44 N.H. 363 | N.H. | 1860
"Where a legacy is charged on land, an action of assumpsit, or debt, will lie against the devisee to recover it in certain cases. Piper v. Bennett, 2 N. H. 439. To the maintenance of such action it is necessary that the devisee should have accepted the devise, of which the most usual and satisfactory evidence is his entry upon it, — his possession and occupation of the devised property. Beecker v. Beecker, 7 Johns. 99; Van Orden v. Van Orden, 10 Johns. 30; Pickering v. Pickering, 6 N. H. 120; Pickering v. Pickering, 15 N. H. 290; Kelsey v. Western, 2 Comst. 501; Birdsall v. Hewlett, 1 Paige 32; Glen v. Fisher, 6 Johns. Ch. 34.
A devisee is presumed to assent to a devise which is apparently beneficial, unless he expressly renounces it; but he may waive, or disclaim the estate, and the devise will then be inoperative as to him. Stebbins v. Lathrop, 4 Pick. 33; Touch. 319; Birdsall v. Hewlett, 1 Paige 32. This presumption of assent is never conclusive; neither are acts that indicate a design or intention to accept. Wheeler v. Lester, 1 Bradf. 293. If the property devised is subject to a condition, or burdened with a charge, the devisee or legatee is allowed a reasonable time and opportunity to judge of the value of the bequest and of the burden of the condition, before he decides to accept or' reject it. Ibid. But by entering into possession of the property, the devisee accepts the gift with the condition; Pickering v. Pickering, 6 N. H. 120; and evidence that a third person was in possession, to whom the devisee gave directions as to his remaining and quitting the possession, is sufficient evidence of entry and possession. Tole v. Hardy, 6 Cow. 340.
If a legacy is charged on land the land will be subject to the charge, not only in the hands of the devisee, but in those of an assignee. Veazey v. Whitehouse, 10 N. H. 409; Leavitt v. Wooster, 14 N. H. 550; Pickering v. Pickering, 15 N. H. 290; Copp v. Hersey, 31 N. H. 317; Harris v. Fly, 7 Paige 421; Nellows v. Truax, 6 Ohio N. S. 97.
On every transfer of the whole estate, the grantee, who takes the estate charged with a duty which may arise upon a contingency, or with a continuing duty, which constitutes no debt, or a duty which arises from time to time, may be held by an implied promise to perform the duty or pay the charge which accrues in his time; and perhaps be charged in an action at law. But the remedy against several assignees of different parts of. the estate is by bill in equity. Pickering v. Pickering, 15 N. H. 290.
In regard to legacies charged on land, courts of equity exercise an extensive, and in some cases an exclusive jurisdiction. 1 Story Eq. 602. _
at personal estate of a testator is held the primary fund for the payment of legacies; Harris v. Fly, 7 Paige 427; Hoes v. Van Hoesen, 1 Barb. Ch. 379; Roper on Leg. 163; Leavitt v. Wooster, 14 N. H. 565, and cases cited; and it is not relieved from liability in the first instance, where the legacy is made charge on real estate, unless such is indicated in the will as the intention of the testator. Hanna's Appeal, 31 Penn. St. 53; Glen Fisher, 6 Johns. Ch. 34; Adams Eq. 263, n. 1; Patterson v. Scott,
The intention of a testator to first charge the realty with the payment of legacies must be express or clearly implied, not only as an intention to charge realty, but to exonerate personalty. Whitehead v. Gibbon, 2 Stockt. 230; Kelsey v. Western, 2 Comst. 506; Dodge v. Manning, 1 Comst. 298; Livingston v. Newkish, 3 Johns. Ch. 325; Tole v. Hardy, 6 Cow. 333. The old law is said to have been that the personal estate could not be exempted from the payment of debts and legacies without express words; but it is held sufficient if there appears upon the will a plain intention, or necessary implication. Hoes v. Van Hosen, 1 Comst. 120. And it is said it is not material that the charge is imposed on the devisee in the terms of a condition, as where real estate is devised to A., he paying the debts, or legacies, or the like. Ibid. Bridgeman v. Dove, 3 Atk. 202; 2 Vern. 120; 9 Ves. 444 ; Eoper on Leg. 163. But this would seem to be one of the circumstances, to be weighed with others in the will, as indicating the intention of the testator. An absolute and specific disposition of all the personal estate of the testator, not a mere residuary bequest, is sufficient to manifest the intent of the testator to chai’ge the realty in exoneration of the personalty. Kelley v. Deys, 3 Cow. 133. From the principle that the personal estate is the fund first liable to the payment of legacies, it results that where the personal estate is not intended to be exonerated, the receipt by the executor of personal assets, sufficient to pay the legacies, discharges the real estate from further liability for the payment of them; and where such assets are wasted or misapplied by the executor, the loss falls upon the legatee; and he can not resort to the real estate, upon which the legacy is charged, either in the hands of the devisee, or of any purchaser from him. Sims v. Sims, 2 Stockt. 168; Glen v. Fisher, 6 Johns. Ch. 34; Birdsall v. Hewlett, 1 Paige 32; Willard Eq. Jur. 488.
And it has been held that the purchaser may insist that the legatee shall first exhaust his remedy against the devisee personally, as well as against the personal estate of the testator, where that is the primary fund; Glen v. Fisher, 6 Johns. Ch. 34; Dodge v. Manning, 1 Comst. 298; though the equity of that rule is not evident.
The rule as to the equitable charge upon the estate devised is the same, where the devise fails wholly at law, or is not capable of being enforced at law, as if the estate is devised to the heir at law, or to a stranger, upon condition that he pay the legacy. In the first case the devise to the heir is void at law, yet in equity it is good as an equitable charge upon the land of the heir, who is directed to pay it; Smith v. Atherley, 3 Rep. in Ch. 93; Freem. Ch. 36, S. C.; and in the next case, if the stranger renounces the estate upon which the devise as to him becomes inoperative, yet the equitable charge remains, so, though a stranger can not enter upon the land on breach of the condition, the court will consider the heir at law a trustee for the legatee, for the purpose of charging the land with the payment of the legacy. Harris v. Fly, 7 Paige 427.
Though a legatee may elect, or may be compelled to resort to
Some decisions in this State seem in conflict with the principles before stated, that the legatee whose legacy is charged on land can not charge the land, if there is sufficient personal assets. In Leavitt v. Wooster, 14 N. H. 566, Gilchrist, J., says, “ In the case of Gookin v. True, 3 N. H. 288, an action was brought on a probate bond to recover certain legacies charged on land, where the devisees of the land had entered upon it. It was held that the legacies could not be considered a charge upon the estate generally, which the executor was bound to pay; that their non-payment was not a breach of the bond, and that the action could not be maintained.” It is also to be inferred from tbe case of Veazey v. Whitehouse, 10 N. H. 410, that where the charge is upon the land the executor is not liable upon his bond. An action of assumpsit was brought in that case against the assignee of the land charged with the support of the testator’s daughter, and maintained; and such was the case also in Pickering v. Pickering, 6 N. H. 120. The first of these cases, however, is reconcilable with the principle before stated. The testator devised to his executor so much of his personal estate as should be sufficient to pay his debts and incidental charges, and if any remained it should be the property of A. D. He gave his real estate to his son, and directed that he pay S. B. and H. D. fifty dollars each, and the action was brought on the probate bond to recover these legacies. The case falls within the rule before stated, that an absolute and specific disposition of all the personal estate shows an intent to charge the real and exonerate the personal property. In the second case no question was made upon the points, and the facts necessary to raise the question are not stated. The third case was against an assignee of the real estate, and it was not suggested that there were personal assets, or that the assignor was responsible.
If the court adopt the rule that the personal estate is the fund first chargeable for the payment of legacies, as there is nothing stated in the bill as to the personal except the household furniture, it may be necessary to amend the bill, so as to show that there was not sufficient personal estate to pay the legacies, or that it was specifically bequeathed to others. It is not necessary perhaps now to decide this point.
The answers in this case present two points, which are relied on as matter of defense: First, that the defendant, the devisee, had never accepted the devise, nor been in possession of the devised estate : The other, that it was the intention of the testator to give his son till he should be twenty-one years of age to determine whether he would accept the estate.
The minority of the devisee precludes his personally doing any valid act to bind himself to his prejudice, and it is not pretended that he has done any thing to affect his right. The estate remained
If this were an action at common law the point of acceptance would be vital, since upon it the right of action depends; but in this proceeding in equity nothing depends upon that, except the question whether the devisee shall be charged personally, since the bill has for its object to charge the land as well as the person of the devisee; and a decree may be made to charge the land itself by a sale, though no person appears to be personally chargeable.
As to the other point, the intention to allow the devisee till twenty-one to make his election to accept the devise, it is of no importance as to the charge upon the land, except as it bears upon the question of the time when these legacies are to be paid. The land is liable to the payment in any event. If, by the fair construction of the will, these legacies were payable when this action was. commenced, the legatees must have a right to commence proper proceedings to enforce payment of them, whether the devisee had made his election or not; the true nature of the devise being that the testator gave to the legatees so much out of the real estate, and the balance to the devisee. But if the legacies, from the terms, or fair construction of the will, were payable only after the devisee should arrive at twenty-one, the bill is prematurely brought. The question is one affecting the interest as well as the right of action, since a legacy draws interest from the time it is payable.
The general rule is that legacies for which no other time of payment is fixed, are payable in one year from the decease of the testator. There seems no color to contend that these legacies were so payable, inasmuch as the real estate is given to the widow during her widowhood, and after her death, or marriage, to the devisee on condition that he pay these legacies.
This is one of the cases where the course of events has not fallen out agreeably to the expectation of the devisor. He probably supposed that his wife would live much beyond the full age of her son, as was the reasonable probability; and as is shown by the provision that after the son should arrive at twenty-one, he and his mother should have the management of the property. In that event the legacies might be payable when the estate should vest in possession
There must be a decree in favor of the plaintiffs, charging the land, the form of which, unless the parties agree, will be directed by the court.