45 A. 183 | Md. | 1900
By this appeal we are called upon to determine what estate, if any, was vested in James Pike Ellicott under the last will and testament of Mrs. Elizabeth E. Pike. He was the grand-nephew of the testatrix and in his fifteenth year at the time of her death, which occurred in 1891 — a few months after her will was executed. He died intestate, in March, 1898, having been twenty-one years of age the December preceding his death. The will is divided into fourteen paragraphs and the testatrix stated in it that it was written by herself. She first named the executor and trustee, then made a number of devises and bequests, and after giving ten thousand dollars to each of the four children of her brother, William M. Ellicott, in addition to an interest in another fund, made them her residuary devisees and legatees. The paragraphs directly involved in this proceeding are the fifth, tenth and eleventh, and are as follows:
"5. I leave the rest of my Baltimore property to my grand-nephew, James Pike Ellicott, for the purpose of securing to him a liberal education. He shall remain at some good preparatory school in the State of Massachusetts until he is fitted to enter either Harvard or Yale university, where he shall remain until he has finished the collegiate course. If, however, through his own disinclination or incapacity, or the indifference of his parent or guardians, he should fail to carry out these intentions, then the money which has been left to him for this purpose shall pass away from him entirely into the body of my estate. * * *
"10. I give and bequeath to my grand-nephew, James Pike Ellicott, in fee-simple, all my real estate situated in the town of Robbinston, Maine, and also all furniture, plate, horses, carriages, boats, harness, by which I mean everything of every description that I own in the town of Robbinston, and not hereafter specially disposed of by me. *323
"11. Provided, however, that all the estate and property devised and bequeathed by me to James Pike Ellicott shall be held by my trustee until the said James Pike Ellicott shall have attained the age of twenty-five years. In trust, to rent, manage and take charge of the real estate, keep it in repair, pay taxes and expenses incidental thereto, also to keep the personal estate invested in good securities and collect and receive all rents, increase and interest accruing on said estate, and devote the net income arising therefrom to the special object mentioned above, viz., the education of James Pike Ellicott. It being my desire that he may be thoroughly prepared to enter into any profession for which he has inclination or capacity. All surplus income arising from the property given for his use by this my will, not required in the earlier years of his minority for his education and maintenance, to be carefully invested and accumulated for the later period of his minority, when his collegiate expenses will be increased. In case the above directions have been carried out upon my said nephew, James Pike Ellicott, attaining the age of twenty-five years, I desire my trustees to deliver over the property and estate into his hands and possession. But I specially desire my said grand-nephew not to sell the Robbinston place till he shall attain the age of twenty-five years, as it is my earnest wish to keep the property as long as possible in the family, and have it go with the name."
James Pike Ellicott graduated at a preparatory school in Massachusetts, and in the fall of 1896 entered the freshman class at Harvard. He was in the sophomore class when he died, but was still under some conditions, either as to his entrance into college or imposed afterwards. The testimony is not altogether clear about that, but it is not material. The question is whether under this will he had such a vested estate as descended to his heirs or whether the property referred to passed to the residuary devisees and legatees named in the will. The Court below decreed that the part of the estate of Mrs. Pike, thus left young Ellicott, became *324 at her death, vested in him, and at his death descended to his heirs at law, and directed the trustee to at once relinquish control over the same, the period during which he as trustee was directed to hold it having been terminated by the death of young Ellicott. From that decree this appeal was taken.
It may be conceded that the desire of the testratrix, most conspicuously made known in her will, was that this grand-nephew, who was named after her deceased husband, should receive such an education and be so prepared for the battle of life that he would reflect credit upon him whose name he bore, although it does not follow that she was not in part influenced by her affection and regard for him. The testimony shows that she always took a very special interest in him, paid nearly if not all his expenses after he went to Adams Academy, and gave means from time to time for his benefit. He at least does not seem to have been in either of the classes of which she says "I have not thought it necessary to divide my property among those who have received a larger amount from others than I can give to any. Still less, have I cared to remember any who have shamefully and despitefully used me." Her idea undoubtedly was that the best way to provide for him was to have him properly educated, but that was not all, for after he received the education contemplated by her, he was to have the corpus of the estate. If she had only been interested in his education and had intended that the property set apart for him should be used for that purpose alone, then she could, and probably would, have directed that the corpus, on his arrival at the age of twenty-five years, should be otherwise disposed of.
But let us examine the will itself to ascertain the legal effect of the terms used therein, always keeping in mind the intention of the testatrix so far as indicated by the will and such circumstances as we can properly consider. In paragraph 5 the language is: "I leave the rest of my Baltimore property to my grand-nephew James Pike Ellicott *325
for the purpose of securing to him a liberal education." In paragraph 10: "I give and bequeath" to him "in fee-simple all my real estate situated in the town of Robbinston, Maine, also all furniture, etc.," and in the part that created the trust she said: "provided, however, that all the estate and propertydevised and bequeathed by me to James Pike Ellicott" shall be held by the trustee until said Ellicott shall have attained the age of twenty-five years, in trust, etc. The language thus used by the testatrix in making provision for him was not only sufficient to vest an equitable estate in him, immediately upon her death, but unless qualified by some other parts of the will is absolutely conclusive of her intention to do so. The form of the gift "shows that a present and not a future estate was intended." In re Stickney's Will,
The only other provision in the trust which reflects upon the question we are to determine, besides what is in paragraph five, of which we will speak presently, is: "In case the above directions have been carried out, upon my said nephew, James Pike Ellicott, attaining the age of twenty-five years, I desire my trustee to deliver over the property and estate into his hands and possession." The direction "to deliver over the property and estate into his hands and possession," in so far as it reflects upon the question whether the estate was intended by the testatrix to be vested in her nephew, indicates that it was. She did not direct him under those circumstances to convey property to her nephew, the title to which up to that time was not vested in him, but simply to deliver over and give the possession of "the property and estate" — which imports that she considered it already vested in him, but that he, up to that *327 time, was to be kept out of the possession of the corpus. Nor did she make any provision for the trustee conveying it to any other person or persons if her directions had not been carried out. She therefore could not have supposed that the property was vested in the trustee, excepting such legal title as was in him by intendment of law, as would enable him to discharge his duties as such trustee. She certainly did not intend that from the time of her death until the period when her grand-nephew would reach the age of twenty-five years, if he lived that long, the beneficial interest in the estate should be in the residuary devisees, for there is nothing in the will to suggest that, and as she devised nothing to the trustee, and the legal title was only in him by intendment of law, she must have intended that the equitable interest should be somewhere, and the only possible place indicated by her will where it could be, if not in the trustee, was in James Pike Ellicott, so long as he had not forfeited his right to it.
The provision, "In case the above directions have been carried out," undoubtedly refers to the directions contained in paragraph 5. They are that James shall remain in a good preparatory school in Massachusetts until he was fitted to enter either Harvard or Yale," where he shall remain until he has finished the collegiate course. If, however, through his own disinclination, or incapacity, or the indifference of his parent or guardian, he shall fail to carry out these intentions, then the money which has been left to him for this purpose shall pass away from him entirely into the body of my estate." The latter part of the clause just quoted adds strength to the appellee's contention that the title to the equitable estate in this property vested in James at the death of the testatrix. It is that "the money whichhas been left to him for this purpose shall pass away from himentirely" — thus not only speaking of the money which had beenleft to him, but when she said it "shall pass away from him"
it seems to us that the necessary inference is that it was, in her opinion, in him, and hence could "pass *328 away from him," upon his failure to carry out her intentions as therein expressed. At the argument the meaning of the word "money" in the connection in which it is used was discussed — the appellants contending that its usual and ordinary meaning should be given it, and that its use showed that the intention of the testatrix was not to give him any estate in the corpus, unless and until he graduated, but only to give him in the meantime so much of the income as was necessary to enable him to become entitled to the corpus by the time he should arrive at the age of twenty-five years, by his graduation at or before that time. They say he took an equitable interest in the income, subject to the condition precedent that he should finish his collegiate course at Harvard or Yale by the time he arrived at the age of twenty-five years, and if he graduated prior to that time the equitable estate in the income, subject to such condition precedent, was to become a vested estate in the corpus, of which, upon his arrival at that age, he was to receive the actual possession, freed from the trust. Although the will furnishes some ground for the contrary contention, it may be conceded that the word "money," thus used by the testatrix, is equivalent to "income" and only meant that. In paragraph 3, in making certain provisions for her sister, Rebecca, the testatrix apparently used the word in its ordinary sense, and she may have intended to do so in this paragraph. But we cannot admit that it at all follows that this use by her of the term "money" shows any intention on her part that he should not have a vested equitable interest in the estate. Until he was twenty-five he was only to have the possession and use of the income — the money. That is all that owners of equitable estates in properties held by trustees usually have. There are, of course, cases in which they may have the enjoyment and use of the corpus, but if the legal title of real and personal property is held by a trustee for the beneficial use of another who gets the income, the latter ordinarily has an equitable, vested interest which is liable for his debts and, if not limited to life *329
or some definite period, it will descend to his heirs at law or next of kin. Generally if the interest from the investment of a fund or the profits of an estate be given by will, the devisee will take the fund or estate absolutely, although that does not obtain when the will shows a different intent, (Cooke v.Husbands,
The only causes of his failure to carry out these instructions, which should work the result mentioned, assigned by the testatrix, are "his own disinclination, or incapacity, or the indifference of his parent or guardian." The one relied on by the appellants is his "incapacity," and they contend that his death, which prevented him from graduating, whatever he might have done if his life had been spared, is included in that term. But while it is true that the word "incapacity" may sometimes apply to physical as well as mental conditions, was it used by the testatrix in that broad *330 sense? It was used in connection with the education of this young man — with reference to his power to complete the collegiate course provided at Harvard or Yale. It was not a question whether he would have the necessary funds, for those she was providing, nor the inclination to study, as that was included by another term, but it evidently applied to his mental powers. If while he was at the preparatory school, his teacher had said of him that he did not have the "capacity" to graduate at Harvard, would that have been understood to have referred to any other than his mental capacity? If when he entered Harvard it had been said, he will fail to graduate by reason of his "incapacity," would it have been thought to refer to his death before graduating? Of course his death would cause him to be incapable of graduating, but that is not the term that would be used, if it was meant that he would not graduate because he would die before doing so. If the testatrix had meant that "if for any reason whatever" he did not graduate, he should forfeit the estate, it would have been easy to say so, and it is only reasonable to suppose that if she had intended that if his death prevented his graduation it should be forfeited, she would not only have said so in terms that would have admitted of no doubt, but she would probably have directed where it should in that event go. She did so in other instances and she was evidently a woman of considerable intelligence and with very decided convictions as to how her estate should go.
The concluding clause of paragraph eleven, "But I specially desire my said grand-nephew not to sell the Robbinston place till he shall attain the age of twenty-five years, as it is my earnest wish to keep the property as long as possible in the family, and have it go with the name," is relied on by the appellees. When that is taken in connection with the tenth paragraph in which she gave him that property in fee-simple it certainly does afford some evidence of her intention that the property should be vested in him, before he was twenty-five years of age, but if the appellants' *331 theory was correct, that she intended him to have a vested equitable estate as soon as he graduated, although he was not twenty-five, it is possible that she might have for that reason placed that provision in the will, and therefore in considering the question we have not attached as much importance to it as might otherwise have been done.
Taking the whole will into consideration, our conclusion is that the testatrix intended to vest an equitable estate in the properties mentioned in her grand-nephew, at the time of her death, subject to be divested by the non-performance of the condition imposed by her, which was a condition subsequent, and not precedent. In that conclusion we are supported by the settled rules of construction of wills and the presumptions of law. It undoubtedly favors the early vesting of estates, as has often been said by this and other Courts, but nowhere more emphatically than in Tayloe v. Mosher,
Having determined that this was a condition subsequent, the estate was not divested by the death of James who was engaged in fulfilling the condition when stricken down. The performance becoming impossible by the act of God, *332
it is dispensed with and the estate vested absolutely. 6 Ency.of Law (2nd ed.) 506; Hammond v. Hammond,
We are, then, of the opinion that this estate having vested in James Pike Ellicott, subject to the condition subsequent, the non-performance of which is excused by his death, descended to his heirs at law and next of kin, and the decree will be affirmed. But as it was proper, for the protection of the trustee and to settle the rights of the parties, to have the will construed, we will direct that the costs be paid out of the estate.
Decree affirmed, costs to be paid out of the estate.
(Decided January 9th, 1900).