141 Mo. 55 | Mo. | 1897
— This suit is prosecuted by plaintiff as administrator of the estate of Alexander L. Mc-Mullin, deceased, against the defendant H. P. Farrow, as administrator of the estate of Sarah Ann Craig, deceased, formerly Sarah Ann McMullin, widow of said Alexander L. McMullin, for the' purpose of obtaining a construction of the last will and testament of said Alexander L. McMullin, deceased, and to determine which of the two administrators is entitled to the possession and control of the notes and choses in action belonging to said Alexander, for the purpose of administration. The court below found in favor of plaintiff, and that said Sarah A. Craig, formerly McMullin, the wife of the testator, took a life estate in all the property owned by the testator at the time of his death, and that Joseph McKinney took the property in remainder; that all the notes and choses in action described in plaintiff’s petition were assets belonging to the estate of Alexander L. McMullin, deceased, and that plaintiff was entitled to hold and control the same for the purpose of administration. Defendant appeals.
■“In witness whereof I have hereto set my hand and affixed my seal this 6th day of September, A. D. 1883.
“Alex. L. McMullin. [seal]”
The will was executed on the sixth day of September, 1883, and was admitted to probate in the probate court of Crawford county on the eighth day of October, 1888. The testator died October 1, 1888, after having reached the advanced age of seventy-eight years. He had accumulated personal property, money, and choses in action amounting to several hundreds of dollars, and was the owner of a large farm in Crawford county of about the same value as his personal property. He
There was no person appointed executor by the will; neither was there any administration on the estate after probate of the will. All of the property left by Alexander L. McMullin, consisting of real estate, chattels and other personal estate, including notes and choses in action, was taken charge of and managed by Sarah A. McMullin, the widow, in like manner as her own, and by her so managed until her death. The personal property consisted mainly of- notes, and at the time of McMullin’s death all of such notes were made payable to Alexander L. McMullin. On the twenty-sixth day of September, 1890, the widow, Sarah A., married said Craig. .
The widow, after McMullin’s death, collected some of the outstanding notes, and then again in turn loaned out such collections on notes, which were made payable to herself as Sarah A. McMullin, until after her marriage to Craig, then they were made payable to her as Sarah A. Craig. She died on the twenty-sixth day of September, 1892. Upon her.death letters of administration upon the estate, with the last will and testament annexed, of Alexander L. McMullin, deceased,
It was also shown that various demands'for indebtedness owing by McMullin were presented and allowed against his estate in the probate court of Crawford county, Missouri, and that plaintiff McMillan, as administrator, was in need of assets with which to pay off demands thus allowed against said estate. After the appointment of plaintiff as administrator, with the will annexed, of the estate of Alexander L. McMullin, deceased, letters of administration upon the estate of Sarah A. Craig, deceased, McMullin’s widow, were by the probate court of Crawford county, Missouri, granted to the defendant, H. P. Farrow, who duly qualified and is now acting as such administrator. Defendant Farrow, as administrator of Sarah A. Craig, deceased, claims all the notes and choses in action in issue herein, as assets of the estate of said Sarah A. Craig,- deceased, to be. by him administered upon.
It has been said that “the true intent and meaning of the testator can be best ascertained by the courts and those concerned in the execution of wills by putting themselves, so far as may be, in the place of the testator and reading all his directions therein contained in the light of his environments at the time it was made.” Murphy v. Carlin, 113 Mo. 112. But the provisions of the will in this case are so plain that resort to extrinsic evidence as to the situation of the parties, and the circumstances surrounding the testator at the time of its execution, is unnecessary in order to arrive at his true intent and meaning. By the first clause of the will the testator gave to his wife Sarah A.nn all of his estate both real and personal, to hold and enjoy absolutely with full power and authority to dispose of all or any part 'thereof at her option. By the second clause, however, the will provides: “In the event of the death of my said wife prior to my death, or if she survive me, whatever of my property may remain undisposed of at her death, I give and bequeath to Joseph McKinney and to his heirs absolutely and in
It is perfectly clear from the second clause of the will that if the testator’s wife, Sarah Ann, had died before he did, that Joseph McKinney would have taken the entire estate under that clause of the will on the death of the testator, for it so says in express terms. While by the first clause of the will all the property of the testator is given to his wife to hold and enjoy by her absolutely with full power of disposal, in the second clause he says “whatever of my property may remain undisposed of at her death I give and bequeath to Joseph McKinney and to his heirs absolutely in fee.” The testator speaks of the property in both the second and third clauses of the will, remaining undisposed of by his wife Sarah Ann at her death as Ms property, and in fact disposes of it by said clauses, which clearly shows that he did not intend to give it to his wife absolutely, but that he only intended to give her a life estate therein, with power of disposal. Evans v. Folks, 135 Mo. 397.
It can not be if the testator had intended to give his property to his wife absolutely that he would have said “my property remaining undisposed of at her death,” and then have disposed of it, the disposition to take effect after her death as provided for by the will.
Such a construction would make the provisions of the will inconsistent with each other, which, when construed as giving her a life estate only, are perfectly
The views which we have expressed are in accord with the ruling of the court below. The judgment is affirmed.