5 App. D.C. 183 | D.C. Cir. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Two principal questions are raised in the case: 1. Whether under the will and codicil of Benjamin Newton the children of Charity Marshall took a vested remainder, in fee simple, in one-fourth undivided part of his property which could not be divested or affected by any action of Charity Marshall, in conjunction with the other children of the testator; and 2. Whether the action of the children of Charity Marshall, in the equity suits that have been mentioned, constituted an
We fail to appreciate the force of the appellee’s contention.. It is ingenious, but unsound. The will and codicil of Benjamin Newton must be taken together; and so taken, they clearly and unmistakably evidence the purpose of the testator to modify his first disposition in favor of his daughter Charity Marshall, and to substitute for the absolute fee simple which wras given to her by the original will a life estate for herself and a vested fee simple remainder in her children. This is nothing so unusual or so extraordinary that we are deprived of the guidance of the well-known rules of the law applicable to such cases. The estate which Charity Marshall and her children took was plainly an undivided interest in the estate of the testator; and there was no power given by the will and codicil, when taken together, to Charity Marshall, either expressly or by implication, to convert that undivided interest
We do not deem it necessary to pursue this question farther. We are strongly of opinion that the fee simple interest in the estate of Benjamin Newton, now claimed by the children of Charity Marshall, was not affected by the action of the latter in the attempted partition proceedings of February 14, 1871.
It is very true that the bills of exception in this case set forth the fact, in connection with the first mentioned equity suit, that the property therein specified and desired to be sold was the same property that had been assigned to Daniel P. Newton by one of the partition deeds of 1871; and in connection with the second equity suit, that the property therein mentioned was the same that had been assigned to Charity Marshall by one of the same partition deeds. But so far as we can judge from the record, these identifications were made at the trial in the present cause, and not in the equity suits; and there is nothing to show that there is any reference whatever in the equity suits, direct or indirect, to the matter of the partition of 1871, or to the rights or claims . of any person thereunder.
We fail, therefore, to find in this cause any ground for the application of the doctrine of estoppel. If the defendant has ground to believe, what the record before us does not show, that the children of Charity Marshall have received their just share of the estate of their grandfather, and that it would be inequitable for them to prosecute their claim to the property held by the defendant, the latter is not without remedy to procure appropriate relief.
We can find no law that in our opinion can sustain the ruling of the court below, and we must regard that ruling as erroneous. The prayer of the plaintiff should have been granted, and the prayer of the defendant refused. For this error the judgment of that cowrt must be reversed, with costs ; and the cause must be remanded to that court with directions to set aside the verdict and to award a new trial; and it is so ordered.