124 Tenn. 312 | Tenn. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill in this case was filed by the executors of the will of Mrs. Rebecca S. Lea, deceased, in the chancery court of Davidson county, for the purpose of settling her estate, and, as incidental thereto, to obtain a construction of her will, and of the will of her son, John M. Lea,
In order to a proper understanding of these matters, it is necessary to set out a portion of the will of John-M. Lea, Jr., and likewise the seventh item of the will of Mrs. Lea.
So much of the will of John M. Lea, Jr., as it is necessary to reproduce is as follows:
“As to all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate and effects, whatsoever and wheresoever, both real and personal, whether in possession, reversion, remainder or expectancy, I give, devise and bequeath the same unto my mother, Rebecca Salmons Lea, to and for her own use and benefit absolutely, provided that she does not marry again; but, if she marries'again, I give, devise and bequeath the same, from the time of her marriage, to my cousin, Overton Lea, Jr., son of Overton Lea, Sr., of Nashville, Tenn.
“I will and direct that not any portion of my estate come into the possession of my sister, Bessie Kelly, the*317 wife of Robert Dalton Kelly, or into the possession of ber husband, or of any descendant of hers, or of any one bearing the name of Kelly.
“In case my mother, Rebecca Salmons Lea, dies during my lifetime, or in case she dies intestate, or in case she gives or bequeathes to my sister, Bessie Kelly, or her husband, or any descendant of hers, or any one bearing the name of Kelly, any portion of my estate, I give, devise and bequeath said rest, residue and remainder of my estate and effects whatsoever, both real and personal, whether in possession, reversion, remainder or expectancy, unto the said Overton Lea, Jr., to and for his own use and benefit absolutely.”
Item 7 of the will of Mrs. Lea is as follows:
“Item 7. ■ To Overton Lea, of Davidson -county, Tennessee, brother of my deceased husband, I devise the following property in Memphis, Tennessee, subject to the mortgage thereon, which, in accepting this bequest, he must take subject to and assume the payment of said mortgage:
“(a) Part of lot one hundred and nine (109) in the original plan of Memphis, being the northwest corner of Main and Court streets, thirty-five (35) feet by one hundred and forty-eight and one-half (148%) feet, upon which is erected a six-story storehouse, now occupied by Lowenstein & Co.
“(b) A lot on the southwest'corner of Madison and De Soto streets, fronting fifty-four (54) feet on Madison*318 street, and one hundred and forty-eight (148) feet on De Soto street.”
Overton Lea filed a formal renunciation and refusal in writing to accept the devise sought to be given him.
This renunciation precipitated the controversies which we are to settle in the present case.
The validity of that portion of the will of John M. Lea, Jr., which is reproduced above was settled by this court in the case of Overton v. Lea, 108 Tenn., 505, 68 S. W., 250.
Mrs. Lea survived her son, and she never remarried.
It is insisted in behalf of the collateral kindred of Mrs. Lea that the conditional limitation (for a discussion of which subject, see Fowlkes v. Wagoner, 46 S. W., 586), based on the contingency of Mrs. Lea dying intestate, or of an attempted disposition of the property by her to Bessie Kelly, now Bessie Leake, imposed upon the property in her hands was satisfied by the execution of the will, even'though the seventh item of it, which alone concerned the property involved, was rejected by the proposed devisee; that she died testate in September, 1905, and thereby satisfied and prevented the operation of the conditional limitation, and that the subsequent renunciation by Overton Lea, in February, 1906, could not restore such conditional limitation to life and vigor; and that upon the filing of such renunciation the property would simply fall into the estate of Mrs. Lea, to be disposed of under the statute of descents, save only that the daughter could not inherit from the mother because
Counsel for the executors have filed a brief, in which ' they concede Mrs. Rebecca S. Lea did not die intestate, but insist her daughter Mrs. Kelly took the property of Mrs. Lea as heir of her mother, Mrs. Rebecca S. Lea.
With reférence to the above clause of the will of John M. Lea, Jr., relied on (“I will and direct that not any portion of my estate come into the possession of my sister, Bessie Kelly, wife of Robert Dalton Kelly,” etc.), it is said that this is ineffectual and abortive, because a negative instrument is not a will; that to be a will it must be an affirmative dispositive document, as to which there is one recognized exception, to the effect than an instrument in the form of a will, which, nominates and appoints an executor or revokes a previous will, without making any affirmative disposition of property, has also come to be regarded as a will (1 Rood on Wills, section 479; 1 Underhill on Wills, sections 4, 5, pp. 6, 7; 1 Jarman on Wills, 16); but, for the reason that a will, to be effective so far as property is concerned, must be an af
In that case the testator said: “It is my will that my son William H. Coffman be excluded from all my estate at my death, and have no heirship in the samebut the testator did not give his property to the other sons, or to any one else. It was held that William took his equal share. The argument was made and considered that the testator (as in Boisseau v. Aldridges, 5 Leigh [Va.], 222,
Todd v. Gentry, 109 Ky., 704, 60 S. W., 639, decided by the court of appeals of Kentucky, is to the same effect. There the testator plainly intended to exclude certain of his heirs from sharing in his estate, but he wholly failed to make any disposition of a certain tract of land. The court held that it passed to all his heirs, including those he attempted by negative terms to exclude. To same effect, see, also, Gallgher v. Crooks, 132 N. Y., 338, 30 N. E., 746; Lawrence v. Smith, 163 Ill., 149, 166, 45 N. E., 259; Wells v. Anderson, 69 N. H., 561, 44 Atl., 103; Wilder v. Holland, 102 Ga., 44, 45, 29 S. E., 134; Bourke v. Bonne, 94 Md., 472, 477, 51 Atl., 396.
The Kentucky cases cited by counsel for the collateral heirs, Tabor v. McIntire, supra, and Clarkson v. Clarkson, supra, so far as they are in conflict with Todd v. Gentry, supra, are overruled thereby. Indeed, Tabor v. McIntire is expressly overruled. Likewise Willis v. Watson, supra, if it is in conflict with the later case of Lawrence v. Smith, supra, is controlled thereby. As we understand Willis v. Watson, however, it does not seem to be in conflict. It appeared in that case that the whole estate had been disposed of by' appropriate language in
Sullivan v. Straus, supra, cited by counsel for the collateral heirs, is fairly open to the construction that there was a disposition of the property to some one else, as well as the clause providing that a particular child should never take. In re Tucker’s Estate, supra, is meager and unsatisfactory.
We are of the opinion that the true rule is that supported by Coffman v. Coffman, supra, and Todd v. Gentry, supra, and the cases we have cited therewith. A testator may make or revoke his will, but he can neither make nor unmake a law of the State.
It is truly said by counsel for the executors that John M. Lea, Jr., kept his estate from going to his sister, Bessie, not by the provision that she should not have any of it, but by the affirmative devise to his mother, Mrs. Rebecca S. Lea.
He evinced a purpose to exclude his sister, not only from taking under his will, but from taking from her mother by descent. Accordingly he provided that if his mother should devise these lands to her daughter, his sister, Bessie, or should die intestate, so that but for his will the lands would descend to Bessie, then Overton Lea, Jr., should take.
The argument for the executors is thus continued:
“Mrs. Elizabeth Lea had only two children, Overton*324 and Eobert Lea. Sbe devised to them equally a large estate. Mrs. Elizabeth Lea was dead, and Eobert was dead. When Eobert died, he devised his ancestral lands to his wife, Eebecca, for life, and at her death equally to their children, John M., Jr., and Bessie. John M., Jr., dying childless, devised his ancestral lands to his mother, with the harsh provision that she should not devise them to her only child Bessie, his sister — which, of course, she wanted to do, but she could not. It was eminently just that she should give these lands back to the Leas — to Overton Lea, the only surviving child of Mrs. Elizabeth Lea, and brother of her husband, Eobert Lea. Notwithstanding this act of justice, the mother in a letter expressed the hope that he would let her daughter Bessie receive the income during life. It is clear, as she could not give the property to Eobert Lea’s child, that she ought to have given it to Eobert Lea’s brother, Overton, and this she did.
“When John M. Lea’s will provides that the property shall go to Overton Lea, Jr. (the son of Overton Lea, Sr.), now dead, ‘in case she (Eebecca) dies intestate,’ it is to be taken that he means intestate as to the property which he gives to her — not general intestacy. She did not die intestate as to that. She devised it to Over-ton Lea, Sr., the man who ought to have had it, if it could not be given to his brother Eobert’s daughter, Bessie.
“Mrs. Eebecca Lea received these lands from her son John M. under the limitations imposed by his will. When she lived up to them, and did all that they required, and*325 all that it was possible for her to do, they were met and ceased thenceforward to be operative. Mrs. Rebecca Lea had the power under her will to devise these lands to anybody except Bessie and the Kellys. She devised them to Mr. Overton Lea, as she ought to have done. The will was a valid will, and it was duly probated. In the nature of things that was the end of the matter so far as the operation of the limitations of John M. Lea, Jr.’s, will was concerned. This must be so because Mrs. Rebecca Lea’s title and right of disposition depended alone upon her own voluntary acts — not on the acts of any one else. She could refuse to make a will, and die intestate, and thereby defeat her daughter. The validity of her gift and the title of her devisee depended alone upon the selection of a devisee that she should malte. If she did not select her daughter Bessie, or a child of Bessie’s, or a Kelly, the devise was good and valid.
“She selected a person (Mr. Overton Lea) not in the proscribed class, and died. It was not possible for her to do more. It was not jmssible for her to provide against the renunciation of the devisee after she was dead, and the will does not provide for this event. . . .
“When Mrs. Lea died testate, leaving a valid will which devised the lands to Overton Lea, who did not belong to the excluded class, the conditional limitations imposed by the will of John M. Lea upon his mother, his first devisee, were exhausted. The force of the will of John M. Lea, Jr., was spent. Up to the moment that Mrs. Rebecca Lea died testate the personal limitations*326 of John M. Lea, Jr.’s, will controlled. Thenceforward the law controlled. Mrs. Lea did not die intestate as to this land; bnt, when O'verton Lea renounced, the lands had to he dealt with the same as if she had died intestate as to them. Under the law they descended to Mrs. Rebecca S. Lea’s heirs, whomsoever they might be. That Mrs. Leake was the sole and only heir is but an accident in the case.
“If John M. Lea had thought to provide against the contingency of renunciation by the devisee under his mother’s will, he, of course, could have done so. He probably would have done so, had he anticipated that the devisee might renounce; but he did not. Perhaps his judgment of men was such that he regarded it as beyond the limits of possibility that any one would have pride and convictions sufficient, to induce him to refuse a large and valuable devise. However, we must not speculate. As a matter of fact, he did not provide against renunciation by his mother’s devisee; and, as a consequence, his mother’s heirs take the property.”
By the counsel who directly represents Mrs. Leake it is contended that since the devise, attempted by Mrs. Lea, to Overton Lea, never became effective, because of his refusal to accept it, she died intestate as to the property in controversy, the conditional limitation based on her dying intestate became operative and passed the property to the heirs of Overton Lea, Jr., he having predeceased Mrs. Lea, and that by a quitclaim deed which these heirs (Hon. Luke Lea, Miss Elizabeth Lea, and
It is perceived that the counsel for the executors and the personal counsel for Mrs. Leake reach the same final conclusion but by different lines of reasoning, while the counsel for the executors and those who represent the collateral kindred agree upon the premises that Mrs. Lea died testate as to the property involved herein, and that her act in making the will was by the renunciation of Overton Lea rendered abortive so far as concerned the passing of title to the property involved; but they draw different and opposite conclusions from these premises, owing to divergent views taken as to the means of rendering effectual that clause of John M. Lea, Jr.’s, will which provided that no portion of his estate should ever come into the possession of his sister Bessie, now Mrs. Leake.
If the premise be granted that Mrs. Lea died testate as to the property in controversy, and also the view be held sound that the testator cannot deprive his heir of property by mere negative words, but only by an affirmative disposition to another, the conclusion reached by the counsel for the executors, we think, follows with rigid logical accuracy.
On the other hand, if the true conclusion be that Mrs. Lea died intestate as to this property, then it follows with equal accuracy that it passed under the conditional
Whether' Mrs. Lea died intestate as to this property depends upon the view taken of the effect of the renunciation filed by Overton Lea, Sr.
A beneficial devise is always presumed to be accepted, and, nothing else appearing, the gift will begin immediately upon the going into effect of the will; that is, at the moment of the testator’s death. However, even such a devise may be renounced, and in that event the renunciation will relate to the moment of the gift, and prevent its ever taking effect. Bradford v. Calhoun, 120 Tenn., 53, 109 S. W., 502, 19 L. R. A., (N. S.), 595. Where the gift is not prima facie beneficial, but saddled with onerous exactions, there is no presumption of acceptance. When there is an express renunciation in such a case, it will relate to the death of the testator, as in the former instance, and will furnish conclusive evidence that the gift was void from the beginning. In the present case there was a mortgage of $34,000 upon the property, which the devisee was required to assume, and, by reference to the fourteenth item, also an annuity of three hundred dollars per year, payable in installments of twenty-five dollars per month in favor of Price and wife, charged u.pon the same property. In addition, there was a letter, written by Mrs. Lea to Overton Lea, Sr., in which she requested him to give all of the income to her daughter during the life of the latter. This letter was not a part of the will, and could impose only a moral obligation
In any event, the devise never became effective, and so stood in the category of a lapsed or void devise. 18 Am. & Eng. Enc. of L. (2d Ed.), 747-769, inclusive. In such cases the rule is, where there is a residuary clause, the property covered by the lapsed or void devise goes to the residuary devisee. Reeves v. Reeves, 5 Lea, 644-653. In the absence of such a clause, it goes to the heirs of the testator. Curd’s Adm’r v. Curd, 9 Humph., 171. The property in the present case would have taken the same direction, but for the limitation over upon intestacy.
Now, while it may be said that Mrs. Lea went through all the forms of making a will as to the property in controversy here, yet it did not result in a disposition of the property. As to this property she died nominally testate, but really intestate. Though the ordinary meaning of the word “intestacy” is that it is the state of one who has died without making a will, we think it is clear that John M. Lea. Jr., intended to be understood as saying
It is insisted in the brief of counsel for the collateral kindred, as already indicated, that the condition against Mrs. Leake’s becoming owner of the property inhered therein, in whosesoever hands it might fall. We do not think this is a sound view. John M. Lea, Jr., could not prevent his sister’s taking the property, even as the heir of her mother, except by a provision in his will giving it to another; and it is no less true that this condition could not follow the property into the hands of any one upon whom the property might be devolved through the operation of the limitation attached to the condition. That is to say, if Overton Lea, Sr., had accepted the devise, he could have made such disposition of the property as he saw fit. He could have either given it away or could have sold it. So, when through the substantial and actual intestacy of Mrs. Lea in respect of this prop-
At this point we deem it not improper to say that the generous conduct of the heirs of Overton Lea, Jr., in bestowing the property upon Mrs. Leake, is recognized by the court as most commendable. Whatever may have been the cause which moved John M. Lea, Jr., to make his most harsh and unnatural will, so far as it related to his sister, the record shows no blame on her. We are likewise convinced that her mother earnestly desired that she should have the benefit of the property, and that she adopted the course which she believed would lead most directly to that end. A will so harsh as that of John M. Lea, Jr., can claim no tender or equitable con.struction; but it is entitled to a fair and reasonable one. It gives the court pleasure to realize that in following the rigid path of the law we have been conducted to a result highly equitable in itself, and satisfying to the conscience and heart as well.
In what has been said, it must not be understood that we intend in any way to interfere with, or to question, the prior contingent estate created by the deed of Elizabeth B. Lea and John M. Lea in 1881 to Robert B. Lea, trustee, conveying the property .in question to Robert B. Lea in trust for himself during his life, and after his death to his children, and providing, further, that if he should die and his issue should become extinct within
Robert B. Lea died in January, 1895, leaving two children, John M. Lea, Jr., and Bessie Lea. The latter subsequently intermarried with Dalton Kelly, and after Kelly’s death in 1897 she intermarried with one of the defendants in this case, J. O. Leake, and has living by her second marriage two children, the defendants Dorothy and Esther Leake. The estate conveyed by the deed of Elizabeth B. Lea and John M. Lea in 1881, after the death of the late Robert B. Lea in 1895, vested in the late John M. Lea, Jr., and Bessie Lea, subject to be divested in the event that both of them should die without leaving issue within twenty-one years after the death of the said Robert B. Lea. In 1890 the said Elizabeth B. Lea died, leaving a last will and testament, in which she made a specific devise giving all her lands, tenements, and hereditaments to John M. Lea, Sr., her husband. John M. Lea, Sr., thus became the owner of the contingent reversionary interest reserved to the estate of Elizabeth B. Lea in the aforesaid deed of 1881. This was the status when Robert B. Lea died in January, 1895. Thereafter, in 1898, the said late John M. Lea, Sr., by deed conveyed to defendant Overton Lea, Sr., the contingent estate which he had received from his wife, and thereupon the ownership of the property was vested as follows: A determinable fee in John M. Lea, Jr., and Bessie Lea Kelly (now Bessie Lea Leake), subject to
It follows that there was no error in the result reached by the chancellor, and his decree must he affirmed.