87 Md. 425 | Md. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The questions to be considered in the record now before us, arise upon the following facts :
Daniel B. Banks, by his will, probated February 9th, 1875, among other things devised and bequeathed to his
“ In case either of my said daughters shall die without leaving issue living at the time of her death, it is my will that the one-half part of the corpus of the said rest and residue of my estate, which, under the provisions of the two clauses next preceding this would have passed to her issue, had she left any, shall be divided equally amongst my said son, Andrew Banks, and his heirs ; my surviving daughter for her natural life, and her issue living at the time of her death, per stirpes, for her sole and separate use free from liability for the debts, contracts or engagements of her husband, and not subject to his control; my grandson, Harry Slingluff and his issue ; and my granddaughters, Alice M. Smith and Margaret Smith, and their issue, the said two granddaughters taking together but one share thereof; and in case both of my said daughters shall die without leaving issue living at the time of their death respectively, it is my will that the said rest and residue of my estate, which as hereinbefore provided, would have passed to their issue respectively, had they left any, shall be divided equally amongst my son, Andrew Banks, and his heirs ; my grandson, Harry Slingluff, and his issue ; and my granddaughters, Margaret Smith and Alice Maud Smith, and their issue, the said two granddaughters taking together but one share.
“ In case any of the children of my daughters shall die before attaining the age of twenty-one years and without issue, it is my will that the share of my estate devised and bequeathed to them respectively, shall pass to and devolve upon such persons as by the then existing laws of Maryland would take the same as my heirs at law and distributees.”
Anna W. Banks subsequently became Anna W. God-
Richard S. Culbreth claims that the devise over was valid and that the interest of Andrew Banks in said one-sixth part passed to him as permanent trustee, by operation of section 2 of Art. 47 of the Code of Public General Laws of Maryland.
Andrew Banks also claims that the devise over was valid, but claims that his interest in said one-sixth part does not pass to his trustee in insolvency, but vests in the said Andrew Banks absolutely, and in his own right, free from all debts owdng by him prior to his petition in insolvency, and free from the control of the insolvent trustee appointed by
These cases have been ai'gued by the numerous counsel engaged therein with great zeal and with marked ability, and we have given to the consideration of these arguments careful and patient investigation and consideration. 1st. We shall first consider the fourth point relied on by the appellants in this record who were plaintiffs below, as that contention if sustained, would dispose of all the questions involved in both records. Their contention is that the third word of the clause which attempts to create executory devise over, the word “any,” should be read “all,” thus making the clause read as follows: “ In case all of the children of any of my daughters shall die before attaining the age of twenty-one years, and without issue, it is my will that the share of my estate devised and bequeathed to them respectively, shall pass to and devolve upon such persons as by the then existing laws of Maryland would take the same as my heirs at law or distributees,” and they maintain that by this means “full effect andan harmonious interpretation can be given to all the clauses of the will in accordance with the manifest and general intention of the testator;” and they assert this manifest and general intention to be to provide:
If there were but the son and the two daughters and their issue to be provided for, and the estate was devised to them alone in the terms used in this will the argument of the appellants would be much stronger, because there would be no context from which to glean anything to countervail the natural inference that the children of Anna, on her death, should take an indefeasible estate. But here there are others provided for, and there is a context which we think countervails the inference sought to be drawn. The testestor had three children—one son and two daughters, and three grandchildren, one grandson, the sole representative of his deceased mother, and two granddaughters representing their deceased mother. There were in all, five stocks of the testator’s blood all made the objects of his bounty, but not all in equal measure, and in dealing with these stocks the testator made a marked distinction between their different degrees. To each of his three grandchildren he gave a pecuniary legacy of $10,000—-about one thirtieth of his estate—but he gave the whole residue of his estate
2nd. The appellants further contend that the executory devise over as to W. Frank Godwin’s share is invalid, because of the well-settled proposition in the construction of wills, that wherever a testator by one clause gives an absolute estate to a devisee, any attempt by a later clause to cut down such absolute estate, will be void, as inconsistent with the absolute estate previously created, and they rely, to sustain this proposition, upon three Maryland cases. Hammett v. Hammett, 43 Md. 307; Benesch v. Clark, 49 Md. 504; Coombs v. Coombs, 67 Md. 17.
The abstract proposition thus stated is a sound one, but we have nevertheless no doubt that it is not applicable to the present case, nor do we doubt that the executory devise over in this case is valid and operative. If it is intended, however, to claim as a result of the above proposition, that
In Benesch v. Clark, 49 Md. 504, the devise was of two houses to the wife, “for her life, to be disposed with as my said wife sees fit at her decease.” The widow assigned one of the houses which were leasehold, and two questions arose. 1st. Whether she took more than a life-estate in the two houses ; and 2nd, whether the power of disposition was well-executed by the deed of assignment, and it was held “that where an estate is given to a person generally with power of disposition, such gift carries the entire estate, and the devisee takes the property absolutely,” but that the rule is different where the devise is expressly for life, with power of disposition annexed, and it was accordingly held that the widow took but a life-estate, and that the power of disposition was effectually executed by the deed of assignment. In Coombs v. Coombs, 67 Md. 17, the devise was “to my son G., to sell and convey the same in his lifetime or to dispose of the same by last will and testament. But should he die without issue ana without having disposed of the same by sale, or by will, then I give and devise said estate to J. and T.,” and it was held that “an absolute ownership or capacity to sell in the first taker, and a vested right by way of executory devise in another, which cannot be affected by such alienation, are incompatible estates and repugnant to each other and the latter is to be rejected as void.” But the Court expressly declared in that case “ An executory devise may be limited after a fee-simple, but in such case the fee must be made determinable on some contingent
The authorities we think are clear that the devise over we are considering is valid. In Doe & Hunt v. Moore, 14 East. 601; where the devise was to G. M. in fee when he attains 21 years of age, and if he die under 21 then over, it was held that attaining 21 was not a condition precedent to the vesting of the fee, but the dying under 21 was a condition subsequent on which the fee was divested. Washburn on Real Property, vol. 2, page 629, 5th edition, cites the case of Bromfield v. Crowder, 1 Bos. & P. N. R. 313, where the devise was to E. & J. for their lives successively, and after the death of the survivor, to A. B., if he lived to attain the age of 21 years, but if he died before that age, then to C. B., and it was held that the remainder vested at once in A. B. in fee, subject to be defeated if he died before 21, and then it would pass not as a remainder, but as an executory devise to C. B.
In Jackson v. Robins, 16 John. 585, Chancellor Kent said, “ The point is, where an estate is given to a man and his heirs with a power of disposal at his own will and pleasure, it carries with it an absolute ownership repugnant to any limitation over and destructive of it,” and he adds, “all executory devises may be said in some degree to depend upon the will or discretion of the owner of the precedent estate. If a devise be to A. in fee, but if he die without issue living at his death, then over to B. it is in his volition and power (morally speaking), not to marry, or to marry and have issue, and so avoid the devise over, but these distinctions have nothing to do with the simplicity and good sense of the rules we are discussing. The first taker in these special cases has not an absolute discretion and free agency, within the meaning of the ru le, as one has who can sell and assign when and to whom, and for what purpose he pleases. This is what we understand by a right incompatible with an executory devise, and this is what we are to understand by the books when they speak of a limitation over
3rd. The appellants next contend, that the devise over ofW. Frank Godwin’s share is void and inoperative after the vesting of the remainder in him on his mother’s death, and they rely for this position upon Reiff v. Strite, 54 Md. 300, and the class of cases to which it belongs, and we have already recognized that case, for the point actually decided therein, in holding that W. Frank Godwin took a contingent remainder in fee which vested on his mother’s death ; but the conclusion sought to be drawn by the appellants by no means follows as a result of our so holding. This contention might be sustained if this will created alternative contingent remainders in W. Frank God-win and in the heirs and distributees of the testator, as in Larmour v. Rich, 71 Md. 369, and in Demill v. Reid, idem, 188, because the vesting of one alternative contingent re
4th. The final contention of the appellants is that even if this devise is to be regarded as operative and valid at all times, then that clause, and the preceding one which gives Mrs. God-win’s share to her surviving issue, must be construed together, and that the result of the operation of the two clauses, when so construed, is to create alternative contingent remainders in her children, and in the testator’s heirs which became vested in the children at her death. This is but another form of presenting and urging the same point we have j ust considered, and may be dismissed without further consideration, beyond the observation that the utmost effect which can be given to the vesting of these remainders in Mrs. Godwin’s children is to create a fee in them respectively, and that there can be no more objection to the creation of an executory devise after a fee thus acquired, than after a fee acquired by any immediate and absolute devise.
We have thus considered, at perhaps greater length than was necessary, the questions raised in the construction of this will, in deference to the very full and able argument made by the respective counsel, and we now come to the remaining question determined by the Court below, and growing out of the claim made by the trustee in insolvency of Andrew Banks, to his share of W. Frank Godwin’s one-sixth part of his mother’s estate. This question was argued so ably by all the counsel representing this branch of the case, and with such zeal and ingenuity by the trustee in insolvency as to make the question involved, appear at first presentation, one of great doubt; but upon examination of
Such a naked possibility, is in law neither an estate, property, right nor claim. One having such a possibility, may in the future have a right or claim, but cannot be correctly said to have any existing right or claim. This was held in Jackson v. Waldron, 13 Wendell (prior to the statute of New York, making all contingent estates descendible and devisable), where Senator Tracy, in the opinion
In the former case the Court asked, “What right, either vested or contingent, existed in the bankrupt at the date of his bankruptcy declared, to receive reimbursement for the enhanced or war premiums paid by him during the Civil War ? * * The statute is clear that it was only existing rights that were contemplated by it, and were intended to be transferred to the assignee. But here the facts show that there was not even a possibility of interest which might thereafter beneficially arise from any existing vested, or even contingent right.” The appellants would have us adopt their inference from the last sentence of the above citation, that if there had been a bare possibility of a future right that the Court intended to convey the idea that it would have passed to the assignee, but this would be to strike out of the language of the Court the recurring and qualifying word “ existing,” which could only appropriately be employed in that connection, to designáte and restrict the character and quality of the right which alone could pass to the assignee. The meaning of the Court in this passage, as we read it, is identical with the meaning of the language in 13 Wendell, “ a right in being."
In Kelso v. Stigar, 75 Md. 398, the insolvent act under consideration was the Act of 1774, ch. 28, which passed to the assignee estates in possession, reversion, and remainder,
Counsel for Mrs. Dorsey relies upon Putman v. Story, 132 Mass. 205, also, to show that there is no uncertainty here as to the person who is to take. There the devise was to a daughter] Frances Bowles, for life, and after her death to be equally divided between her heirs, and it was held that the children of Mrs. Bowles, as they were born, took successive, contingent remainders (as in Albert's case, 68 Md. 352) liable to be defeated by their death before their mother, and that such vested interest of a child, in such contingent remainder, would pass to his assignee in insolvency, subject to the same contingency. But we find no analogy between that case and the present, for that case stops just short of where this case begins. It is authority for holding that if W. Frank Godwin had become insolvent, and there were no executory devise over that his interest would have passed to his assignee, subject to be divested by his death before his mother. But there is nothing in the decree here appealed from in conflict with Putman v. Story, and there is a wide difference between a vested interest in a contingent remainder, which is an existing estate, and a contingent interest as heir at law in an executory devise, an
Decree affirmed.