130 Ga. 782 | Ga. | 1908
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
• It was further urged that certain persons who were parties in the trial court were not served with the bill of exceptions and did not acknowledge service. The case originated in an equitable petition filed by an administrator with the will annexed, for construction of the will and direction as to payment to various persons claiming as devisees, or their heirs, or by virtue of conveyances from alleged devisees. The administrator filed the petition for direction, but was not a party in interest, save as to a prayer to be allowed the expense of the proceeding. The contest was between those claiming under the will. The verdict and decree were in favor of some and against others. All who won and were interested in sustaining the decree were made parties defendant in error and were served. Some who lost were made parties plaintiff in error, some were not. A motion was made'to make the latter parties plaintiff in error if necessary. No reason appears why this can not be done. We grant the motion. Western Union Tel. Co. v. Griffith, 111 Ga. 552 (36 S. E. 859). It did not appear that those who made transfers were warrantors.
It is further contended that some of the plaintiffs in error are designated merely as “the representatives of J. P. Hall & Co.,” and that this is too vague and imperfect a statement of parties. The point is well taken; but elsewhere in the bill of exceptions it appears (from the copy of the equitable petition) who are claimed to be the representatives of J. E. Hall & Co., and the amendment proposed to the bill of exceptions states distinctly the parties. It is allowed and the point is overruled. See Joiner v. Singletary, 106 Ga. 257 (32 S. E. 90).
A further contention is that there is no sufficient assignment of error. It is recited, that no issue was submitted except one of law involved in the construction of the will; that the presiding judge directed a certain verdict, and then made it the decree of the court (the verdict and decree being copied); and that certain named parties “except to the judgment and decree above set out, and now assign said judgment and decree as erroneous,” on several stated grounds, which attack in detail the construction put upon the will by the court. We think this is a' substantial exception to
Whether words of survivorship in a will creating a remainder after a life-estate refer to the death of the testator or to the death of the life-tenant has created no little conflict in decisions. The earlier English cases were practically unanimous in holding that such words referred to the death of the testator, unless they were expressly or manifestly made referable to some other period. Then exceptions began to be made, holding that, under the language of particular wills, it was the intention of the testators for the words of survivorship to apply to the time of the death of the life-tenant or to the time of distribution. Some of the wills considered contained expressions which might legitimately indicate such an intent by the testator; in others the grounds of differentiation from the general rule previously laid down were unsubstantial and arti
In this State the rule has been adopted into the code thus: “The law favors the vesting of remainders in all cases of doubt. In •construing wills, words of survivorship shall refer to the death •of the testator in order to vest remainders, unless a manifest intention to the contrary appears.” (Civil Code, §3104.) Does “a manifest intention to the contrary” appear in this case, so as to take it out of the rulings in former cases? In Vickers v. Stone, 4 Ga. 461, supra, the language under construction was a bequest of real and personal property to the wife of the testator, for the raising and education of his children, “during her natural Ufe; and
These authorities are conclusive on the subject in this State, although there may be contrary rulings elsewhere as to the effect of a direction to sell and divide proceeds, as there undoubtedly are. There is nothing else in the will which is sufficient to show a manifest intention to the contrary. It is suggested that selling the land converted it into personalty; and in a few of the English decisions the former rule has been adhered to in respect to realty, though changed as to personalty. But there seems to be no sound distinction, at least under the law of this State. Both realty and personalty were included in the wills construed in the cases cited from the 4th Georgia Reports; and this has become a settled rule of construction. In this State, too, any estate may be created in personalty which can be created in realty. Civil Code, §3080.
It follows, from what has been said, that the bequest involved in this ease created a life-estate in the wife, that the words of survivorship .applied to the time of the death of the testator, and that his children then living (none having died) took a vested remainder estate. Hence a conveyance by such a child after fhe death of the testator carried the vested interest of the maker, and not a. mere contingency or defeasible estate.
Judgment reversed.