68 Conn. 207 | Conn. | 1896
The plaintiff’s ownership of a fee simple in the land he covenanted to convey to the defendant, is the only question involved in this ease ; and that question must, be determined by the construction of the third section of his uncle’s will, which reads as follows: “I give and bequeath-to George Lasher Chesebro, son of Gideon P. Chesebro, after the decease of my Wife, my house and buildings, also all my Real Estate, viz.: All my lands, wherever situated, together with any and all estate, right or interest in lands which I may acquire after the date of this Will to him, his heirs and assigns forever. Yet it is my Will that if the said George Lasher Chesebro dies leaving no heirs, lawfully begotten, then in that case I give the above bequests to Daniel Frost Chesebro, son of Gideon P. Chesebro, to him his heirs and assigns forever. If the said Daniel Frost Chesebro dies leaving no heirs, lawfully begotten, then I give the above bequest to Gideon P. Chesebro, to him his heirs and assigns forever.”-
It is evident from every part of the will that the testator,- or whoever may have been the draftsman, not only endeavored to use legal terms without any definite notion of their
On the other hand, where the limitation over on the death of the first devisee is in case of his death without issue, by a settled rule based also on inherent evidence of intent, the estate in the first devisee is limited to an estate tail, and in such case the time of death referred to must necessarily be death after that of the testator. Here too, if all the provisions of the will clearly indicate a different intent, the usual construction must give way to the actual intent; but the results reached in cases where such controlling intent has been found, must be regarded rather as illustrative of the application of a general rule to special cases, which in the nature of things are rarely exactly duplicated, than as precedents which may safely be developed through the process of analogy. And indeed the reports not infrequently fail to disclose all the elements that affected the special result. In White v. White, 52 Conn. 518, there was a bequest to several children, and in the event of none of them having issue, a gift over; the court in holding that the children took an abso
It is unnecessary to cite further examples. The cases, even if they may apparently differ in the application, are all consistent with the principle—that the governing intent of the testator is an intent expressed in the will consistently with the rules of law; th'at the meaning of language used cannot be determined by an arbitrary rule of legal definition, but depends in each case on the peculiar provisions and characteristics of the special will, which must to a large extent be its own interpreter, as well as on the circumstances surrounding the testator; and that the qualification of words apt for devising a fee simple, by following words disposing of the-estate on the death of the devisee in such terms as imply an interest in the heirs of his body, limits the fee devised-to a fee tail, and defines' the death of the first devisee as his death under all circumstances, unless such meaning conflicts with other provisions of the will and the surrounding circumstances.
The present case raises a main question different from that in Turner v. Balfour, supra, and-the special' facts in the'two
The construction of the will is involved only so far as it affects the present title of George. He does not now own an estate in fee simple; and therefore Palmer was not bound to accept the deed tendered, and pay the price agreed upon for a conveyance in fee simple.
Amicable suits are the mere creatures of statute (General Statutes, § 1200), and must strictly follow the statutory provisions. We do not mean to intimate that Gideon P. Chesebro was properly summoned into court after this suit had been entered ; but the record shows that he subsequently voluntarily became a party to the agreed case, and no question as to the procedure is before us.
The Superior Court is advised to render judgment for the defendant.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.