1 Gill 403 | Md. | 1843
delivered the opinion of this court.
The testator having directed the sale of all his real and personal estate, without any preceding devises or bequests, declares that he gives and disposes of the proceeds of sale, “and all the residue and remainder” of his “estate generally,” the one moiety or half part thereof, to trustees, for the benefit of his wife and children in the manner specified in his will, and the remaining moiety or half part, to trustees, for the benefit of the complainants. The testator thus divided his estate into two separate and distinct moieties; giving each moiety to different persons; and by nothing that appears in the will, can we even raise an inference, that upon any contingency or con' dition that might happen, the whole or any portions of those distinct moieties were ever again to commingle; or that the legatees, entitled to one moiety, should ever become entitled
Upon the election of the widow, all devises and bequests made to her by the will were inoperative and void; and the property given to her, except so far as it may be diminished by the exertion of her legal rights, remains as if no such devises and bequests had ever been made to her. Apart from the act of 1810, concerning lapsed legacies and devises, it would stand precisely in the condition in which it would have stood had the wife died in the life-time of the testator. In
But suppose we are wrong in the construction we have given to the will, under the contingencies that have occurred, in regarding the entire moiety as passing to the children under the devise in their favor, subject only to the rights of the widow, in virtue of her election. The legacy to the widow, in virtue of her renunciation, having lapsed or become void, and failing to pass under any of the devises or bequests in the will, becomes a residuum of the testator’s estate, unaffected by any testamentary disposition, and as such, vests not in the complainants, but in his children, as heirs and next of kin.
This case has been brought up to this court by appeal, contrary to the provisions of the act of 1830, ch. 185, and must therefore be dismissed. In venturing, under such circumstances, at the earnest solicitation of the solicitors of both parties, to express our opinion upon the merits of the present contro - versy, we wish it to be distinctly understood, that this act of
APPEAL DISMISSED.