159 A. 275 | Conn. | 1932
This action involves the construction of the third and fourth paragraphs of the will, dated February 13th, 1897, of William H. Peckman, of New Haven, who died August 31st, 1905. The paragraphs in question are quoted in a footnote.* The widow of the decedent, Emily E. Peckman, enjoyed the use and income of the estate until her death on July 10th, *443 1921, and did not dispose of certain real estate belonging to the estate of her husband, which has since been sold by the plaintiff administrator, c. t. a. d. b. n. on the estate of William H. Peckman, and he is holding the proceeds thereof. After the death of William H. Peckman, his widow married Henry J. Griswold, who survived her.
One nephew and three nieces of William H. Peckman survived him at his death and all are still living; three nephews and one niece of his widow survived him and are still living, with the exception of one nephew, William N. Potter, who died May 7th, 1913, after the death of William H. Peckman and before the death of Emily E. Griswold.
The questions upon which advice is desired are: (1) Did Emily E. Griswold, the widow of William H. Peckman, receive an absolute estate in fee simple under paragraph three of the will? (2) Did the nephew and nieces of William H. Peckman and the nephews and niece of Emily E. Griswold who survived William H. Peckman at the date of his death, take a vested interest on that date in Peckman's estate, subject to being divested by a disposition of the property by the widow in accordance with the provisions of paragraph three of his will; or (3) did only the nephews and nieces who survived Emily E. Griswold at her death on July 10th, 1921, take a vested interest in the estate, upon her death?
Reading the two paragraphs of the will together, it *444
is clear that the intention of the testator was that his widow should not take an estate in fee simple in the residue but only a life estate, although with power not only to use and enjoy the income but also to convert to herself the corpus during her life if she so elected, but without the right to dispose of by will or transmit by inheritance any of the estate remaining at her decease. The restraint in the third paragraph upon testamentary disposition by her, and the gift over to nephews and nieces in the fourth, conclusively manifest such an intention. A life estate will not be converted into a fee or any other form of estate greater than a life estate merely by reason of there being coupled with it a power of disposition, however general or extensive. Mansfield v. Shelton,
The only point presented by the second and third questions which is of practical importance upon the facts of the case is whether the gift of the remainder, after the life estate of the widow, so vested as to entitle the estate of the nephew, William N. Potter, who survived the testator but predeceased the life tenant, to share therein. This would occur only if his interest vested at the death of the testator indefeasibly except through disposition of all the property by the life tenant, in her lifetime, under the powers and privileges conferred upon her by the will.
We interpret the testamentary provisions as signifying an intention that the remainder should pass only to the nephews and nieces surviving at the termination *445 of the life estate. The amount of property passing by the gift over could not be ascertained until the death of the widow, as it would consist only of so much as she failed to convert to herself in her lifetime. The language of the will convinces us that the remainder to which paragraph fourth relates is that existing at the death of the life tenant and that the testator's purpose was that such remainder should pass only to the nephews and nieces surviving at that time.
While precedents are usually inconclusive, since the same or substantially similar phraseology of expression seldom occurs in different wills, cases of construction tending to confirm the foregoing view are not wanting. Denny v. Kettel,
To the first question reserved our answer is "no"; as to the remaining questions, it is sufficient to the purposes of this case to add to what has been said only that the necessary conclusion therefrom is that only the nephews and nieces who were living at the decease of the life tenant, Emily E. Griswold, are entitled to share in the distribution of the remainder, and the representative of the deceased nephew, William N. Potter, is not so entitled.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.