumulate and wait upon .the time of payment of principal is «rather negatived hy the express direction as to payment of the latter and silence as to the former. That it was not intended to leave the interest as intestate property is negatived by the obvious general scheme of the testator to dispose of all of the property. No construction can be rightly adopted that would leave the interest undisposed of, if one can reasonably
“While it is true, as a general rule, that where the time or other condition is annexed to the substance of the gift and not merely to the payment the legacy is contingent, yet, as an exception, when interest, whether by way of maintenance or otherwise, is given while the enjoyment of the gift of the principal is postponed, the legacy will vest immediately.”
In the light of the foregoing it is the opinion of the court that the testator’s purpose was to bequeath the principal of the invested fund to the grandchildren living at the termi
The result is that the right to the estate in remainder will vest by title, absolute, in the grandchildren, share and share alike, at the time of the termination of the life estates. Each child will be entitled thereafter to the benefit, annually, of the interest upon his share until he realizes in possession as to the principal. In case of the death of any child after the period of vesting and before the time of payment his share will go to his personal representative instead of to the surviving grandchildren. The decision of the trial court, in effect, that the time of payment was affixed to the substance of the gift so that at the termination of the life estates the then surviving grandchildren will come into possession of mere contingent rights as to principal; that they will be mere joint tenants so that though having a vested interest, in a sense, such interest will be subject to be divested as to any one by his demise prior to his arrival at the age of twenty-one, must be reversed.
By the Court. — The judgment as to the character of the estates in remainder is reversed, and otherwise it is affirmed. The cause is remanded with directions to modify that part