126 A. 699 | Conn. | 1924
The first clause of the will of Sarah Hull devises and bequeaths all of her property to her daughters Marietta and Caroline. The second clause provides that "at the decease of my two daughters if childless it is my will that the same be equally divided between . . . or their heirs and assigns forever." The question for our advice is whether the second clause cuts down the devise and bequest of the first clause to a life use and gives the fee to the persons therein named. From two grounds, quite independent of each other, the only construction permissible under our law is that the second clause is ineffective to cut down the fee, given by the first clause, to a life estate. The language of the second clause, "at the decease of my two daughters if childless," is susceptible of two meanings: if they shall die before the testatrix, or if they shall die at any time prior to or subsequent to the decease of the testatrix. Unless this clause, construed in the light of the circumstances under which it was written, shows that the testatrix used it in the second of these meanings, it will, under the rule of construction which we have heretofore *485 adopted in constructing like language, be construed to have been used in the first of these meanings and to refer to the decease of the legatees prior to that of the testatrix.
In Walsh v. McCutcheon,
The two daughters did not predecease the testatrix, and under this construction the second clause ceased to operate, and hence the two daughters took the property devised and bequeathed in the first clause of this will in fee and absolutely.
We reach the same point by another way. The primary question in the construction of this will is the ascertainment of the intention of the testatrix. Did this testatrix intend to devise and bequeath to her two daughters all of her property absolutely, or merely a life use? Rules of construction relating to wills are designed *486 as aids to the discovery of this intention. They are the growth of a long and broad experience arising out of the considered construction of many wills. A fundamental and unvarying rule of construction forbids the cutting down of an express and positive devise in fee, or bequest absolute in terms, in one clause, to an inferior or lesser estate by another clause, unless the second clause expressing the lesser estate indicates a clear intention that the greater estate shall be cut down to the lesser estate. That intention can only be found when the lesser estate is expressed in positive terms and in language which is unambiguous and incapable of any but the one meaning.
In Fanning v. Main,
In Mansfield v. Shelton,
The ninth clause of the will under construction inStrong v. Elliott,
It may be conceded that "It is my will" is a broader term than "It is my desire or my wish"; even so, it remains true that the contention of the defendants rests on implication. The second clause does not state what shall happen upon the contingency of the daughters, one or both, dying leaving children. It does not say that in that event the two daughters will take, under the first clause, an absolute estate. This is left open to implication. Apparently this second clause is a devise and bequest of all the testatrix's property to named persons upon the decease of her two daughters if they die childless. Yet it does not provide that in such contingency *488
the daughters shall have the use and income of all the property until their decease. This, too, is left open to implication. A clause of a will open to implication is not the express and positive devise and bequest, free from doubt and ambiguity, which will cut down a devise in fee to a lesser estate. We cannot hold that the testatrix intended by the second clause of her will that her two daughters should not take under the first clause a transmissible estate. The results which might have followed from a construction of the second clause in accordance with the defendant's claim, is strongly indicative that neither Sarah nor Marietta Hull intended such construction. At this time Sarah was sixty-eight, Marietta forty-six and Caroline forty-three. They lived on terms of the utmost amity and affection. The property left by John L. Hull did not exceed $20,000 in value. Just what it was on July 5th, 1877, does not appear in the statement of facts, but that it had shrunk is a reasonable inference. It is hardly probable that this mother would have limited her children's use of this property to a life use when it might not prove sufficient to meet their wants. The love of the mother, and her consideration of the future needs of her daughters, forbid a conclusion that she knowingly intended to subject her daughters in their old age to meet the hazards and misfortunes of life, as well as the necessities of existence, upon so small an income as she must have known this little property would produce. The total value of the property from which Caroline is supported is in its income insufficient to meet the expenses of her care. This is a situation which the mother might in 1877 have anticipated. In the will before us for construction in MeridenTrust Safe Deposit Co. v. Squire,
These considerations apply with equal force to the provisions of the will before us. We do not read the letter of Caroline written in the last year of Marietta's life, on which defendants rely, as expressing her intention to leave to defendants the property held by her and Marietta, as defendants do. When Caroline says: "The property coming from the Hulls belongs to you three boys when we have done with it," we are inclined to think that she intended to say that whatever was left of this property would be left to the three boys. Though the inference to be drawn from it were such as defendants draw, that fact alone could not overcome the considerations which have led to our construction of the second clause.
The considerations which we have found applicable to the construction of the clauses of the will of Sarah Hull are likewise applicable to the first and second clauses of the will of Marietta Hull. The provision in the second clause, "At their decease," means at their decease during the lifetime of the testratrix. Caroline has title in fee simple absolute to all of the real estate and absolute title to all of the personal property devised *490 and bequeathed under the first clause of the will of Marietta.
We answer question (a), that Caroline F. Hull has title in fee simple absolute to all of the real estate described, and has absolute title to the personal property.
No costs will be taxed in this court.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.