Hall v. Wiggin

29 A. 671 | N.H. | 1891

The parts of the will submitted for interpretation are the clauses providing for the distribution of the estate at the termination of the interest of the testator's wife. After sundry bequests, the testator gives "the use and improvement of the rest and residue" of his estate to his wife "during her natural life, or until she shall marry again," and provides that at the decease or marriage of his wife his "estate shall descend and be distributed among nearest relations as follows, to wit: -" To his brother, Nelson Clark, $500; to his brother, Horace Clark, $1,500; to his sister, Harriet (Clark, $300; to his sister, Mary Witt, $200; to his sister, Rhuhama Wiggin, $100; to his half-sister, Trephana Carruth, $50; to his half-brother, George Clark, $1; and to his sister-in-law, Olive P. Rollins, $200; and if the estate shall amount to more than the legacies given, "the surplus shall be equally divided among my nearest relations, or the heirs of their bodies, as then be living, share and share alike." The language of the will is neither obscure nor ambiguous. The testator's intention is plainly expressed, that his estate, subject to the interest given to his wife, should be divided among his nearest relations, *91 whom he named, in legacies of specified amounts, and any surplus remaining at the decease or marriage of his wife should then be divided equally among the nearest relations named then living, and the issues of any who had deceased. There is nothing indicating that the testator used the words "nearest relations," in the clause disposing of the surplus, as embracing different persons from those named by him as nearest relations in the preceding clause, in making the bequests. The persons there intended by the words "nearest relations" are specifically named. Having designated who were his nearest relations, it is not to be assumed that the testator used the phrase with a different intention in the next clause of the will. Where the language of a will is plain and unambiguous, no intention on the part of the testator is to be sought after other than the one expressed. Greenough v. Cass, 64 N.H. 326. It is certain that the testator included his sisters-in-law, Olive P. Rollins, a relative by marriage, as one of his nearest relations, and a construction of the clause disposing of the surplus that would exclude her from a share of it would defeat the intention of the testator. His intention as expressed in the will was, that his estate remaining at the decease or marriage of his wife should be distributed among his two brothers, three sisters, half-brother, half-sister, and sister-in-law, named as his nearest relations, by payment of the legacies specified, and a division of the surplus in equal shares among the surviving legatees and the heirs of the bodies — meaning children or lineal descendants — of such as were dead, the lineal descendants of deceased legatees taking the share of the surplus which the deceased legatees would receive if living.

A will is to be construed as speaking and taking effect from the death of the testator, unless a contrary intention appears. It was the testator, intention that his property, excepting a portion otherwise disposed of, should be distributed among the legatees named, subject to the right of his wife to the use of it during her life or widowhood, and the specific legacies vested immediately on the death of the testator. There was no uncertainty as to their right of enjoyment of the bequests. It was postponed until the happening of an event certain to occur, — the death or marriage of the testator's wife; and their interest was a vested estate, to which their representatives were entitled at their decease. Crosby v. Crosby, 64 N.H. 77; Kennard v. Kennard, 63 N.H. 303; Brown v. Brown,44 N.H. 281. The children of George Clark, who died after the making of the will and before the testator, are entitled to the estate bequeathed to their father. Goodwin v. Colby, 64 N.H. 401; Gen. Stats., c. 174, s. 12.

The will provides for the distribution of the surplus, at the death or marriage of the testator's widow, among the "nearest relations, or the heirs of their bodies, as then be living." The words "then be living" refer to the time when distribution is to *92 be made, and limit it to the surviving issue of deceased nearest relations. O'Brien v. O'Leary, 64 N.H. 332. Consequently the surplus is to be divided among the surviving nearest relations named, and the issue of those deceased who survived the testator's widow, the children of those deceased taking by substitution the place of their parents.

The specific bequests, being gifts of definite sums to legatees named, vested on the death of the testator. The interest in the surplus was contingent, as the distribution was to be made, at the decease or marriage of the testator's widow, among the nearest relations named then living, and the heirs of the bodies, or lineal descendants, of deceased nearest relations. These only were to share in the distribution of the surplus. The nearest relations who died before the testator's widow took nothing in the surplus but their children or grandchildren, if any, take the share they would have been entitled to if they had survived the testator's widow. If all the legatees had survived, the surplus would be divided into eight equal shares; and if the deceased legatees all have surviving children or grandchildren, the same division is to be made, — the children or grandchildren taking per stirpes. If one of the deceased nearest relations left no lineal descendants, the division will be into seven shares, the death of a nearest relation without surviving children or grandchildren reducing by one the number of shares in the division and distribution of the surplus.

As William H. Clark, the son of Horace Clark, did not survive the testator's wife, his widow is not entitled to any share in the surplus of the testator's estate; but inasmuch as the legacy of $1,500 to Horace Clark without limitation vested at the death of the testator, this interest in the legacy passed by his will to his son and daughter, and his son's widow, Lucinda E. Clark, is entitled to her distributive share of her husband's interest in the legacy, as of other personal property of her husband.

There is nothing in the will indicating an intention that the issue of Fannie Stimpson and Eliza Rogers, sisters of the testator, who died before the making of the will, should share in the distribution of the estate.

No question of collateral representation is presented upon the facts in the case.

Case discharged.

CHASE, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *93