53 Ark. 358 | Ark. | 1890
The appellants, as residuary devisees and legatees under the will of Daniel Hughes, deceased, brought this suit.
Daniel Hughes died resident in Shelby county, Tennessee, •on the 10th of February, 1862, seized of the land in controversy. By last will, which was duly admitted to probate in that county in March, 1862, he disposed of his estate as follows: “All my real and personal estate I give in trust to my executors for the purpose of disposing of it to the best of their judgment, for the.support and education of my two ■children, the children of Eliza Darragh, and the support of the said Eliza. For that purpose they are to give the said Eliza one thousand dollars a year until the eldest child is nine years old (it is now nearly two), and if either of the children should die before then, there shall be no change-made as to the amount of a thousand dollars a year. Should both children die before they are of age, Eliza Darragh is to receive out of my estate five hundred dollars a year during her life. Should the net income of my estate be two thousand dollars a year, after paying the legacies hereinafter mentioned, I wish my father to have five hundred dollars a year of this income during his life, and if my mother out-lives him, she is to receive it after his death. The residue is to be invested in Memphis City bonds until the children, or the survivor of them, is sent to college. I desire my executors to exercise their best judgment in the selecting of a suitable school, and to be liberal, if the means are in their hands to procure them a good education. But my executors are requested to check and stop the supplies if they should be satisfied there is extravagance by the children, and to pay no bills of theirs not authorized by the executors before contracted by the child, or children; I wish the children plenty, but not waste. ’ ’ And the following: “In the event of the death of both of my children, mentioned above, before they have a child, or children, to inherit to them, I give to Elizabeth Higgins and Mary Ann Hughes all my estate remaining, except the annuities as above mentioned.” And the following: “lap-point James Hughes (my father), Wm. Park and John Cannavan the executors of my will. I know it is an unpleasant task, but I would render either of them any service in my power. They are to be required to give no security, for they will not abuse their trust.”
Of the parties named as executors, James Hughes never qualified and William Park, who qualified, resigned in 1863. John Cannavan, the remaining executor, died in 1877, without, as it appears, having resigned or concluded his trust.
The will was duly admitted to probate in Crittenden county, this State, on the 2d day of March, 1866. There seems to have been at different times a scrambling administration of the estate, conducted by various parties under appointment from the probate court in that county; but, in the view of the case taken by us, it is unnecessary to consider the legal aspect or effect of the administration in this State. It was characterized by unseemly conduct, which can not be contemplated without condemnation.
On the 16th of October, 1866, John Cannavan, the only acting executor, sold and conveyed to Asa Hodges the land in controversy for $1,280 in cash and $1,280 payable twelve months after the date thereof, to secure which a lien was expressly reserved in the face of the deed. The appellees claim title by purchase from Hodges.
Lizzie Darragh, one of the children named in the will, died before the testator; Eliza Darragh, her mother, died in 1865 ; Daniel Darragh, the second child, left his residence in Memphis about 1870, and was not afterwards heard from by his relatives or friends, and is presumed to be dead. He was unmarried, and died without a child to inherit from him. The appellant, Mary Ann Winters, was a married woman when Daniel Darragh died, and so continued to the bringing of this suit.
The appellants seek (1) to recover the land conveyed by Cannavan, as executor, to Hodges; but, in the event that they are not entitled to that relief, they seek (2) to recover the sum of $1,280 with interest, being the unpaid installment of purchase money secured by him on the land, in the deed above mentioned. In support of their claim they say (1) that the will did not confer a power of sale on the executors; (2) that the power conferred could not be executed by one only of the executors; and (3) that a sale was authorized only upon stated conditions, which did not exist when it was made.
The appellees insist (1) that a power of sale was conferred by the will; (2) that it was duly executed; (3) that they purchased in good faith, and entered immediately into possession of the land, that they had continually held it for seventeen years, claiming title against the world, and that they had good title by limitation; (4) that the installment of purchase money was paid; and ( 5 )r that it was barred by limitation. The proof sustained their contention as to their possession of the land. There was trial by the court, and judgment for the defendant.
It is insisted that the judgment is wrong, and should be reversed for many reasons pressed upon our attention. In the view we have taken, it is essential for us to consider only the defense of limitation and such other matters as are involved in its correct determination.
The appellants contend that, until the death of Daniel Darragh, they had no right in possession, but only in remainder ; that they were not entitled to bring any suit either for the land or the purchase money during his life; that the statute was not set in motion against them until he died, and that they brought this suit in apt time thereafter. If mistaken in that contention, their claim to the land must fail against the plea of limitation. Is it correct? Our answer must depend upon the construction of the will, for it makes a great difference whether the executors are held to have acquired the legal title for life or in fee.
The phrase, ‘ ‘ estate remaining, ’ ’ was evidently not used in the legal sense of a remainder, but to cover what was left after special directions were executed. The testator intended his executors to take absolutely the legal title to all his property to pay off the special bequests — to provide as he directed for Eliza Darragh and her children — and, to those ends, to sell or otherwise dispose of his property as their judgment might direct. Whatever was not sold or consumed in paying the bequests and the matured annuities, the trustees were to hold for the purposes indicated; and if both children died without a child to inherit, the estate remaining was to go to the appellants, subject to the payment of the future annuities to Eliza and his father. The grant to the executors and the power to sell are co-exterisive, and neither can be restricted to a life estate or an estate less than a fee, without importing into the terms of the grant a meaning they do not express. As we have seen, there is no purpose indicated that requires such a construction, but on the contrary the natural import of the terms consists with the general purpose of the testator as indicated in the will.
This rule was applied by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Meeks v. Olpherts, 100 U. S., supra, against the right óf cestui que trust in a vested remainder. It has been applied similarly by other courts, and there are now no doubts that it is sound in principle and accepted by the courts.
The question of the application of_the rule to claims of contingent remainders seems to have arisen in but few American cases; but it has been held by the eourts of last resort in two States, that, when the trustee is barred, the cestui que trust holding a contingent remainder is also barred. Edwards v. Woolfolk, 17 B. Mon., 376; Waring v. Cheraw & Darlington R. R. Co., 16 S. C., 416.
In our investigation we have found no case in which a contrary rule was favored, and as the trustee represents alike all cestuis que trust, whether entitled in possession or in remainder, vested or contingent, we think the same rule should apply to the claim of each of them in determining the effect upon it of the bar of the trustee’s right by limitation.
The disability of the cestui que trust is immaterial, if the trustee is under none. Hill on Trustees, *p. 504, and cases above cited.
This court has repeatedly held that the bar by limitation of the right of the life tenant does not affect the right of the remainderman against whom limitation will not run until his right of possession accrues. Those were cases in which the tenant for life and the remainderman each held his estate at law, and where no right of action accrued in behalf of the remainderman, until the estate for life determined. But in this case, as we have seen, the right of action accrued to the trustees for the benefit of all beneficially interested as soon as the adverse possession began, and, if they failed to institute suit, the cestuis que trust might have resorted to equity for the protection of their interests.
The rule does not apply to the claims of the cestuis que tmst against the trustee, or against those who purchase trust property from the trustee in fraud of the trust.
It follows that the right to recover the land, and also the right to foreclose the lien reserved in the deed, were barred by limitation, and that the judgment below was correct.
Affirmed.