22 How. Pr. 169 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1859
Elisha Burrows, the elder, being seized of a house and lot in Clinton street, in this city, made his last will, in due form, wherein he gave á life estate therein
The first question presented is, in whom is the estate vested ? Supposing the testator had stopped with the language, “ when he the said child shall become twenty-one years of age,” it cannot be doubted that the estate was vested' in the plaintiff, and on his attaining the age of
A devise to A. in fee, if or when he attains the age of twenty-one years, becomes a vested remainder, provided the will contained an intermediate disposition of the estate, or of the rents and profits during the minority of A., or if it directed the estate to go over in the event of A. dying underage. (4 Kent, 234.) In the present case there is an intermediate disposition of the estate, and a direction that the estate go over in the event of the plaintiff dying under age. The proposition laid down is, therefore, met by the facts in this case, and the authorities cited to sustain it •will be referred to. They will elucidate the proposition sought to be maintained. (Bracton’s case, 3 Coke, 19.)
In that case the will was, “ when the said Hugh shall come to his age of twenty-one years” ; there the estate ivas given to him and his heirs forever, and it was held that the use of the word “ when” was a demonstration of the time when the remainder to Hugh should take effect in possession, and not when the remainder should vest. Hugh having died at the age of nine years, his brother became his heir, who demised the premises to the defendant. It was alleged on the part of the plaintiff that no remainder was vested in said Hugh, until he attained the age of twenty-one years, and that, in the meantime the lands did descend to the daughters of the elder son, who were the general heirs of the devisee, and through whom the plaintiff claimed; and that inasmuch as Hugh did never accomplish his said age, the land never vested in him, but remained in the heirs general. But so the court did not - think, and gave judgment for the defendant.
In Goodtitle agt. Whitby, (1 Burr., 228,) where the estate was given, “ when and as they shall attain their respective ages of twenty-one,” Lord Mansfield held that the rule is, that that shall not operate as a condition precedent, but as
In Edwards agt. Hammond, (3 Lev., 132,) a copyholder surrendered to himself for life, and afterwards to the use of his eldest son and his heirs, if he should live to the age of twenty-one years, provided and on condition that if he should die before twenty-one, then it should remain to the surrenderor and his heirs. On the death of the surrenderor, the youngest son entered, and the eldest son being seventeen, brought an ejectment, and the question was, ■whether it was a condition precedent or subsequent ? and the court held it to be a limitation to the eldest son, immediately defeasible, on a condition subsequent.
Broomfield agt. Crowdee, (4 Burr., 313,) was a case sent by the master of the rolls to the judges of the common pleas for their opinion. In that case the testator gave all his real estate to the plaintiff, “ if he shall live to attain the age of twenty-one years,” “ but in case he die before he attains that age, then to another brother ; but in case both should die before attaining the age of twenty-one years, then to his god-son John Vale, and his heirs forever.” The testator gave a life estate in the premises devised, after the death of his widow, to one Joshua Rose ; on the death of his widow, Rose entered into the possession of the estates and enjoyed the rents and profits till his death, on the 27th March, 1802. The plaintiff was then an infant under the age of twenty-one, and filed a bill asking that his rights in the estates might be declared. The parties defendant were Crowdee, the heir at law; and plaintiffs Butler and John Yale. ,On behalf of Crowdee, the heir at law, it was insisted that the plaintiff had no right or title to the estates, for that the devise to the plaintiff and his brother, and to Yale, were contingent remainders, limited upon the estates for life, and that inasmuch as the- preceding particular estates were at an end before the events happened on which the said premises were to become vested,
Doe agt. Moore, (14 East, 600,) is even more like the present case than those already cited. There the testator gave to John Moore, “ when he attained the age of twenty-one years,” all his estate, &c.; but in case he should die before he attains the age of twenty-one years, then he gives it over. The testator died, leaving the lessees of the plaintiff his heirs at law, and the deyisees named in the will were all under the age of twenty-one years ; and the question reserved was, whether the lessees of the plaintiff, or any of either of them, as heirs at law of the testator, or otherwise, took any and what interest in the estates. The case was argued in Hilary term, 1807, but stood over for decision till Michaelmas term, 1811, awaiting the decision of the House of Lords in Broomfield agt. Crowdee. In this case the rule is held to be, that a devise to A. when he attains twenty-one, to hold to him and his heirs, and if he dies under twenty-one, then over, does not make the devisee’s attaining twenty-one a condition precedent to the vesting of the interest in him, but the dying under twenty-
But it remains to consider the effect of the words “ and becomes married and has children.” If the first “ and” may be read “ or,” there is no difficulty in sustaining the plaintiff’s title in fee to the premises devised to him.
The judges of the common pleas, in Broomfield agt. Crowder, (cited supra,) say : “ It must be admitted that according to repeated decisions, no precise words are necessary to constitute a condition precedent in wills. They must be construed according to the intention of the parties, and it would be absurd, considering the various circumstances under which wills are made, to require particular terms to express particular meanings. The apparent intention as collected from the whole will must always control particular expressionsNow, what is the apparent intention of the testator, from the provisions of this will ? Clearly, that his father should enjoy the income of his estate during his life; that on his decease it should go to the plaintiff, his son, to be vested in him on the termination of the life estate, and he to have the absolute possession thereof, on his attaining the age of twenty-one years. I think it was also his intention that he should have the estate on his marriage, even if that event happened before he attained the age of twenty-one years, subject, of course, to be divested, if he died before attaining that age. It cannot be argued that it was the intention of the testator to deprive the plaintiff of the use and enjoyment of this property, after he arrived at the age of twenty-one years, until he got married and had children. The estate is not devised over on any such contingency, and it may well be assumed that the testator did not intend to deprive his son of the enjoyment of it, if neither of these events should happen. If that to effeqtu
Judgment for the plaintiff on demurrer, with costs.