91 Ky. 465 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1891
delivered the opinion or the court.
diaries Hilbert and Ms wife owned jointly tbe two lots of land in contest. Sbe died intestate. He sub
The defense is that the devise to Mrs. Schmitt and her children of the two lots, and the devise of other real estate of the testator to the other two daughters, created a case for an election by them ; and that by accepting the property devised to them, they elected to take under the will, and are now estopped from claiming any interest in the lots devised to their sister and her children.
The language of the devise to the latter is: “I give, devise, and bequeath to my beloved daughter, Carrie Schmitt, lot number one, in Davis’ subdivision, in the city of Covington, Ky., and the house thereon, said house being number twenty on the north side of Cross street. Also lot number two, in • Davis’ subdivision, of Covington, Ky. * * * To have and to hold the same unto her for and during the term of her natural life, with full power to act with, and after her death said property is to go and belong in fee-simple to the heirs of her body in equal portions, share and share alike.”
The conditions to the necessity for an election, however, are, first, that the testator shall give property of his own; and second, he shall profess to also give the property of his donee.
No election is necessary unless the instrument shows a clear intention upon the part of the donor to dispose of the property of another. The language of the instrument must be unequivocal. There must be no doubt as to the donor’s design. If the proper interpretation of the clause of donation be doubtful, no necessity for an election arises. It should be enforced only in well defined cases. If, however, such an intention is evident, then it is immaterial whether the donor believed the property to belong to him or to another. One accepting the bounty must take it with any burden the testator may have attached to it.
It was held in the case of Isler v. Isler, 88 N. C., 581, if a testator expresses a manifest purpose of disposing of the property of. one to whom he de
Story says: “It is upon a similar ground that the doctrine of election has been held not to be applicable to cases where the testator has some present interest in the estate disposed of by him, although it is not entirely his own. In such a case, unless there is an intention clearly manifested in the will, or (as it is sometimes called) a demonstration plain, or necessary implication on his part to dispose of the whole estate, including the interest of third persons, he will be presumed to intend to dispose of that which he might lawfully dispose of, and of no more.” (2 Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, section 1089.)
In the sixth volume of the American and English Encyclopedia of Law, page 252, note 7, under the title “Election,” it is said: “Where the donor uses gen
In the case of Isler v. Isler, supra, the court uses this language: “Again, it is said that, according to the facts stated, the testatrix had a third interest in the house and lot, having expended that much of her own money in its purchase, and it is insisted that under such circumstances she will not be presumed to have intended to give more than she had a right to. This, too, is a question of construction for. the court, and the case of Padbury v. Clark, 2 Macn. & G., 298, seems to be directly in point, and to lay down the rule correctly. There it was held that when a man who had an undivided moiety in a house devised it by a particular description, such as ‘my messuage,’ or ‘tenement with the garden thereunto belonging,’ the whole was intended to pass.” •
Again, in Miller v. Thurgood, 33 Beavan, 496: “If a testator, having an undivided interest in a particular property, devises that property specifically, a case of election arises, and the co owner must elect between his own interest in the property and the interest he takes under the will.”
The doctrine is fully summarized in section 489 of Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, where the author says: “Prima fade, a testator is presumed to have intended to bequeath that alone which he owned, that only over which his power of disposal extended. Wherever, therefore, the testator does not give the whole property specifically, but employs general words
Judgment affirmed.