36 Md. 168 | Md. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The decree below declares the seventh clause of the will of Benjamin Deford void and inoperative, because it infringes the rule against perpetuities. This part of the decree cannot be reversed without overruling the decision in Barnum’s Case, 26 Md., 119.
The testator commences this clause of his will by declaring, “WhereasT have now a number of grand-daughters and may have many more, and believe I will confer more good on my family by making proper provisions for my said granddaughters than by any other disposition of my property,” and he therefore “gives, devises and bequeaths, certain described real estate and bank stock to two trustees and the survivor of them and the heirs, executors, administrators and assigns of the survivor in trust, to and for the following uses and purposes, viz: to receive the rents and profits thereof and keep the same in order, to pay all taxes, expenses and charges, including a reasonable compensation for services as trustees,
It is plain this trust may continue beyond a life or lives in being at the time of its commencement, and twenty-one years and a fraction of a year, to cover the period of gestation, thereafter, and that during this time the property may be placed extra commercium. The trustees are. to hold the property and apply its net income not solely for the benefit of granddaughters living at the testator’s death, but also for the benefit of all that may at any time thereafter descend from any of the testator’s five children alive at his decease, and is to continue until his grand-daughters, then born or thereafter to be born, be reduced in number to two; then only is the trust to cease and the property to be divided. Thus many grand-daughters of the testator’s living children may be born years after his death, and their number may not be reduced to two until long after the expiration of the lives in being when the will took effect, and the allowed period thereafter.
In Barnum’s Will the devise was to trustees in trust with a leasing power to continue, “ so long as my said children, or any children or descendants of them, or of any of them, left by them, or any of them, at the death of them, or any of them, shall live,” and the Court held it void because the trust might extend so as to embrace persons and lives not in esse at the time of the testator’s death. After stating the rule that the law would not permit an estate to be so limited as by possibility to extend beyond a life or lives in being, and twenty-one years and a fraction thereafter, they said the case before them did not present the question “as to the future vesting of an executory estate, in order to determine the tvalidity of the preceding one; but simply whether the trusts of the will require in their execution a longer period than that prescribed by the rule against perpetuities, and, therefore, render the property devised to the trustees inalienable during that time; if so, the law denounces the devise in trust a sa perpetuity, and declares it void.” All the reasoning in that case applies here, and we regard it as a binding and conclusive authority which must, notwithstanding the very able argument of counsel to the contrary, control our judgment in the present case. The Oourts in prescribing and settling the rule against perpetuities have founded it in true wisdom. They have thereby
The decree after declaring the seventh clause void, further declares the testator to have died intestate of all the estate, and property thereby attempted to be disposed of, thus devolving the bank stock therein meiitioned upon the next of kin. The appellants insist this is error, and that this stock as personal property passes under the residuary clause.
This question has also been settled by express decisions of this Court. In Tongue vs. Nutwell, 13 Md., 415, it was decided that in .case of a devise of real estate void by the rules of law the land descended to the heirs-at-law and did not pass to the residuary devisee. In their opinion the Court admit the preponderance of authority outside of Maryland was in favor of the residuary devisee, and base their decision upon Lingan vs. Carroll, 3 H. & McH., 333, a case decided nearly seventy years before, never overruled or doubted, but followed'and acquiesced in by the legal profession as sound Maryland law. In Cox vs. Harris, 17 Md., 23, a similar question in reference to a void bequest of personal property arose, and the Court held the residuary legatees entitled to it, according to the law recognized by the whole current of authorities both in England and in this country. They referred to Tongue vs. Nutwell, and said, they did not intend to disturb the law established by that case, that being a devise of realty, affecting the rights of an heir-at-law which have always been regarded even in this State, and that the distinction between a void devise of real estate and a bequest of personal property, was sanctioned by the authorities referred to, and should be maintained. In Barnum’s case, the Court remarked that if the clauses declared void and the residuary clause constituted the entire will, the testator would be held to haVe died intestate of his “hotel property,” under the ruling in Tongue vs. Nutwell. In using the terms “hotel property” the Court, in our opinion, had reference to the real estate of which the property thus described chiefly consisted, and did not advert to the fact
We have decided the seventh clause of the will to be void without considering whether any of the appellees have the right to raise that question, because we consider it presented by the appeal- taken by the appellants, and the position they assume in this Court. They insist the decree is wrong because it takes the bank stock away from them as residuary legatees. Whether that be error or not must depend in the first place upon the validity or invalidity of this clause, for if that be valid the appellants as residuary legatees have no title and have not been prejudiced by the decree they have appealed from.
Decree reversed and cause remanded.