Buchanan v. Lloyd

88 Md. 642 | Md. | 1898

Schmucicer, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a pro forma decree of the Circuit Court for Talbot County dismissing a bill filed by the appellants, who are the children of Ann Buchanan and those claiming under them, to enforce certain rights asserted by them under the will of their grandfather, Ex-Governor Edward Lloyd.

Governor Lloyd died in 1834 leaving surviving him a widow and three sons and four daughters. By his will, executed in 1829, after making suitable provision for his widow, he gave certain property to each of his three sons absolutely and also gave them other property in trust for each of his four daughters for life with remainder to her children. The residue of the real estate was given to his son Edward and the residue of the personalty to the three sons who were made the executors of the will.

The share of each daughter was given to the trustees for and during her life “ and no longer,” and the remainder therein was, at her death, given directly to her children without the intervention of the trustees. The property- appropriated in this manner to the use of the testator’s daughter Ann Catherine, afterwards Ann Buchanan, and her children, consisted of a farm called Davis Farm ” and $5,000 in money and certain woodland contiguous to the farm.

On April 12, 1834, Governor Lloyd made a codicil to his will of which the portions material to this controversy are as follows: “ I hereby revoke all that part of my will in which I give and devise to my daughter, Ann Catherine Lloyd, my farm called ‘ Davis Farm ’ with one hundred and fifty acres of woodland contiguous to the same, and in lieu thereof I give, devise and bequeath to my sons Edward Lloyd, James M. Lloyd .and Daniel Lloyd and the survivors or survivor of them in special trust for the use and benefit of my daughter, Ann Catherine Lloyd, agreeably to the provisions and *645conditions of the trust in said will expressed, the sum of fifteen thousand dollars (in addition to the sum of five thousand dollars given and devised in said will) which fifteen thousand dollars I will and direct shall be paid as follows, ten thousand dollars to be paid by my son Daniel Lloyd and five thousand dollars to be paid by my son Edward Lloyd, and I hereby will and direct that until the above respective sums are paid over and invested in some safe fund for the use and benefit of my said daughter, Ann Catherine Lloyd, that my said sons, Edward Lloyd and Daniel Lloyd, shall annually pay to their sister legal interest for the same.”

“ In consideration of the payment of ten thousand dollars by my son, Daniel Lloyd, to his sister, Ann Catherine Lloyd, I give, devise and bequeath to my son, Daniel Lloyd, his heirs and assigns, ‘ my farm called Davis Farm together with one hundred and fifty acres of woodland contiguous to the same,’ which in my will is devised to my daughter, Ann Catherine Lloyd.”

“ In consideration of the legacies of five thousand dollars to my daughter, Ann Catherine Lloyd, and five thousand dollars to my daughter, Mary Ellen Lloyd, directed by this codicil to be paid by my son Edward Lloyd out of his part of my estate, and for and in consideration and full payment to him of whatever sums I may owe him at the time of my death either on bond, note or open account, I do hereby give and devise to my son, Edward Lloyd, his heirs and assigns, my farm called £ Hopewell,’ composed of and containing all the land purchased by me of Richard Parrotts and Fayette Gibson, except such parts as are devised as parts of £ Knightly ’ farm to my daughter, Elizabeth Tayloe Winder, and such parts as are devised to my daughter, Sally Scott Lowndes, adjoining and contiguous to the land purchased of Edward Lloyd Nicholson, provided that if the legacies and sums due by me (as above expressed) to my son, Edward Lloyd, amount to more than the sum of fifteen thousand dollars, then the excess above the sum of fifteen thousand dollars shall be deemed and considered a debt due by me to my son, *646Edward Lloyd, and shall be paid accordingly out of my whole estate.”

Ann Catherine Lloyd married Franklin Buchanan, whom she survived, and lived until 1892, fifty-eight years after the death of her father.

The three sons of Governor Lloyd, who were made trustees under his will for their sisters, died as follows, to wit: James M. in 1847, Edward in 1861, and Daniel in 1875. By an order of the Circuit Court for Talbot County, passed May 21, 1863, on petition of Ann Buchanan, the appellee Edward Lloyd, a grandson of Governor Lloyd, was appointed her trustee in lieu of his uncle, Daniel Lloyd, the then surviving trustee who declined to further act as such.

In 1847 Daniel Lloyd sold his interest in “ Davis Farm ” to William Johnson, who in 1849 sold it to Daniel’s brother Edward Lloyd, who thereafter held both Davis and Hopewell farms until his death in 1861, when he devised them with much other valuable property to his son, the appellee Edward Lloyd, whom he made his executor and residuary legatee and devisee.

Both Governor Lloyd and his son Edward left ample personalty to satisfy all debts and legacies but no part of the $5,000 left by the will or the $15,000 left by the codocil in trust for Ann Buchanan is shown by the proceedings to have been invested for her or paid to her, except the sum of $7,500, which Edward and Daniel Lloyd, the then surviving trustees, invested in 1847 in a farm called “ The Rest,” taking the deed for it in their names as surviving trustees for Ann Buchanan upon the limitations and for the uses declared in her father’s will. It does not appear with entire certainty from what source the $7,500 invested in “ The Rest ” came, but the deed conveying that farm to the trustees recites the gift by Governor Lloyd’s will of the Davis Farm and $5,000 to his sons in trust for Ann Buchanan with remainder to her children, the revocation by the codicil of the devise of the Davis Farm and the gift in lieu thereof of the $15,000 legacy in trust, and then states that “ The Rest ” had been purchased “ in virtue of the *647last trust so referred (reposed?) in them and for the purpose of investing a portion of the said trust fund.” We therefore think that the $7,500 so invested should be regarded as having been appropriated to the $15,000 legacy given by the codicil. The record shows that “ The Rest ” came into possession of Ann Buchanan’s children at her death and was sold by them at a handsome profit over its cost.

Edward Lloyd, the father of the appellee, continued until his death in 1861 to pay to Ann Buchanan the interest on the $12,500, uninvested balance of the two legacies of $15,000 and $5,000. After his death his son, the appellee Edward Lloyd, to whom he devised the Davis and Hopewell farms, continued to pay interest on the $12,500 to Ann Buchanan until her death in 1892 and after that he paid the interest to her children until August, 1895. Edward Lloyd, the appellee, also paid as hereinafter mentioned to certain of the children of Ann Buchanan, on account of the principal of the $12,500, sums amounting in the aggregate to $4,125.20.

The bill, which was filed on June 30, 1897, against the appellee Edward Lloyd and his grantees of Davis and Hopewell farms, asks for an accounting by him in respect to the two legacies of $15,000 and $5,000, and that the balance ascertained to be due thereon may, so far as it is due on the $15,000 legacy, be declared to be a lien and charge upon the Davis and Hopewell farms.

The appellees in their answers deny the right of the appellants to relief and contend that under the true construction of the will and codicil neither of the legacies was charged upon the land, and further contend that the $15,000 legacy was given for the life of Mrs. Buchanan only and that her children have no interest in it. The appellees, other than Edward Lloyd, also set up the defences of limitation and laches. The first question presented by the record is whether the $15,000 legacy given by the codicil was intended only for the use of Mrs. Buchanan for life, or was to go at her death to her children in the same manner that the $5,000 legacy *648given by the will went and the Davis farm, in lieu of which the $15,000 legacy was given, would have gone under the terms of the will if there had been no codicil.

We think that the remainder in the $15,000 legacy after Mrs. Buchanan’s death was intended to go to her children and that the testator in the part of the codicil now under consideration when he spoke of his daughter Ann, both in revoking the devise of the Davis farm and in giving the $15,000 legacy, in lieu of the farm, used her name in a representative sense and meant thereby Ann and her children, and that he intended merely to change the subject-matter of the provision made for them and did not intend to deprive the children of their participation in such provision. He repeatedly, both in the will and the codicil, used the names of his several daughters in this representative sense when speaking of the disposition of his property. In the 5th clause of the will he refers to certain land as “ hereinafter devised to my daughter Mary Ellen Lloyd,” in the 5th clause of the codicil he describes other land as that “ which in my will is devised to my daughter Ann Catherine,” and in the 6th clause of the codicil he excepts from the devise of Hopewell “ such parts as are devised as part of Knightly farm to my daughter Elizabeth Tayloe Winder, and such parts as are devised to my daughter Sally Scott Lowndes,” when in fact none of the parcels of land so designated were devised to the daughters but they were in each case devised to trustees for the benefit of the daughter for her life only and the remainder was devised directly to her children. Again in the tenth clause of the will he gives to the surviving husbands, of such of his daughters as may leave no issue, for their respective lives, “ all of the said property real and personal hereinbefore given to his, her or their deceased wives respectively ” when in fact no property had been given to the daughters, except a few chattels, other than equitable life estates which of course terminated at their death. The surviving husbands would have taken nothing under this devise unless the testator in describing the subject-matter of the gift used the *649word “ daughters ” in a representative sense and meant thereby daughters and their children. It is by the use of the name of Ann Catherine in this representative sense in the codicil that the devise by the will of the remainder in the Davis farm to her children is revoked. There is no express reservation of it.

The intention of the testator to give to the children of his daughter Ann the remainder after her life in the legacy of $15,000 made by the codicil is further evidenced by the fact that he gave the legacy expressly in lieu of the Davis farm which had been by the will devoted to the benefit of Ann and her children and which constituted the main provision made for their support. It is unreasonable to suppose, in the absence of express provisions in the codicil revoking the devise of the remainder in the Davis farm to Ann’s children, that the testator intended to deprive her children of the provision which he had made for them by his will upon terms precisely similar to that made for the children of his other daughters. The will and the codicil must be construed together and what is plainly given by the will is not to be revoked or withdrawn by doubtful or ambiguous expressions used in the codicil. Buchanan v. Lloyd, 64 Md. 310, 311.

It was strongly contended by the counsel for the appellees that the decision of this Court in Buchanan v. Lloyd, supra, was conclusive of the present case in their favor, but we do not so understand that decision. The Court there stated at the beginning of the opinion that the only question then presented for its consideration was the true construction of the 2nd clause of the codicil by which a legacy of $5,000 and certain slaves were given to two of the testator’s sons in trust “ agreeably with the provisions of my said will (in addition to the $5,000 devised in my said will) ” . . . “ for the use and benefit of my daughter Elizabeth Tayloe Winder.” It was claimed in that case that the reference in the codicil to the provisions of the will and the legacy therein given for the benefit of Mrs. Winder for life with remainder to her children, indicated an intention on the part of the *650testator to also give to Mrs. Winder’s children an estate in remainder after her death in the $5,000, given in trust for her benefit by the codicil, although no mention of the children was made in the codicil, but the Court held that the terms of that clause of the codicil were not, sufficient to give an interest in the legacy to the children. They rested their decision largely upon the fact that to hold otherwise would, in the absence of plain words expressive of any such intent, give to the 2nd clause of the codicil the effect of curtailing the residuary clause of the will of the subject-matter of its operation. No such difficulty exists in this case for the $15,000 legacy given by the codicil is not payable out of the residue of the estate to the derogation of the residuary legatees, but is required to be paid by the sons Edward and Daniel, to each of whom a farm is at the same time expressly given out of which to pay his portion of the legacy. The provisions of the codicil in reference to Mrs. Winder did not by revoking any part of the will deprive her children of the devise made to them and then make a new gift in lieu of the revoked devise. The legacy of $5,000 given for her use by the codicil was purely an additional gift to her and was unconnected with the general scheme of the will.

There is no such similarity between the clause of the codicil construed in the case in 64 Md. and the portions of the same instrument now under consideration as to make of that case a precedent for the determination of this one.

The next question to be determined is to what extent, if at all, are the legacies of $5,000 given by the will and $15,000 given by the codicil to be treated as having been charged upon the “ Davis ” and “ Hopewell ” farms.

Legacies are primarily payable out of the personal estate of the testator and will not be considered charges upon the real estate unless the intention of the testator to make the charge is either expressly declared or may be fairly inferred from the will. In the absence of a positive direction to charge legacies upon the real estate, various expressions in a will have been held sufficient *651to establish an intention to create the charge. In Kemp v. McPherson, 7 H. & J. 320, where the devise of the farm was to the son, “ he paying to my other children the sums ” which were given to them, it was held that the legacies were a charge upon the land in the hands of either the devisee or the purchaser from him. In Spence v. Robins, 6 G. & J. 507, the real estate was devised to the son, “ on paying three dollars per acre ” to the sisters; in Luckett v. White, 10 G. & J. 480, the devise was to the son, “ he paying his younger brother one hundred pounds”; in Ogle v. Tayloe, 49 Md. 175, the sons to whom a remainder in lands and personal property was devised were directed to pay a legacy, “ upon their coming into possession of the property”; and in Crawford v. Severson, 5 Gill 443, the testator gave a farm to each of his two sons and gave $1,000 to his daughters, $600 of which was to be paid by one son and $400 by the other, “ on his attaining full possession.” In all of these cases the legacies were held to have been charged upon the land. The Court in Owens v. Claytor, 56 Md. 129, intimates that the case of Crawford v. Severson, supra, goes to the limit of the doctrine involved in its decision but they do not overrule the case or hold it to have been erroneously decided.

There is nothing in the will in the present case indicating that the testator intended the legacy of $5,000 given by the body of the will in trust for Mrs. Buchanan and her children to be charged upon any real estate. We are, however, of the opinion that the language used in the codicil, and already quoted by us, connecting the legacy of $15,000 therein directed to be paid by the sons Edward and Daniel with the devise to them of the Davis and Hopewell farms brings this case well within the scope of those last cited, and that the testator intended to charge the two farms with the payment of the $15,000 in the proportions mentioned by him.

He knew that this $15,000 would not be payable like the other legacies of his will out of his personal estate by his executors, and he is presumed to have known that his real estate was not liable for its payment, and when *652he directed his two sons to pay it and then in express terms devised these two farms to them “ in consideration of the payment,” it is evident that he was providing the means of making the payment and that he intended the legacy to be not a mere charge upon the devisees personally but also a charge upon the two farms.

Not only is the construction of the codicil, which holds this legacy to be charged upon the farms, supported by the language of that instrument but the scheme of disposing of his estate adopted by the testator in which he selected real estate as the main portion of the property devoted to the use of each daughter and her children, makes it most natural to suppose that, when he revoked the entire devise of real estate which he had made for Ann and her children and gave them a legacy in lieu of the devise, he would afford them the protection of a charge upon land for the legacy, at least until it should be “ invested in some safe fund.”

The will and codicil were duly admitted to probate and recorded in the office of the register of wills of Talbot County where the farms lie and the public were thus given that constructive notice of their contents which it is the purpose of the registry laws to effect. The charge therefore followed the lands into the hands of the appellees and remains a lien thereon unless some subsequent event has released it or estopped the appellants from asserting their claim.

We do not regard the defences of limitations and laches or either of them as applicable to this case. The right of the appellants who are remaindermen to the possession of the legacies did not accrue until the death of the life tenant in 1892. Even after their title to the legacies had thus ripened the appellee Edward Lloyd continued to pay them interest down to August, 1895. None of the appellees, except Edward Lloyd who does not plead limitations, claim title under deeds made twenty years prior to the institution of this suit. The mortgage of the Davis farm to the appellee Hardcastle, made in 1891, appears to have been a renewal of a *653former mortgage made in 1871, but he was never in possession of the land and cannot from the standpoint of his mortgage plead limitations against the prior lien of the appellants which was kept alive by the payment of interest by the mortgagor in possession down to 1895. Brown v. Hardcastle, 63 Md. 489.

An almost unprecedented time did indeed elapse between the death of Governor Lloyd and the institution of this suit, but that was due to the fact that the equitable life tenant survived the testator for nearly sixty years. There has been no such delay on the part of the appellants in asserting their rights as to deprive them of their title to relief on the ground of laches.

It appears from the record that, since the death of Mrs. Buchanan, the appellee Edward Lloyd has paid to each of her two daughters, Sallie E. Screven and Elizabeth F. Sullivan, the sum of $1,562.60, being her full one-eighth share of the $12,500 then remaining due of the two legacies of $15,000 and $5,000, and has also paid to Ellen B. Screven, another daughter, $1,000 on account of her one-eighth share of such balance. These payments to Mrs. Sullivan and Sallie E. Screven, having been in full of their shares of the balance on the two legacies, must be credited on the several legacies in proportion to the sums respectively due on them at the time of the payment, i. e. three-fifths on the $15,000 legacy and two-fifths on the $5,000. The $1,000 paid on account to Ellen B. Screven should, by analogy to the rules laid down for the appropriation of payments in Frasier v. Lanahan, 71 Md. 133, be credited on the $15,000 legacy as the most burdensome obligation, being a lien upon the land to the extent of her full share of the balance due thereon and what remains of the $1,000 should be credited on the other legacy. We have already said that the $7,500 invested in “ The Rest ” should be credited upon the $15,000 legacy.

The appellants are entitled to a first lien or charge upon the Davis farm to the extent of two-thirds and upon the Hopewell farm to the extent of one-third of the balance remaining unpaid of the $15,000 legacy with *654interest, after crediting it with the several payments with which we have said that it is entitled to be credited and, in default of payment of the balances so ascertained to remain charged upon said farms or either of them, the appellants are entitled to a sale of the farm or farms so in default.

(Decided December 21st, 1898.)

The appellants are also entitled to a decree against the appellee Edward Lloyd for such balance as shall appear to be due upon the $5,000 legacy, after crediting it with the payments with which we have said that it is entitled to be credited.

The decree of the Circuit Court will be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

Decree reversed and cause remanded.