13 N.Y.S. 120 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
This is an action of ejectment, and was tried before the court. The court decided in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiffs appeal. The question involved arises solely on the construction to be given to the will of Samuel Hodson, who died in 1853, seised in fee of the premises, and especially on the construction to be given to the fourth and sixth clauses. By the third clause the testator gave to his daughter Elizabeth a house “to her
Should they be a part of the estate of the deceased daughters, or should they go to her children? To settle'this, he provided that these unpaid installments should go “to their surviving children, respectively, according to law, as the said annual sums, devises, and bequests may remain in the hands and under the control of either of my executors.” When he spoke of annual sums, devises, and bequests remaining in the hands of executors, he had no reference to land, notwithstanding the use of the word “devises.” He plainly had reference to the moneys which were in the hands of the executors, and which were to be paid annually by installments. There were no annual devises, accurately speaking. This use of the word “devises” in the middle of the sentence shows what it means in the beginning of the same sentence, where he says: “It is hereby understood that the devises and bequests made, respectively, to my daughters, ” etc. The beginning of the sentence is not to be separated from the end. We must look at the sentence as a whole, to understand what was the testator’s meaning. Of course, it is well known that, in ac