38 Wash. 227 | Wash. | 1905
One George Lauman died, leaving a will, which was duly admitted to probate by the superior court in Spokane county. The portions of said will material upon the questions involved in this appeal were substantially as follows: “1st. I wish all my just debts to be paid. 2nd. [Directs place of burial.] 3rd. I desire an appraisement made of all my property I may leave real, personal and mixed, and a sufficient amount sold to pay the special bequests hereinafter named, and also- my debts and for the portion to be set apart for my daughter Jessie Mas-
The executors of the will, being in doubt as to the construction to be placed upon some of its terms, requested the advice and protection of the court as to the manner of giving effect to its provisions. They submitted to the court the following four interrogatories:
“(1) Is the bequest, referred to in the 3rd clause of said will by said testator, as ‘the portion to be set apart for my daughter, Jessie Masson Lauman,’ concerning which he speaks more particularly in the 7th clause of said will, a legacy, differing from the other legacies given by said will, only, in that the specific amount thereof is not mentioned, but is to be determined by the appraisement directed to be made by said clause 3, or is it a devise of one-fourth part of the residuary estate, coupled with a direction for its segregation from the rest of said residuary estate, its conversion into money, and investment upon the trusts mentioned in said 7th clause.
“(2) If it is to be considered as a legacy, does the provision for the appraisement of the testator’s estate^ directed to be made by the 3d clause of said will, refer only to the appraisement, required by the laws of this state, to be made of the estates of all deceased persons, and if so, on
“ (3) If the testator, in making provision, as aforesaid, for an appraisement, referred to another and different appraisement than that provided by statute to be made of his estate, then by whom, in what manner, and at what time is such appraisement to be made ?
“(4) In case the bequest, referred to by the testator as the portion to be set aside for the benefit of his daughter, is adjudged to be a legacy, is it intended that said legacy should equal in amount, one-fourth of the gross value of said estate on appraisement, either already made or here¡after to be made, as it may be by this honorable court determined, or equal in amount to one-fourth part of the net value of said estate, according to such appraisement, after deducting all debts, other legacies, and costs of administration, or whether debts and other legacies only are to be deducted from such appraised value, or finally, the other legacies only, in computing the amount of the aforesaid legacy.”
A hearing was had before the superior court upon these matters, and thereupon findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and entered. The court found, among other things, that the estate had been appraised, in the manner in which estates are ordinarily appraised under the provisions of our probate statutes, at the sum of $200,691.61; that the debts of said testator, including taxes which were a lien upon the estate at the time of his death, amounted to $72,803.84; that certain unimproved lands of the estate had been sold, and the sum of $12,490 realized from said sales, and the debts of said estate re
“(1)_ That the intention of the testator, in directing an appraisement of the whole of his estate, was that the same should be made as soon as possible after his decease, so that his executors would be able to then form an intelligent estimate of the amount of real estate they would have to sell, under the power of sale conferred on them, before they were called on to exercise the same, and also to determine the amount of the sum to be set apart, as directed by the will, for the benefit of the defendant Jessie Masson Lauman.
“(2) That tne appraisement, made April 12th, 1902, fully complied with testator’s intention, and is the only appraisement required by the will to be made:
“(3)_ That the sum to be placed in trust, as directed by paragraph 7 of said will, is a legacy, the amount of which is arrived at by deducting $18,000.00, the amount of the legacies termed by the testator special bequests, directed to be paid by paragraphs 4, 5, and 6 of said will, from $200,691.61, the total of the appraised value of the whole estate, leaving $182,691.61, one-fourth of which, or $45,-675.40, will be the amount to be placed in trust as directed in said paragraph 7.
“(4) That, in announcing the purpose for which he gives his executors a power of sale, in paragraph 3 of said will, the testator placed no special significance on the order in which those purposes are mentioned.
“(5) That it was the intention of the testator that his debts and expenses of administration should be paid out of the remainder of his estate, after the special bequests and the legacy bequeathed by paragraph 7 were paid.”
A decree was made and entered in accordance with these conclusions of law. From this decree, the sisters and children of the deceased sister of testator who are mentioned as
The sisters maintain that the will should be construed as follows, to wit: (1) That the portion to be set apart to Jessie Masson Lauman is a legacy, and not a devise. (2) That the word “appraisement,” in paragraph Y, means the original appraisement of the estate required by law, and that the testator intended that appraisement to be made to determine the amount to be set aside to his daughter, after the payment of the special bequests, expenses of administration, the one thousand dollars for keeping in order the burial place, and payment of the debts of the deceased. (3) That the testator, in paragraph Y, intended no different appraisement than the one mentioned in paragraph 3. (4) That the portion given to Jessie Masson Lauman is one-fourth of the net value of the estate, as found on the original appraisement—that is, from the value of the property, as then appraised, the expenses of administration, the one thousand dollars, the debts of the deceased, and the specific legacies are to be subtracted, and ■the remainder is the net value of the estate; that one-fourth of this sum is the amount intended for said daughter; that no part of the income of the estate is to be considered in determining the net value of said estate, nor is the said income to be applied in satisfaction of the debts of the deceased for the purpose of ascertaining the part or portion to- be set aside to said daughter. The minor children make substantially the same contention as do the testator’s sisters.
The daughter, Jessie Masson Lauman, claims that it was the intention of the decased to, and that he did, devise and bequeath to her the one-fourth of all his property, real and personal, after first deducting from the same the legacies
The question as to- the intention of the testator, with' reference to the matters in contention, is therefore presented to this court, and it is incumbent upon us to gather that intention from the language of the will. To do this we must construe all of its provisions together, in the light of the testator’s evident general purpose, and of the statutes in force with reference to the administration of wills. After a careful examination, we are unable to agree fully with the conclusions reached by the trial court. In our opinion, it was the intention of the testator that his debts should be a first charge upon his estate-. The first provision of his will is for their payment. The next thing to find expression was the purpose to create a fund from which his debts, and the allowances of paragraphs 4, 5, 6, and I, should be paid. To provide the cash for these payments, he expressly directs (in paragraph 3) that a sufficient amount of his property, real, personal, and mixed, be sold. It is evident to us that he intended his debts to be paid first, the bequests of paragraphs 4, 5, and the provisions of 6 to be next attended to, and the directions of paragraph I as to the daughter’s share to be then carried out. As the law makes the expenses of administration a charge upon each and every part of the estate, we think it must be held that those expenses were in contemplation by the testator when he made the provision for the payment of all his debts in paragraph 1 of the will—there being no express mention of such expenses, or provision to meet the same,-elsewhere in the will.
In arriving at the amount to which the daughter is en
As to whether the one-fourth of the remainder of the estate, given to the daughter by paragraph 7, and referred ■to in paragraph 3 as the portion to be set apart to said daughter, is a bequest or devise, we are inclined to think that it is the former. The language of paragraph 3 is far from being clear or explicit, and the opening part of paragraph 3 sheds but little light upon this question; but, further on, in paragraph 7, the testator says: “It is my wish that the net income from the aforesaid amount shall be paid to my said daughter during her life and in the event of her death without issue, said money shall again become a part of my general estate and be divided as hereinafter provided for my sisters.” The use of the word “amount” would seem to indicate that the testator had in mind the idea of money, rather than other property; and where he says that said money “shall again become a part of my general estate,” etc., it is evident that he used the word “money” as referring to the “amount” mentioned theretofore in the same sentence. This word “money” must refer—as a grammatical proposition—to the word “amount,” or to the word “income.” It cannot be held to refer to the word “income,” because to give it such a construction would be to leave no provision whatever for the disposition of her property in case of her death, excepting the mere “income from the aforesaid amount.” It was, without doubt, the testator's intention that the entire property given by this will to the daughter should, in the event of her death without issue, go to his sisters. If the
It will be noticed, also, that in paragraph 8, in speaking of the “remainder” given to his sisters, he speaks of the “rents and proceeds” to be derived therefrom; but in paragraph 1, speaking of the portion given his daughter, he says nothing about “rents and proceeds,” but speaks merely of the “income” from said “amount.” This is another indication that he did not have in his mind any thought of the daughter’s portion embracing real estate. We are satisfied that it was the testator’s purpose to have his daughter’s allowance delivered to her in the form of money. Such allowance was, therefore, a bequest.
The case is remanded to the honorable superior court with directions to modify its decree hereinbefore entered to correspond with this decision. The costs to the parties upon this appeal shall be allowed by the executors as expenses of administration.