90 Ky. 205 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the opinion or the court.
The will of Samuel Carlisle is before us for construction. He died, leaving six children surviving him, and made, after providing for his wife, the following disposition of his property:
“I give to my son, James- A. Carlisle, axxd his heirs, lot No. 1,” describing it.
“I give to my daughter, Anna H. Carlisle, and her heirs, lot No. 2,” describing it.
“I give to my daughter, Mary A. Carlisle, and her heirs, lot No. 3,” describing it.
“I give to my son Samuel, and his heirs, lots 4 and 5,” describing them.
“I give to my daughter Sophia, and her heirs, lot No. 6,” describing it.
“And I do hereby declare that none of the above lands described are to be sold during the life-time of the devisees, either by the devisee or any other authority whatever, for the debts of any husband or wife that any of the legatees now have or may hereafter have, but to remain as above stated; and if any one of said heirs of mine should die, leaving no child or children, then the one so dying their share or. shares to be equally divided amongst the survivors.”
“And to my daughter, Malvina F. Flynt, I give all my houses and lots in Carrollton, which I purchased of one John Layeman, namely: two houses and eight half-acre lots, to be under the same restrictions as provided for the other heirs.”
The daughter, Malvina Flynt, at the date of the will, was married, and had living a daughter. The daughter married, and died before her mother, leaving a child surviving her, named Dudley E. Miller. The mother, Malvina Flynt, then died, leaving a will, by which she gave this property that her father devised to her to her grandson, Dudley E. Miller. The two sons of the original devisee, Samuel Car-lisle, claiming that under the will of their father, as their sister, Malvina Flynt, died without leaving a child or children surviving her, her portion of the estate passed to her brothers and sisters, this action was instituted that the rights of the parties might be determined, and the chancellor below having adjudged that the great grandson of the original devisor, and the grandchild of his daughter, Malvina, took nothing under either the will of Samuel Carlisle, his great-grandfather, or under the will of his grandmother, that judgment is brought here for revision.
It is well settled by numerous authorities, embracing several decisions by this court, that the words child or children, when used as describing those who are to take under the will, do not embrace grandchildren, and the meaning of such words can not be extended unless such was the plain intention of the
This statutory construction was not intended to control the intention of the testator where it appears that a more extended meaning was given such words by him, but was enacted as following the rule adopted or recognized by this court in the case of Churchill v. Churchill, 2 Met., 466, as well as in many other reported cases. Where there is no necessity for enlarging the meaning of the words child or children, or where no intention by the testator to do so appears on the face of the will, the chancellor is confined to the ordinary meaning of the words, and can not include grandchildren; nor will the necessity for the chancellor’s interference arise from the fact alone that injustice has been done by the testator, or by reason of the hardship of the devise, but it must be a necessity arising from a state of facts that compels the chancellor to extend the meaning of the words to include grandchildren, so as to make the will operative or effectual; therefore, a plain devise to one’s children will not include grandchildren, although they may have the same claims upon the testator’s bounty. The chancellor is left, however, to construe the entire will, with all its provisions, so as to arrive at the testator’s intention.
In this case the devise to five of the testator’s children is to each by name, and to their heirs; but when he comes to make the devise to his daughter, Malvina
The question is, what meaning the testator attached to the words child or children. In each devise to his five children he uses the word heirs — “to my son and his heirs”- — “to my daughter and her heirs”— evidently meaning those who would take by descent in a direct line from them, whether children or grandchildren. And in determining the question-of survivorship, he used the words child or children as meaning the same thing; and it seems to us it is a plain perversion of the meaning and intention of the devisor to say that he intended the children only of his children to take, and that if they all died but one, leaving grandchildren and no children surviving them, that the survivor of the original devisees took the entire estate. The word children was used as synonymous with heirs, the purpose of the testator being that, if they died without some one to take from them by
What advice counsel gave him does not appear, but it is apparent that the use of the word heir or heirs might be construed as passing to each child the absolute fee by which the estate could be disposed of by the devisee contrary to the intent of the testator, and for that- reason the words child or children were substituted ; but whether so or not, the devise to his children and their heirs points clearly to the intention of the testator, and leaves no doubt of his desire to have the estate pass from the child to its offspring, including children and grandchildren; and where the contingency happened that no one could take from the original devisee, his or her part then passed to the survivor. It is, therefore, needless to discuss the nature of the estate that vested in Mrs. Flynt; whether a defeasible fee or a life estate, or whether the case is like that of Wills v. Wills, reported in 85 Ky., 486, the title is now in the appellant, Dudley Miller.
The judgment below is, therefore, reversed, and remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer, and for proceedings consistent herewith.