103 Mo. 151 | Mo. | 1890
Ejectment to recover the undivided half of a tract of land situate in Holt county. Both parties claim title under the will of Daniel Hudson, which was as follows :
£! In the name of God, Amen. I, Daniel Hudson, of the county of’Holt, in the state of Missouri, do make and publish this, my last will and testament:
“ First. I give and bequeath to Charles W. Hudson and Elvora Hudson, heirs of my eldest son, Charles W. Hudson, to each of the above-named heirs of Charles W. Hudson, I bequeath $1.
“Second. I also further give and devise to my granddaughter, Minerva Nichols, heir of my daughter, Permelia Caroline Hudson, and to my daughter Mary, wife of John Boswell, and also to my daughter Amanda Jane, wife of David° Hudson, all of my real estate, together with all and every messuages, lands, tenements and hereditaments, with the appurtenances whereof lam seized in fee, situated, lying and being in Hickory township, county of Holt, and state of Missouri, to be divided equally between each of the above-named Minerva Nichols, Mary Boswell and Amanda Jane Hudson, so that each may receive one equal portion, to have and to hold, to them and their heirs forever.
£ ‘ Third: I further will that in case the above-named Minerva Nichols and Amanda Hudson, or either of them, should be dead and not now living, then all of my estate, both real and personal, I give and devise and bequeath to my daughter Mary, wife of John Boswell, to have and to hold, to her and her heirs forever.
‘ ‘ Fourth. I do appoint as executor of this, my will, William Shields. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand, this twenty-third day of September, A. D. 1881. - his
“Daniel x Hudson.” mark.
The following evidence was offered by plaintiff and admitted over defendant’s objections:
John Boswell testified as follows: “I am the defendant and son-in-law of the testator, Daniel Hudson. I think Mr. Hudson, the testator, died in October, 1881, a couple of months after the execution of the will. The plaintiff and Amanda Hudson named in the will were not present when the will 'was made; they were not in the neighborhood. I do not know where they were ; had not seen them for. some years. Amanda Hudson married in Holt county and left, I think, in 1872 or 1873 for Texas. The plaintiff left here when she was a
The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that the rents and profits of plaintiff’s interest in the land in' suit were $83.33 1-3 per year, and that the monthly rents and profits of said land are $6.90 per month.
Plaintiff received judgment for an undivided one-third of the land and defendant appealed.
The rights of the parties depend upon the construction given to the foregoing will of Daniel Hudson, deceased. Defendant contends that, inasmuch as Amanda Hudson, one of the devisees of the land in controversy, given in the second clause of the will, was dead at the time of its execution, she took the whole estate therein by virtue of the third clause. There can be no doubt that there is an apparent inconsistency, if not repugnancy, between the third and the first and second clauses of this instrument. The first clause, in plain terms, gives to each of his grandchildren, Charles and Elvora Hudson, $1. The second clause gives to his granddaughter, Permelia Nichols, who is plaintiff in this suit, his daughter, Mary Boswell, who is wife of defendant, and a daughter, Amanda Hudson, all his real estate, “ so that each may receive an equal portion, to have and to hold to them and their heirs forever; ” this devise of the real estate is absolute and unequivocal in its terms. The third clause provides “that-, incase the above-named Minerva Nichols and Amanda Hudson, or either of them, should be dead, and not now living, then all my estate,
At the date of the execution of the will, Amanda Hudson was not living. Would a proper construction of the will defeat all the provisions of the first and second clauses by reason o'f existence of the contingency, apparently provided against in the third clause ?
“The first and great rule in the exposition of wills to which all other rules must bend is, that the intention of the testator expressed in his will shall prevail, provided it be consistent with the rules of law.” Smith v. Bell, 6 Peters, 75. So important and paramount is this rule regarded in this state, that the legislature has given it emphasis by making it a part of the statute law. R. S. 1879, sec. 4008. It is not to be understood that parol evidence can be resorted to, to ascertain the intention of the testator; to do so would defeat the requirement, that all wills shall be in writing. The intention must be gathered from the will itself, not from particular words, phrases or clauses, but from the whole instrument, and every part thereof, taken as a whole. Allison v. Chaney, 63 Mo. 280.
When it becomes necessary to explain inconsistencies, or ambiguous or doubtful expressions, the situation of the testator and objects of his bounty, and all the circumstances surrounding the parties may be considered. Smith v. Bell, supra.
The testator had four children, Charles W., Permelia, Mary and Amanda. At the time of making the will Charles W. was dead. To him, during his lifetime, the testator had given eighty acres of land, and by the first clause of the will his children were given $1 each. The testator still owned two hundred acres of land, which he disposed of, under the second clause of the will, by dividing it equally among his two daughters, Mary and Amanda, and plaintiff, who was a daughter of Permelia. There is no uncertainty about these
When he comes to make the third clause, had his intention changed, and did he intend thereby, that, if his daughter Amanda was not living, his grandchild, who was first named, who was apparently first in his thoughts and affections, should be disinherited ? There was no such connection between plaintiff and Amanda, as could raise even a suspicion that their interests should stand or fall together. One had been in Texas for years, the other in LaFayette county in this state.
“ Where one estate is given in one part of an instrument in clear and decisive terms, such estate cannot be taken away, or cut down, by raising a doubt upon the extent, or meaning, or application of a subsequent clause, or by inference therefrom, nor by any subsequent words that are not as clear and decisive as the words of the clause giving that estate.” Roseboom v. Roseboom, 81 N. Y. 359. While the provisions contained in the third clause, taken alone, are without such ambiguity or uncertainty as would render their meaning doubtful, they fail to express the intention and purpose of the testator with the clearness and decision shown in the preceding clause. If a construction can be given that will reconcile the conflicting clauses, it should be done in such a manner as to give effect to the
He may, also, have intended to pass to Mary other property, undisposed of. That the intention was not to defeat previous bequests, or dispose of property already devised, becomes more apparent, when we remember that the legacy of $1 each, given to the two grandchildren, in the first clause, was evidently done with a view of complying with section 3969, Revised Statutes, 1879, and thus preventing intestacy as to them. If the intention was to give his daughter all his estate, regardless of previous disposition .of any part of it, then it would take from these two grandchildren the provision intended to prevent them from demanding an interest in the whole estate. This he could never have intended, but such would be the result under the interpretation contended for. It may be true that intestacy as to these children may have been avoided by the mere naming them, but the testator’s intention evidently was to avoid such intestacy, by making the provisions
The conclusion is, that the testator intended that his daughter Mary should take, under the third clause of the will, the estate previously devised, respectively to plaintiff and his daughter Amanda, only in case the devisee of such estate should be dead at the time the will was executed, and not otherwise ; and that he never intended, if one of said devisees should be dead, that his daughter Mary should take the estate of both, and also the legacy of the other grandchildren.
If this was the evident intention of the testator, as apparent from the whole will, then in order to effectuate that intention, the words, “undisposed of,” may be supplied, so as to make the third clause of the instrument read, “then all my estate, both real and personal, undisposed of, I give, devise and bequeath .to my daughter Mary.” This supplying of words to effectuate the manifest intention is allowable under the well-known rule, “that in the construction of a will the intention of the testator, apparent in the will itself, must govern, and that in order to effectuate that intention, as collected from the context, words may, when necessary, be supplied, transposed or changed.” Dew v. Barnes, 1 Jones’ Eq. 151; Kellogg v. Mix, 37 Conn. 243; Butterfield v. Hamvant, 105 Mass. 338; 2 Williams on Ex’rs, sec. 978. “And it is no objection to supplying the omission, that different persons may differ in regard to which of two or more words, of similar significance, will more appropriately supply the omissions.” 1 Jarman, 456. See also Aulick v. Wallace, 75 Ky. 533, in which a number of other authorities are collated.
The proof, from the whole will and from the condition of the parties, their relation to each other, and the character of the property, is manifest and convincing,
The evidence introduced for the purpose of showing the situation of the parties was proper, and there was no error in admitting it. In the construction of ambiguous or conflicting provisions, “the situation of the parties may very properly be taken into view.” Smith v. Bell, supra; Schouler on Wills, secs. 579, 580.
Judgment affirmed.