14 N.J.L. 68 | N.J. | 1833
The opinion of the court was delivered by the Chief Justice.
The only question submitted to the court in this cause, is, whether a certain lot of land not specifically mentioned, or disposed of in the will of Joseph Copner, deceased, passed under the residuary clause contained therein. If it did, then the lessors of the plaintiff are entitled to recover; if it did not, then there must be judgment for the defendant. There is nothing in the introductory clause of the will, to show that the testator had any special intention to make a testamentary disposition of his whole estate—but the presumption is that such was
In the case of Den v. Snitcher, the attention of the court was called to this clause of the will of Joseph Copner, not for the purpose of deciding what did pass under it; but to enquire whether any argument could be drawn from the language in which it is conceived, to favor the idea, that the testator in a previous part of the will, had intended to convey only an estate in fee tail, to his son Samuel. In that case I expressed an opinion, that I could find in this chmse, no indication of such an intent; and felt rather inclined to believe, from the peculiar phraseology employed by the testator, in connection with the fund he had raised by a previous part of his will, for the payment of his debts, that the surplus of that fund was what he had in his mind when he framed this residuary clause. But that was a very different question from the one now under consideration. 'It cannot be denied, that the clause standing by itself uncontroled and unexplained by other parts of the will, is expressed in terms that will comprehend and pass real estate. But it is a question ot intention; that intention must be collected from the whole will and not from any clause taken by itself. The testator seems to have been a man of large property, and he has made very extensive and specific devises of different plantations and tracts of land. It is not likely therefore, that he intended to die intestate, as to
If the testator had set out, with an expressed intention to make a testamentary disposition of his whole property, I should have had no doubt; for though introductory words to that effect, cannot enlarge the estate of a devisee, unless there are words in the devise itself, sufficient to carry the degree of interest contended for; yet, they may assist to shew the intention of the testator; and courts will lay hold of them, as they will of every other circumstance in a will, which may help them to arrive at a right and true construction of it. 2 Prest, on Real Estates, 188; Hogan v. Jackson, Cowp. 299; Doe v. Spearing, 6 T. R. 610 ; Den v. Mellor, 5 T. R. 563; Goodright v. Stocker, 5 T. R. 13. And in Smith v. Coffin, 2 Hen. Bl. R. 444, Mr. Justice Buffer, says, where it is apparent, in the introductory part of the will, that the testator meant to dispose ofthe whole of his property, and the expressions in ,the residuary clause, may include real estate, it is to be taken in the largest sense, in order to correspond with the introductory part.
But in this case, there is no such expressed intention, and we are left to the words of the clause itself, for the meaning of the testator. Those words are, “ all the remainder of the rents, profits, and residue of my estate, after payment of my debts.” If the words rents and profits, had stood alone, they could have been satisfactory and exclusively referred to the remainder of the rents which the testator had previously devoted to the payment of his debts and funeral expenses. ' But the words “ residue of my estate,’’cannot be so easily disposed of. It is true, the word estate, is susceptible of different meanings, according to the connection in which it .is used, and the subject matter to
IfoKD, J. concurred.
Cited in Den v. Young, 4 Zab. 784.