53 Md. 317 | Md. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The will of Mary E. A. Reed is dated 15th March, 1847, and was admitted to probate in July, 1855. In April,
The exceptions are: “1. That the administrators d. b. n. c. t. a. were not authorized to make the sale.
“ 2. That the cestui que trust named in the will of the said Mary E. Reed was, and is not a corporate body, and has no existence.
“ 3. That the alleged power of sale in said will depends on a contingency which may or may not happen, and is therefore void.
“4. That under the item of said will in which said alleged authority is claimed, Elizabeth Baynard, late of Caroline County, deceased, took a fee simple estate.”
In effect all these exceptions mean hut one thing, that the devise over, in the event of the death of Elizabeth Baynard without issue, is void, and as the object of the sale no longer exists, the sale cannot he made; and the property must be left without sale, to the heirs-at-law of Elizabeth Baynard, to whom it is alleged the property passes in fee. The clause of the will on which the question arises is as follows: “ To my cousin, Elizabeth Baynard, I will and bequeath the late residence of my father in Greensboro’, consisting of one lot, a two story double house, stone house, granary, carriage house and stable, and all the buildings thereon, during her life; and in case
The first object in construing a will is to ascertain the intent of the testator, if possible from the language of the whole will, and then to give it effect, if consistent with the rules of law. Here the devise is to Elizabeth Baynard for life. She is the first object of bounty in this bequest.
“ In case of her death without issue ” there is a devise over to the “ Home and Foreign Missionary fund of the Maryland Protestant Episcopal Church.” If she has issue the charitable bequest is not to take effect. The inference, therefore, is irresistible that the testator intended that if Elizabeth Baynard had issue, that such issue should have and enjoy the property; for it would he, in the language of Mr. Jarman, “ attributing the grossest absurdity to the testator,” to suppose she intended her missionary charity to fail because of the first object of her bounty having issue, unless she intended that issue should enjoy her bounty in preference to the charitable object to which she gave the property in the event of there being-no such issue. 1 Jarman on Wills, 431.
If issue in this will is to be regarded in its usual and technical sense as meaning the same as “heirs of her body,” the devise being Elizabeth Baynard for life, follow by a devise to her issue, the word issue must he construed under the operation of the rule in Shelley’s Case, as a word of limitation, and not as a word of purchase, and the two estates would coalesce and form an estate tail general in the first taker. The Yice-Chancellor in Mackell vs. Weeding, 8 Simons, 4, says, in a case of like character; “ I consider it to he a settled point that whether an estate he given in
In the case of Shreve vs. Shreve, 43 Md., 382, and Timanus vs. Dugan, 46 Md., 420, relied on by the counsel of the appellees as controlling the construction of this will, there were superadded words which indicated to the mind of the Court, a clear purpose on the part of the testators to create in the issue a new stock of inheritance, and also to restrict the meaning of the word issue. It was the presence of such words in the context, and superadded to the word issue, that compelled the Court to the conclusion that the testators did not mean to give the fee to the first takers.
In Shreve vs. Shreve, the Court distinctly announces that the rule in Shelley’s Oase is a part of the law of Maryland, and to be applied in all cases where the language of the will does not disclose a contrary and clearly defined purpose, that the effect of that rule shall not take place. In Thomas vs. Higgins, 47 Md., 439, the rule was afterwards applied in the case of a deed where the word issue was so used as to raise the question. It is true, that in wills the word issue is more flexible than in deeds, and all technical words are, in wills, treated with less strictness in the effort to reach the true meaning of the testator. But when the will gives no clue by which the intention of the testator can be seen to have been not to use the words technically, the technical meaning will be applied.
Such being the true construction of the will in this regard, the only remaining question is, was the sale of the property mentioned in that clause of the will, rightfully made and ought it to stand.
It is proper to notice that this sale is not being questioned collaterally, but is assailed directly in the Court directing it to be made, on the question of ratification; and it would be a great injustice to the fee owners to make them take the proceeds of sale, less expenses and commissions, when the sale can be arrested and set aside without injustice to the purchaser. Although he may have bought without notice, the objections came before his purchase was perfected. If we were regarding this case in an equitaable aspect only, there would be good ground for reversal. Justice Washington, in Craig vs. Leslie, 3 Wheaton, 583, says the rule is well established in equity that where the
The order of the Orphans’ Court ratifying the sale will be reversed and cause remanded, that the sale may be set-aside.
Order reversed, with costs, and cause remanded.