5 App. D.C. 76 | D.C. Cir. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court:
In construing the will of Mrs. Wright, the auditor arrived at the conclusion that, by force of the terms employed in the devise over to the mother, upon the event of the death of the son before he attained the age of twenty-one years, without lawful issue surviving him, such devise over was defeated, and,the devise and bequest to the son stood as if there had been no such devise over; that the words, “ of which my said son may die seized and possessed,” operated to invest the son, by necessary implication, with an absolute power of disposition of the estate devised and bequeathed,
The principle stated and maintained by the auditor, upon the authorities cited by him, would seem to be well established ; but we do not think the principle applies to this case. The case upon which the greatest reliance is placed, is that of Howard v. Carusi, 109 U. S. 725. Without at all questioning the correctness of the decision in that case, we do not think it an authority to control the decision of this case. The provisions of the will in that case were quite different from the devise in the will before us. In that case, the will was, as stated by the court, that the brother, S. C., should have a fee simple estate, coupled with the expression of a hope and trust that he would not unnecessarily diminish the estate; and then is given to the nieces of the testator so much of the estate as 8. C. shall not at his death have disposed of by sale or devise. Of this devise the Supreme Court said: “ We have then, devised to Samuel Carusi an estate in fee simple, with an absolute power of disposition, either by sale or devise, dearly and unmistakably implied. Therefore, according to the adjudged cases, the limitation over to the nieces of the testator is void.” In a case so plain as that stated by the court, of course there could be no doubt of the application of the principle. For, as the court proceeds to state: “ The rule is well established that, although generally an estate may be devised to one in fee simple or fee tail, with a limitation over by way of an executory devise, yet when the will shows a clear purpose of the testator to give an absolute power of disposition to the first taker, the limitation over is void.” There are many authorities
In construing a will the intention of the testator is paramount, and must be given effect, unless that intention is clearly in conflict with som e well settled rule of law. The first and great principle in the exposition of wills, says Chief Justice Marshall, in Smith v. Bell, 6 Pet. 68, to which all rules must bend, is, that the intention of the testator expressed in his will shall prevail, provided it be consistent with the rules of law. The will is defined to he “ the legal declarations of a man’s intentions which he wills to be performed after his death.” These intentions are to be collected from his words; and ought to be carried into effect if they be consistent with law. In the construction of ambiguous expressions, the situation of the parties may very properly be taken into view; and where there are two intents, inconsistent with each other, that which is primary will control that which is secondary.
The case just referred to, of Smith v. Bell, would seem to have a strong application to this case in principle and by analogy. In that case the will contained this clause : “Also I give to my wife E. G., all my personal estate whatsoever and wheresoever, and of what nature, kind and quality soever, after payment of my debts, legacies and funeral expenses, which personal estate I give and bequeath unto my said wife E. G.,to and for her own use and disposal absolutely ; the remainder after her decease to be for the use of the said I. G.,” the son of the testator. On the construction of this will, it was held that I. G., the son, took a vested remainder in the personal estate, which came into possession after the death of E. G., the wife. The conclusion reached was based upon what
In the case now before us, it is clear beyond doubt, that Mrs. Wright, the testatrix, intended to provide for her mother, and she intended her property to pass to her mother in the event of her son dying under the age of twenty-one years, without issue. This was reasonable; indeed, nothing more natural, and according to duty and filial affection. She could never have contemplated, in the devise made to the son, that he would alienate or attempt to alienate the property during the period of his minority; and there are no terms employed that necessarily give rise to the presumption that she did so contemplate. On the contrary, the presumptions are all the other way. She must be taken to have known that by the statute law her son would be wholly unable to make a valid will to pass real estate, during his minority; and as it is claimed that it is by virtue of an implied power of disposition of the property that the devise over is defeated, it must likewise be supposed that the testatrix was advised of the fact of the incapacity of her son to execute such power before attaining the age of twenty-one years. In 1 Sugd. on Pow. 211, it is said that an infant, like a feme covert, may at common law do any act where he is a mere instrument or conduit pipe, and his interest is not concerned ; and upon this principle, it would seem to follow that an infant may execute a power simply collateral, deriving its effect from the Statute of Uses. And the author submits, upon the authorities cited by him, that an infant cannot execute a power over real estate unless it be a power simply collateral ; but as to personalty, clearly he may exercise a power over that at the age at which, by law, he may dispose of personalty to which he is absolutely entitled. And so in 4 Kent. Com. 324, the author says: “Every person capable of
It is clear, we think, that these words, “ of which my said son may die seized and possessed,” were never designed to raise a power in the infant son, nor were they- used in any such connection, but were used as merely descriptive of the condition of one part of the estate devised, as distinguished from the part that was in the hands of Holcomb as trustee; or, it may be, that it was supposed that the property might be changed or increased before the happening of the contingency upon which the devise over was to take effect. We are clearly of opinion that the devise and bequest over to the mother of the testatrix were good, and that it would do great violence to the clear intention of the testatrix to hold otherwise. And such devise and bequest over carried not only the real estate as such, but the principal fund of $5,000 in the hands of the trustee, and also the sum of $6,714.18, and the sum of $2,470, derived from the sale of certain real estate belonging to the estate of Mrs. Wright, the testatrix, at the time of her death.
It would seem to be according to a well settled principle, that though the mother, the executory devisee and legatee, died before the son of the testatrix, the first devisee, at common law, the executory devise and bequest were transmissible to the heirs and personal representatives of the mother, the executory devisee and legatee, notwithstanding her death before the contingency happened. Barnitz’s Lessee v. Casey, 7 Cr. 456. And so it is laid down in Fearne, Con. R. & Ex. Dev. 364, that contingent interests pass to the real or personal representatives, according to the nature of such interests, as well as vested interests, so as to entitle such representatives to them when the contingencies happen. And again, at page 559, the author, stating the case of King v. Withers, Cas. Temp. Talb. 117, lays it down, that where the testator devised lands to his son B, but if he should die without issue male of his body then living, or which might be afterwards born, then his daughter should receive at her age of twenty-one, or day of marriage, which should first happen, the sum of £3,500; but in case the contingency of his said son’s dying should not happen before his daughter’s said age or day of marriage, that then she should receive that sum whenever such contingency might happen, and charged the said legacy or portion on the real estate. The daughter married, having attained her age of twenty-one, and died in the lifetime of her brother B, who afterwards died without issue male. Lord Chancellor Talbott decreed, that the legacy should be raised, for the benefit of the administrator (the husband) of the daughter; and he held, that though it did not absolutely vest, because it might never arise, yet it so far vested as to be transmissible to the representative. This decree was afterwards affirmed in the House of Lords on appeal, and the case has ever since been regarded as a leading authority, and is one of the cases referred to in the case of Barnitz’s Lessee v. Casey, supra.
At the death of Mrs. Post, the executory devisee, she left two heirs at law surviving her; her son, Frank O. Post, and her grandson, Harry Post Wright. And though the contingent estate, so far as the realty was concerned, devolved upon these two heirs at law, upon the death of Mrs. Post, yet, inasmuch as the estate did not vest absolutely until the happening of the contingency upon which it depended, and that contingency was the death of Harry Post Wright under twenty-one years of age without issue, with the happening of that event the entire estate in the realty devolved upon and became vested in Frank O. Post, the only remaining heir of the executory devisee, Mrs. Mary H. Post. This is the principle laid, down by the Supreme Court in the case of Barnitz’s Lessee v. Casey, 7 Cr. 456, a case arising under the Maryland Act to Direct Descents of 1786, Ch. 45, and in force in this District, though the statute was held not to embrace the particular devise, and the descent was according to the common law. In that case the devise was to A in fee, and if he should die under the age of twenty-one years, and without issue, then to B. That was held to be a good executory devise; and the principle of the transmissibility by descent of such executory estate was stated to be, that if B died before the contingency happened, it devolved upon his heirs, and so from heir to heir until the contingency happened, when it would vest absolutely in him only who could then make himself heir to B, the executory devisee. And although A be the heir at law of B, yet the executory devise thus devolving on him would not merge in the precedent estate, but, on the death of A, it devolved to the next heir of B. Here the heir upon whom the whole estate
But with respect to the personal estate, operated upon by the executory bequest over to Mrs. Post, a different rule applies. And this personal estate includes the $5,000 bequeathed, and the two sums derived from the sales of real estate before mentioned.
The personal property carried over by virtue of the bequest, must be distributed as the personal estate of Mrs. Mary H. Post, the executory legatee, including the $5,000 in the hands of Holcomb, trustee. This is upon the principle settled in the leading case before referred to, of King v. Withers, supra. For though, at the death of Mrs. Post, the right of property had not absolutely vested, because the contingency might never occur, yet it had so far vested as to be transmissible to the personal representative of the executory legatee. And that being so, the distribution of such personal estate must be made as of the estate of Mrs. Post» the legatee. Who are, then, the distributees of this fund ? The inchoate right to distribution accrued upon the death of Mrs. Post to her son Frank O. Post, and her grandson Harry Post Wright, to become absolute on the happening of the contingency contemplated by the will. Under the Statute of Distribution (act of Md. of 1798, Ch. 101, Subch. 13) Frank O. Post would be entitled to one-half, and the other half would be distributable to those representing Harry Post Wright, deceased; the statute by its 13th section providing, that “If any person entitled to distribution shall die before the same be made, his or her share shall go to his or her representatives.” In distributing this portion of the fund, it should be divided equally among the uncles of the deceased grandson, whether of the paternal or maternal side, or of both. The statute, by Section 11, provides, that “After children, descendants, father, mother, brothers
It follows from the view we have taken of this case, as presented on the two appeals or cross appeals before us, that the decree appealed from must be affirmed in part, and reversed in part; and we shall remand the cause that a decree may be entered therein by the court below in conformity with the foregoing opinion of this court; the costs of said appeals to this court to be paid out of the personal estate or fund involved; and it is so ordered.
Decree affirmed in paid, and reversed in part, and cause remanded.