| Mass. | Apr 1, 1904

Loring-, J.

It is plain that if the words “ such of ” had not been inserted in the twelfth clause of the will, the plaintiffs’ testator would have had a remainder vested subject to b,e divested by his dying leaving issue him surviving at the date of his decease.

It is also plain that a mistake has been made in drafting the will. The sentence and limitation which were begun by the words “such of” stand unfinished and incomplete.

And finally it is plain that the mistake was either in the insertion of these words or in the omission of the description and limitation begun by them.

The surviving children of Mary D. Child, who are the defendants here, ask us to hold that the mistake consists in omitting the rest of the sentence, and to correct the mistake by reading into this article of the will the words “ as survive my wife,” or their equivalent.

The leading case in this Commonwealth on supplying words in a will is Metcalf v. Framingham Parish, 128 Mass. 370" court="Mass." date_filed="1880-02-26" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/metcalf-v-first-parish-in-framingham-6419878?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6419878">128 Mass. 370, which has been often cited and followed. J It is not the province of the court to conjecture what the intention of the testator would have been had the omission been called to Ifis attention. It is the more restricted duty of ascertaining his intention by construing the words which he has used and of supplying the words which the court finds necessary to express that intention fully. It cannot supply words to give effect to an intention which he has not expressed by the words used by him. In construing the particular words in question they are to be construed in the light of the will as a whole; see Bradlee v. Andrews, 137 Mass. 50" court="Mass." date_filed="1884-03-10" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/bradlee-v-andrews-6421271?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6421271">137 Mass. 50, 53 ; Towle v. Delano, 144 Mass. 95" court="Mass." date_filed="1887-02-25" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/towle-v-delano-6422379?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6422379">144 Mass. 95, 99 ; see also Lord Halsbury in Inderwick v. Tatchell, [1903] A. C. 120,122. Or, as it was well put by V. C. Page Wood in Hope v. Potter, 3 Kay & Johns. 206, 209, 210, cited and relied on by the defendants, words can be supplied only where it is plajn by necessary implication what the words to be supplied are. !

*379If we pass by the difficulty that it is no more than a conjecture whether the mistake in the case at bar consists in leaving in the words “ such of ” or in leaving out the dependent clause, and assume in favor of the defendants from the presence in the will of the words “ such of ” that the mistake consists in the omission of the dependent clause, it is a matter of conjecture what the omitted dependent clause is. It must be gathered from the gift over contained in the following sentence, the sentence with which the article ends, construed in the light of the rest of the will. This sentence makes provision for the brother or any of the sisters, or any of the children of the deceased sister Mary “leaving children,” in case they die either during the lifetime of the testator or during the continuance of the trust for the life tenant, and the provision made is that “ such children shall take the parent’s share by right of representation.” Judged by this sentence, the. omitted clause was to confine the provision made by it to the class consisting of the brother, the sisters, and the children of the deceased sister Mary who did not die leaving children; but there is nothing to indicate by necessary implication (to use the phrase used by Y. C. Page Wood) that the prior gift to the class above named was to such of that class as survived the duration of the trust for the life tenant, and did not include all of the class who survived the testator and who subsequently died leaving no children them surviving at the date of their several deaths. It is at least a matter of conjecture which of these two was the provision contained in the omitted clause, and for that reason no missing words can be supplied.

Indeed if we were at liberty to indulge in conjectures of this kind, it is at least as probable that the omitted clause did include those surviving the testator and dying not leaving children at the date of their several deaths. The gift over is a gift to take effect in case the brother or any sister or any child of the deceased sister Mary should die “ in my lifetime, or before said trust shall terminate,” and the omitted clause (following the lines of the following sentence containing the gift over) may well have been a clause which together with the words of the will gave the remainder to “ such of my brother and sisters and children of my deceased sister as shall have survived me and *380shall not die leaving children before the termination of the trust.”

The case principally relied on by the defendants is Donnell v. Newburyport Homoeopathic Hospital, 179 Mass. 187" court="Mass." date_filed="1901-05-24" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/donnell-v-newburyport-homœopathic-hospital-6427509?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6427509">179 Mass. 187. That is a case where there was a gift over by way of substitution, and the gift over was not commensurate with the previous gift; it was held that the gift over was to be cut down to fit the previous gift.

A decree must be entered declaring that Samuel G. Child had a vested interest in the land described in the bill of complaint, and directing the $7,500, the proceeds of the sale of the interest of Samuel G. Child, to be transferred to the plaintiffs as executors.

So ordered.

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