135 Mass. 138 | Mass. | 1883
The testator left a fund, consisting of both real and personal property, in trust, 1st, to pay the net income to his wife for her life; 2d, after her death, to pay from the principal of the fund certain specific sums to various persons and
The question to what period survivorship is to relate must. depend rather upon the apparent intention of the testator, in each case, than upon any rigid rule. Here were two separate life estates, preceding the time for distribution. The various legacies to persons from the principal of the fund were to be paid only in case the legatees named should survive the testator’s wife. The testator had in mind, in these clauses, a later period of survivorship than his own death. All the residue of said trust fund, which was finally to be divided, was what would be left after the end of both of the life estates, and after the payment of all of the specific sums to the different persons and societies named. This residue was not ascertainable till the time came for its distribution. The word “surviving” more naturally relates to that time when the residue was to be ascertained and distributed. The - persons who are to take are not mentioned by name; but the language used was equivalent to saying, “ after the decease of the survivor of the last two life tenants, and the payment to Harvard University, then to pay over the residue to my surviving nephews and nieces,” or “to pay over the residue to my then surviving nephews and nieces.” This gives effect to the word “ surviving.”
This construction seems best to carry out the apparent intention of the testator, and is also in accord with the course of the more recent decisions, under wills somewhat similar. 2 Jarm. Wills (5th Am. ed. by Bigelow), 154, n., 727-738. See also Hulburt v. Emerson, 16 Mass. 241; Olney v. Hull, 21 Pick. 311. The rule that the law leans towards vested remainders always yields when a contrary intention of the testator is to be gathered from
In Blanchard v. Blanchard, 1 Allen, 223, the devise of the remainder was directly to five persons by name, with a proviso that, in case any of them should die before the life tenant, then the property should be equally divided among the survivors; and it was held that they all took vested remainders, which were determinable upon the happening of the contingency. The contingency, however, did not happen in fact, the question being whether one of them had an estate which he could convey before the death of the life tenant; and the decision is no authority to show that, in case any one of the remaindermen there named had died before the time for distribution, his heirs or legal representatives would have been entitled.
Decree accordingly.