35 A. 940 | N.H. | 1893
It was held in Kimball v. Bible Society,
Before considering the question, it is necessary to determine whether the testimony offered by the sons is to be taken into *505
account. If the testatrix had declared in positive and unmistakable terms, orally or in writing, that she did not intend to execute the power by the residuary cause of her first will, the declaration could not be considered in the interpretation of either will. Utley v. Titcomb,
The testatrix had all the fruits of the trust property so long as she lived, and at her decease it was to descend to her heirs unless she disposed of it by will. She had as complete and absolute testamentary power over the property as she had over any property that she owned. Such use, power, and provision in respect to descent would impress one unfamiliar with the technical rules of law as amounting to practical ownership. The phrase "all the rest, residue, and remainder of my estate and property of every description" would be understood by such a person to include property so held. There is nothing in the language of the will tending to show that the testatrix did not intend to execute the power, except the absence of terms specifically referring to the power or to the property to which it related. The probability that she regarded the phrase "my estate and property of every description" as descriptive of all property which she could dispose of by will, accounts for the absence of more specific terms. The fact that she owned other property upon which the will operated does not conflict with this view. She intended to dispose of all property (not disposed of by previous provisions of the will) over which she had the power of disposition, whether by reason of ownership or by reason of authority from the owner, and used language sufficiently broad to indicate such intention. Similar reasons have led the court of Massachusetts to adopt the rule that a general residuary devise will operate as an execution of a power to dispose of property by will, unless there is something to show that such was not the testator's intention. Cumston v. Bartlett,
The daughters are entitled to the third of the trust fund over which the testatrix possessed the power.
Case discharged.
DOE, C. J., did not sit: the others concurred. *506