70 Conn. 87 | Conn. | 1897
John Galvin made the will in question, in 1889, and died in 1894. He left surviving him, as Ms next of kin, one daughter, Catherine Holohan, a married woman, one of the defendants, certain children of said daughter, and the plaintiff John P. Lawlor, son of a deceased daughter. John P. Lawlor, the grandson, “is and ever has been childless.” The questions M the case arise under the Mnth clause of the will, wMch reads as follows: “ I give and devise to my grandson, John P. Lawlor, all my real estate on Union street; also all the land on the south side of Ray street on the Abrigador; also a piece of land fronting on the extension of Wall street, running west one hundred feet from the stone wall dividmg the front meadow from the pasture land, said land to extend one hundred and ten feet northerly, and to be the width in rear as in front, that is, one hundred feet; also fifty feet on the new street now running in front of John Mulville’s land, said land to extend westerly on Mulville’s land to the stone wall, and to be the same width in rear as in front, namely, fifty feet, said land to have the use of a passway forty feet wide, runmng southerly from where the street now ends to the south side of his lot, the same to be to said John P. Lawlor, subject only to this condition, viz: should the said John P. Lawlor die without issue, then tMs above real estate hereinbefore described, with the rents and profits winch may have accumulated therefrom, shall become the estate and
The will consists of ten clauses in all. In the first the testator merely directs that his debts shall be paid. In the second, third and fourth, he makes specific gifts to a granddaughter, a grandson and a niece, of a picture, his watch and chain, and two hundred dollars, respectively; and said two hundred dollars is, in a codicil, subsequently given to the plaintiff. In the fifth clause he gives the plaintiff certain personal property, including some of his household furniture, and in the sixth he gives all the rest of his household furniture to Mrs. Holohan. In the seventh clause as changed by a codicil, he gives to the plaintiff the use of the barn with carriage-house and sheds adjoining, on the homestead of the testator, rent free, for the term of two years after the decease of the testator. In the eighth, he devises to his daughter Mrs. Holohan, his homestead, the land on Ray street on the Abrigador, and all his land on Wall street, “fourteen and one half acres, more or less, except three building lots reserved and hereinafter described in my devise to my grandson, John P. Lawlor, the same to be to her and her heirs absolutely.” -In the tenth he appoints the executors.
The grandson, John P. Lawlor, claimed that under the ninth clause of the wifi he took an estate in fee in the land therein described, while the daughter Mrs. Holohan claimed that he took only a life estate in said land; thereupon the plaintiff brought tins action for the construction of the will, making the executor and Mrs. Holohan defendants. The executor disclaimed all interest, and it is admitted by the pleadings that the plaintiff and Mrs. Holohan “ are all the persons having any interest or claiming interest in the matters involved in this action.”
The main question in this case relates to the meaning of this phrase in the ninth clause of the will, “ should the said John P. Lawlor die without issue.” Does this mean “die without issue ” in the lifetime of the testator, or does it mean “ die without issue ” after the death of the testator ? Standing alone it is susceptible of either of these meanings; and unless the will, when properly construed, shows that the testator used it with the second meaning, it should be held that he used it with the first meaning. If any rule to be applied in the construction of pirrases of this kind can be settled by repeated decisions, this rule must, in this State at least, be regarded as settled. This rule in substance has been acted upon or recognized in the following cases: Phelps v. Robbins, 40 Conn. 250; White v. White, 52 id. 518; Coe v. James, 54 id. 511; Phelps v. Phelps, 55 id. 359; Webb v. Lines, 57 id. 154; Stone v. McEckron, ibid. 194, 198; Johnes v. Beers, ibid. 295; St. John v. Dann, 66 id. 401; Chesebro v. Palmer, 68 id. 207.
A rule of construction applicable to the language of a will, is a rule of law determining the construction which the courts are bound to put upon particular words, expressions and forms of disposition occurring in wills, in the absence of a sufficiently declared intention to the contrary. Nothing in the will in question shows that the testator used the phrase under consideration in the second of the above meanings.
The only thing that can be said to militate against this view is the provision, immediately following the phrase in question, to the effect that if Lawlor dies, the real estate devised to him, “ with the rents and profits which may have accumulated therefrom,” shall vest in Mrs. Holohan, the daughter; and it is upon this that the defendant mainly relies. She claims that the rents and profits here spoken of, mean the rents and profits which “ may have accumulated ”
It is conceded by her that Lawlor, on the death of the testator, took at least a life estate in the land devised; and this is clearly so on any view of this will. If this be so, then the rents and profits accumulating after the testator’s death belonged to Lawlor, whether collected by him or not. The testator could not dispose of such rents and profits, because, in effect, if Lawlor took a life estate, he had already given them to Lawlor. The rents and profits upon the land described in the ninth clause of the will, “ which may have accumulated ” up to the time of the testator’s death, he could give away, for they were his own; and it seems to us that the more reasonable construction of this part of the wifi is that he meant those rents and profits, and not those which would under the will belong to Lawlor at Lawlor’s death. If this be so it is an argument against, and not in favor of, the defendant’s claim; for it shows, so far as it shows anything, that the testator was providing against Lawlor’s death before, and not after, the testator.
We are of opinion that on the death of the testator, John P. Lawlor took an estate in fee in the land devised to him, and that the court below erred in holding otherwise.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the cause remanded to be proceeded with in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.