114 Me. 235 | Me. | 1915
This case is before the court on an agreed statement of facts in an appeal from the decree of the Judge of Probate of York county assessing an inheritance tax against Edward C. Luques, one of the residuary legatees under the will of Margaret C. Luques. The agreed statement is as follows:
“Samuel W. Luques, father of appellant, died August 31, 1897. Margaret C. Luques died December 16, 1913. Edward C. Luques and Herbert L. Luques are the only children of Samuel W. Luques. Margaret C. Luques was a second wife of Samuel W. Luques and a sister of his first wife, the mother of Edward C. Luques and Herbert L. Luques. The value of the real estate coming to Edward C. Luques and Herbert L. Luques under the will of Margaret C. Luques which she took under the second clause of the will of Samuel C. Luques is $20,466.00. The value of the personal property coming to Edward C. Lrfques and Herbelt L. Luques under the will of Margaret G. Luques, -which she took under the eleventh clause of the will of Samuel W. Luques, is $2,000.”
The questions raised arise under the following sections of the will of Samuel W. Luques who died prior to the passage of the collateral inheritance tax law as in Chapter 186, Public Laws of Maine, 1909:
“Second: I give, devise and bequeath to my wife, Margaret C. I.uques, my homestead place where we live with all furniture, fixtures, family library, stable connected therewith, together with its contents, horses and carriages, also house and lands on said Foss street containing tenements Nos. 34 and 36, and also houses and lands on northeast .side of Summer street, containing tenements Nos. 13 and 15. Said lands being bounded on the southeast by*237 Foss street; on the southwest by Summer street; on the northwest by land of Risworth Jordan and by land of Joseph T. Mason, and on the northeast by land of Joseph T. Mason and by Pool street, to have and to hold to said Margaret C. Luques, her heirs and assigns forever, except as hereinafter provided.”
“Eleventh: All the rest and residue of my estate, both real and personal, I give, devise and bequeath to my wife Margaret C. Luques and my sons Edward C. Luques and Herbert L. Luques, to have and to hold to them in equal shares, their heirs and assigns forever.
“If during the lifetime of my wife she shall not have disposed of the property above given and devised to her, or at her decease disposed of it by will, then said estate and property not disposed of by her, I give, devise and bequeath to my sons Edward C. Luques and Herbert L. Luques, and in the event of their decease or the decease of either of them, then the share that would have gone to the father from my wife’s estate shall go to the heirs of my son or sons by representation.”
As has been seen, Margaret C. Luques died after the passage of the collateral inheritance tax law, testate. By her will she made forty-two bequests of money and personal property, and the following residuary provision: — “My will is that all my just debts and funeral expenses shall by my executors hereafter named, be paid as soon after my decease as shall by them be found convenient. All the rest and residue of my estate, real, personal and mixed, of which I shall die seized or possessed, or to which I shall be entitled at my decease, I give, devise and bequeath between my nephews Edward C. Luques and Herbert L. Luques, or their heirs. And lastly I do nominate my said nephews Edward C. Luques and Herbert L. Luques and my' sister Pauline C. Lithgow to be the executors of this my last will and testament.”
Counsel for appellant contends, i, that the property on which the inheritance tax was assessed was not the absolute property of Margaret C. Luques; 2, that Edward C. Luques takes his title and interest therein through said Margaret C. Luques by her execution of a power conferred upon her in the will of Samuel W. Luques; 3, that appellant takes title to the same as of and under the will of Samuel W. Luques; and, 4, that the will of Samuel W. Luques
Samuel W. Luques in direct and simple language has furnished a meaning for the words “except as hereinafter provided” by which we must be controlled. He says in conclusion: “If during the lifetime of my wife she shall not have disposed of the property above given and devised to her, or at her decease disposed of it by will, then said estate and property not disposed of by her I give, devise and bequeath to my sons,” etc. It clearly appears that his intention was that the widow should have full power of disposal of-all the property devised to her in the will, and there was no intention to limit her use or disposal thereof. It is equally apparent that if she had disposed of the property either by sale or by will, it was just w'hat he intended and knew she had the right to do. While such words as here used may be open to speculation and question as to the actual state of mind of the testator in a given case, the settled law is the best guide for the protection of the property rights of all interested, and the primary controlling rule in the exposition of wills is that the intention of the testator as expressed in his will shall prevail, provided it be consistent with the
In Mitchell v. Morse, 77 Maine, 423, a devise was in these words: “I give and devise to my wife, Sarah F. Mitchell, all the rest and residue of my real estate. But, on her decease, the remainder thereof, I give and devise to my said children, or their heirs respectively, to be divided in equal shares between them.” It was held that the widow took an estate in fee simple, and that the devise over of the remainder was void. See Wallace v. Hawes, 79 Maine, 177; Bradley v. Warren, 104 Maine, 423; Young v. Hillier, 103 Maine, 17. So too in Shazw v. Hussey, supra, it is held that a devise of land generally or indefinitely, with a power of disposing of it, amounts to a devise in fee. And such a devise, without words of inheritance, is treated as equivalent to a devise with words of inheritance. See Gifford v. Choate, 100 Mass., 343; Gardner on Wills, 466; 4 Kent’s Com., 535; Jones v. Bacon, 68 Maine, 34.
The concluding words which appellant holds to be in effect a limitation upon the fee, and in fact the creation of a power of appointment coupled with a trust, cannot be so considered by the court. As before stated, the language used cannot be construed to imply any such meaning on the part of the testator, but does authorize the implication of a deliberate intention that the property should be at the free disposal of his wife during her life, by sale, or by her will,
An inheriatnce tax being a tax on the privilege or right of inheriting, could not be levied or collected as against the appellant until such right existed in fact, a condition only to be made certain in this case by the death of the widow. Magoun v. Illinois Trust & S. Bank, 170 U. S., 283; Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U. S., 41-115; 27 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 338; Cohan v. Brewster, 203 U. S., 543-551.
In view of our conclusion, consideration of the question as to the legality of such tax in the presence of an actual power of appointment coupled with a trust, is unnecessary; but inasmuch as the question has been raised, it may be useful to direct attention to the recent case of Chanler v. Kelsey, Comptroller of the State of New York, 205 U. S., 466, where the question was raised. The necessary facts therefrom may be stated substantially as follows: Laura Astor Delano was the daughter of William B. Astor. Upon the occasion of her marriage in 1844 to Frank H. Delano, Mr. Astor executed a deed in the nature of a marriage settlement, conveying certain real and personal property to trustees in trust to pay the income to said Laura Delano for life, with remainder to her issue in fee, or in default of issue to her heirs in fee; and giving her power in her discretion to appoint the remainder “amongst her said issue or heirs, in such manner and proportions as she may appoint by instrument in its nature testamentary, to be acknowledged by her as a deed and in the presence of two witnesses, or published by her as a will.” Three later deeds were executed substantially similar in terms. These deeds were absolutely irrevocable, took effect upon delivery, and were not made in contemplation-of the death of the grantor. Laura Delano died in 1902. By her last will, admitted to probate in the county of New York, she exercised the power of appointment conferred in the deeds above named. One of the appointees to whom Mrs. Delano had appointed the property conveyed by two of the later deeds referred to, took an appeal from
A “power of appointment” is defined as a power of disposition given a person over property not his own, by some one who directs the mode in which that power shall be exercised by a particular instrument. Words and Phrases, 5480, 55 Atl., 707. In the case at bar the property vested in Margaret C. Duques, and when her will was made there was nothing left on which a trust could operate. She had disposed of all the property, and hence ho power of appointment could have been executed. Fitzsimmons v. Harmon, 108 Maine, 456. The will speaks from the death of the testator, and in clearest terms expresses his intent and his clearly stated purpose that if the widow had disposed of the property by sale or by will, his wishes were satisfied and at an end.
Decree affirmed.
Case remanded to Probate Court for further proceedings.