Devane v. . Larkins

56 N.C. 377 | N.C. | 1857

The bill was filed for the recovery of a legacy arising to the plaintiff's intestate, under the will of Benjamin C. Moore, and it was admitted on both sides that the plaintiff's right to *378 recover depended on the construction that might be given to the will. After giving several slaves to a daughter, Mary D. Moore, the will is as follows: Item 3rd. "It is my will and desire, that all the balance of my property, both real and personal, shall go to the benefit and support of my beloved wife, Mary J. Moore, and my other children, Margaret A. Moore, Harriet D. Moore and Porter R. Moore, during my wife's widowhood and the minority of said children; but should my wife marry again, it is my will that she shall receive her distributive share or child's part out of my estate; and should any of my children, named in the clause, live to attain to the age of twenty-one years, then such child or children shall, upon reaching said age, receive his, her or their distributive share or shares, it being equally divided among my wife and three last children named; and at the death of my wife, it is my will and desire, that my first named child, Mary D. Devane, shall have her distributive share or draw of my real estate, her and her lawful heirs."

Porter R. Moore, the legatee named in this clause, died before he reached the age of twenty-one and during the widowhood of his mother, Mary J., and the plaintiff administered on his estate. After the death of Porter R. Moore, the widow, Mary J., intermarried with Joel Hines, and it is contended that on the happening of that event, the estate became divisible, and his intestate was entitled to draw his legacy; that his legacy was vested in the legatee, and only the time of enjoyment was postponed.

The defendants demurred to the bill, generally, for the want of equity.

The cause was set down for argument on the bill and demurrer, and sent to this Court by consent. The only question in the case is, whether the plaintiff's intestate, Porter R. Moore, took a vested or a contingent *379 interest in the residue of the personal property bequeathed to him and others in that clause of his father's will. In support of the demurrer, the counsel for the defendants, contend that the share given to the testator's widow was clearly contingent, and argue from that the contingency of the shares limited to the children. The counsel for the plaintiff insist, on the contrary, that the part bequeathed to the widow was not contingent; but if it were, it did not follow, as a necessary consequence, that the parts given to the children, respectively, were also contingent. We agree with the plaintiff's counsel, that the respective shares of the widow and children, mentioned in the above-mentioned clause, were all vested immediately upon the death of the testator, and that upon a fair construction of the will, the contingency therein mentioned, applied only to the time when each should take his or her share out of the common stock.

It is a well known rule of construction, that if the expressions in a will be ambiguous, and the intention doubtful, the Court leans in favor of holding a legacy to be vested rather than contingent; Stuart v. Bruor, 6 Ves. Jr. 522; Litwell v. Bernard, Ibid. 522. We hardly deem it necessary to call in aid this rule, in endeavoring to carry out the wishes of the testator in the present will. He clearly gives the fund immediately for the benefit and support of his widow and three of his children. They are to have it in common until certain events shall happen, which would make partition necessary. The widow might marry, or the children might, one after another, come of age, and then she or he "shall receive" her or his distributive share. The very terms used, "shall receive," plainly imply that they respectively had vested interests in the property before that time. This construction is, we think, the only fair one which can be put upon the words of the will, without reference to the authority of adjudicated cases; but if any such aid were needed, it may be found in several cases heretofore decided in this Court.

In the case of Johnson v. Baker, 3 Murp. Rep. 318, the testator bequeathed as follows: "I give and bequeath to my *380 said wife, all the property I received with her, to her and her executors and administrators; and the rest of my estate, I also give her, till my son comes of lawful age, when I will that the same shall belong to him, and in the mean time, it is my will and desire, that he be maintained and educated at a reasonable expense out of my estate, in proportion to the value of all my property and its general profits and income."

The widow died, leaving her son surviving, and then he died under the age of twenty-one years. The question was whether the legacy was vested or contingent upon the son's arriving at full age. The Court held that the legacy became vested immediately upon the death of the testator, and that the words "till his son should come to lawful age, when the property should belong to him," did not import a contingency, but only denoted the time when the remainder, limited by the will, was to vest in possession, the bequest being considered as made subject to the intermediate estate created out of it, and made an exception to it.

In Clancy v. Dickey, 2 Hawks' Rep. 498, the will, upon which the question arose, contained the following clause: "It is my will and desire, that my negroes should be kept together until my children arrive to full age, or marry, and then to be divided between my beloved wife and children, share and share alike, equally," and "it is my will and desire, that whenever any of my children arrives at full age, or marries, that his, or her, share of my estate be delivered to him, or her, immediately." The Court held the legacy to the children to be vested during their minority, and not to depend upon their arriving at full age.

The case of Guyther v. Taylor, 3 Ire. Eq. Rep. 323, is an instructive one. A testator, among other bequests, made the following: "It is my will, that my negroes and stock be kept on the plantation whereon I live, until my son Kinchen attains the age of twenty-one years. Item. I give to my son Joshua, $1000, to be raised from the farm. Item. I give and bequeath to my three daughters, Maria A. Guyther, Harriet Jane Taylor and Charity D. Taylor, and my son Kinchen, *381 to be equally divided between them, my negroes, when my son Kinchen arrives to the age of twenty-one years. Item. It is my will that the residue of my estate, of every description, belong to my son Kinchen Taylor." RUFFIN, C. J., in delivering the opinion of the Court said, that in respect to gifts of personal estate by will, the law is, that the word "when," is a word of condition, and imports that the time when the legatee is to receive the bounty is of the essence of the donation, unless there be some expression to explain it or some provision of the context to control it." He then went on to state that a direction in the will, making a disposition of the property until the time specified, is such a provision as will control the general rule. So also the expression in the will "to be equally divided between them," is equivalent to the expression "payable," or "to be paid," in explaining the word "when," or any other word of condition. The opinion concluded, by declaring that the son and three daughters took vested and equal interests, under the clause in which was contained the bequest of the negroes.

The rules established by these cases, appear to be decisive of the present, and the only case which seems to be in opposition to these rules, is that of Anderson v. Felton, 1 Ire. Eq. Rep. 55, cited and relied upon by the defendants' counsel. There, the testator, after giving his manor plantation to his son, and two other plantations to his four daughters, and providing that all his lands should be rented, and his negroes hired out until his youngest daughter became fifteen years old, and that his children should be educated and boarded out of the estate, proceeded as follows: "I likewise will, that at the time my youngest daughter, Sarah Thatch, arrives to the age of fifteen years, all my negroes, money and perishable estate, shall be divided between all my children. In case any of my children should be married before Sarah Thatch arrives at fifteen years of age, then my will is, that his or her board shall be stopped, and no further charge be paid for him or her until Sarah Thatch arrives to fifteen, when he or she shall receive his or her proportional part." The Court *382 decided that the legacies to the children were not vested, but contingent upon their living to the period when the testator's youngest daughter should arrive to the age of fifteen years, or in case of her death, to the time when she would have arrived at that age, had she lived, and that only those of the children who were alive at that period, could take. Upon examining the case, it will be seen that the main ground upon which it was put, was, "that there were no words of gift of the personalty, except by inference from the direction to divide, and as to the period of division, and consequently of gift, the will uses terms of strict condition, `at the time my daughter Sarah arrives at fifteen,' and `when he or she shall receive,'" c. The Court also remarked, that the intermediate profits were not given to the children as distinct from the capital, nor for the purpose of maintenance; that the maintenance was merely a charge, which might consume the profits, or it might greatly exceed it, and in that case, the capital must supply the deficiency; that besides, the maintenance was to cease upon the marriage of a child before the division. The Court, therefore, said, "The provision for maintenance, will not bring the case within that exception to the general principle, which is founded on a gift of the intermediate interest or profit, to the same legatee, to whom the future legacy of the capital is given. That does not apply, if the maintenance is not to absorb the whole amount of profits, or if it be not restricted to that as the only fund; Pulsford v. Hunter, 3 Bro. Ch. Ca. 416; Hanson v. Graham, 6 Ves. Jr., 249; 1 Rop. on Leg. 497."

Thus explained, the case is not at all inconsistent with the others to which we have referred, and presents no obstacle in the way of our conclusion, that, in the present case, the legacy to the widow and children became vested in them, as tenants in common, immediately upon the death of the testator.

The demurrer must be overruled with costs, and the cause must be remitted to the Court below, in order that the defendants may put in answers.

PER CURIAM, Decree accordingly. *383

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