128 Mass. 41 | Mass. | 1879
The agreed statement of facts renders it clear that it was the intention of the testator to make the demanded premises, which he purchased after the date of his will, part and parcel of his mansion-house estate. He removed the house and shop standing thereon, tore down the fences and made one garden with walks running through both original estates, and erected a greenhouse on the demanded premises, which was used in connection with the mansion-house. The whole thus became one parcel, with nothing to distinguish the demanded premises from the mansion-house estate, as it was at the date of the will, and it was all thus used and occupied at the time of his death.
It is also manifest from the will itself that it was the intention of the testator that all real estate acquired by him in the future should be disposed of by his will. The statutes provide that “ any estate, right or interest in lands acquired by the testator after making his will shall pass thereby, in like manner as if possessed at the time of making the will, if such clearly and
But we are of opinion that the executors had no authority to give this deed, for they were empowered by the will only to convey lands not specifically devised; and the testator having in terms expressed the intention in his will that after-acquired real estate, as well as the real estate held by him at the date of the will, should be disposed of “ in the following manner,” (that is, as he proceeds to point out,) the fair construction is, that he intended that, if any of such after-acquired real estate should be added to and become part of the mansion-house estate, it should pass to the devisee under that specific devise. There are no words that limit or define the extent of the mansion-house estate; the description is general, and what constituted the estate at the time of his death passed under this will to the demandant.
In Wait v. Belding, 24 Pick. 129, a testator devised to his two sons “ the whole of my land and buildings lying and being within the town of Hatfield.” He made a codicil afterward, which was held to be a republication of the will; and it was also held that other lards acquired by the testator, in the interval between the date of the will and the codicil, passed to the two sons by the will. It was said by Chief Justice Shaw, in delivering judgment, “ By the Revised Statutes it is provided that a will shall embrace after-acquired real estate as well as personal, when such