144 A. 378 | Vt. | 1929
This is a direct appeal from a decree of the probate court making final distribution of the estate of the late Clara S. Robinson. Some suggestion is made that the appeal is defective in the manner of its taking; but the statute provides (G.L. 3451) that such appeals as this may be taken to this Court "in the manner provided in cases of appeals from the court of chancery." Chancery appeals are effected by motions filed with the clerk of that court — without more. Hyde Park v. St. J. L.C.R.R. Co.,
Clara S. Robinson died testate, leaving an estate amounting to about $37,000. By her will, after making several specific *467 bequests, she disposed of the bulk of her property by a clause reading as follows: "I will and bequeath to Carroll A. Davis the residue of my property, to be used for his own personal benefit in so far as he requires it, if there should be any of my estate left after his death, then it is my will that the residue of my estate be converted into money and the same be holden in trust by the trustees of the Orleans County Memorial Hospital Association, the income to be used for the general purposes of the Hospital."
The question submitted to us is, What did Davis take under this will?
It is claimed in his behalf that he takes a fee in the residue, and that the attempted gift over is void for repugnancy. Or, if this claim is untenable, he takes, it is argued, a life estate in the residue with the right to consume so much of it as he may desire. The hospital disputes both these claims, and takes the position that he gets nothing but a privilege of resorting to this property, principal or interest, if and when, after exhausting his own resources, his necessities require.
We quite agree with counsel for the hospital when he argues that the only office of judicial construction is to remove doubt and uncertainty. It is the settled doctrine of our decisions that where the terms of a writing, whatever its character, are plain and unambiguous, there is no room for construction and it is to be given effect according to its own language. We agree, too, that the use of a term susceptible of two or more meanings does not necessarily make the meaning of the sentence in which it appears ambiguous or doubtful. Apt illustrations of cases of this kind were suggested at the argument. But as Mr. Justice Holmes says, "A word is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged; it is the skin of a living thought and may vary greatly in color and content according to the circumstances and the time in which it is used." Towne v. Eisner,
The following propositions are unquestionably established as the law: (1) Where property is given by will to one absolutely, together with the power, express or implied, of unlimited disposition of it, and by another clause of the will it is attempted to give over an undisposed of remainder of the property, the limitation over is void for repugnancy; because, if you give a fee, you cannot curtail its essential attributes. (2) Where a life estate only is given, and the life tenant is endowed with the power of disposition, the limitation over of such of the property as remains undisposed of by the life tenant at his death is valid. Stowell v. Hastings,
In the application of these rules, much perplexity has been experienced by the courts. It is difficult to reconcile the decided cases, and those in the same jurisdiction frequently appear to be inconsistent. Such inconsistency is more apparent than real, and not to be wondered at. No two wills are exactly alike, Morse v. Stoddard's Estate, supra, and each is to be construed by itself and not by other wills, In re Keniston'sWill,
The one rule of construction to which all others are servient and assistant is that the meaning intended by the testator is to be ascertained and given effect, in so far as legally possible. To determine such meaning, the court is to take the instrument by its four corners, consider it in all its parts, and give effect to its language read in the light of the relation of the parties concerned and the circumstances attending its execution. Effect is to be given to all its provisions, if they can be so reconciled as to make them lawful. So here, the testatrix having, in this residuary clause, manifested an intention to confer one benefit on Davis and another on the hospital, it is our duty to so construe her language as to effectuate that intention, unless it is legally impossible for the two provisions to subsist together. Hibbard v. Hurlburt,
That Mrs. Robinson intended to make Davis the primary object of her bounty is apparent. For, whatever the quality of his interest turns out to be, certain contingencies may arise which would enable him to entirely defeat the attempt to benefit the hospital. That she intended to confer upon him something less than a fee in the residue seems equally plain, because she added to the bequest the clause "in so far as he requires it," — which would be inappropriate and superfluous if she intended to confer the absolute title. Davis takes what he requires; the rest goes to the hospital. Davis must assert his rights during his lifetime in order to make them complete. It makes no practical difference with his situation whether his interest under the will is technically an estate or a power, or both. It is a right, vested and available, though it expires at his decease. This view gives effect to both benefactions according to the manifest purpose of the testatrix.
This brings us to the important question in the case: What does the term "requires" as here used, signify?
That it is a word of various meaning, one of which is needs,
and another is demands, is conceded. In Hall v. Holloway, supra,
a case much like this one, the word "require" was given the former significance; in Blair v. Blair,
The commissioner of taxes appeals from the decree of the probate court on the ground that it should provide for the payment of the inheritance tax on Davis' bequest. By No. 30, Acts of 1925, it is made the duty of the probate court to *471 make the amount of this tax a part of the final decree of distribution of the estate. This was not done, and upon a remand the new decree should include it. No question as to the amount of this tax is before us.
There was no legal error in the appointment of a trustee to handle this property. The testatrix might have so given it that Davis would be entitled to its possession and management; but she did not. Therefore, by force of the statute (G.L. 3487) the probate court was authorized to appoint a trustee. Morse v.Stoddard's Estate,
Decree reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings anddecree in accordance with the views herein expressed. Let Davisrecover his costs in this Court. To be certified to the probatecourt.