122 Ga. 183 | Ga. | 1905
William B. Kendrick died testate in 1892. By his will, which was executed on March 29, 1888, he devised and bequeathed certain portions of his property separately to each of his three sons, William G., Wilson B., and John R. Kendrick, for life, and at the death of each to go to their respective children as a class, in remainder. William, G. Kendrick, one of the life-tenants, died in 1902, leaving one child, namely J. H. Kendrick, who was also his only child in esse when the testator died, and one grandchild, the plaintiff in error, whose parent had died even before the testator had made his will. This grandchild claims an equal share in the remainder with the said child of William G. Kendrick, under the terms of the testator’s will giving the remainder to the “ children ” of William G. Kendrick. The plaintiff in error, as the plaintiff in the court below, also sought a reformation of the testators’s will, whereby she could be added as a beneficiary. The court below sustained a general demurrer to these claims, to which judgment the plaintiff filed her direct bill of exceptions.
It is contended for the plaintiff in error, however, that the code has. completely changed the above inflexible rule of property, by a “ new view of policy,” and hence that a devise of a remainder to the children of the life-tenant as a class, since the code, includes grandchildren of the life-tenant whose parents died before the death of the testator or ‘even before the testator made his will. We are referred to the Civil Code, § 3084, as the law that makes this change or revolution. This section reads as follows: “ Limitations over to heirs, heirs of the body, lineal heirs, lawful heirs, issue, or words of similar import, shall be held to mean children, whether the parents be alive or dead; and under such words, children and the descendants of deceased children, by representation, in being at the time of the vesting of the estate, shall take.”
Under the general or ordinary law of vested remainders, the descendants of deceased children, or grandchildren of the life-tenant, do not take any portion of the remainder by representation or as purchasers, but only by descent where parents had a vested interest in such remainder during the lifetime of the life-tenant. An exception to this rule is where the remainder is vested at the testator’s death in the children, and is expressly made subject to divestment by their dying before the life-tenant, leaving children, in which their descendants take their shares by representation as purchasers, as in the cases of Clanton v. Estes, 77 Ga. 353, 359, 360, Hudgins v. Wilkins, Ibid 556, and Fields v. Lewis, 118 Ga. 573, 576-7. Consequently, “the time of the vesting of the estate,” mentioned in section 3084, when the children and descendants of deceased children, by representation, take the estate in remainder absolutely, must mean the vesting of the remainder in possession at the life-tenant’s death, in order to give the words a proper and legal sense; and hence in this event, as the estate is a vested remainder in the children, defeasible only upon the con
Hence we hold that J. H. Kendrick, who was the only child of William G. Kendrick in esse when the title to the remainder-vested at the testator’s death, and afterwards and at the time of the vesting of the remainder in possession at the life-tenant’s death, was, upon the termination of the life-estate, the sole legal