51 So. 728 | Ala. | 1910
— The testator, Hezekiah Allen, after bequeathing his property to his wife during her life or widowhood, provided further, by section 3 of the will as follows: “After the death or marriage of my said wife Sarah Allen, I desire that all my estate both real, personal or other description on hand at the death or marriage be sold and equally divided among my children share and share alike.” It is evident that the will bequeathed a life estate to the wife, subject to her marriage, with a remainder to all .of the testator’s children, as a class, who were living when the testator died. It was not restricted or limited to any of the children by name or to. those who survive the marriage or death of the life tenant, but referred to all of the children then living. It matters not that some of them died before the termination of the life estate, for section 6166, Code 190.7, expressly vests their-interest in their descendants, and prevents'a lapsing of the bequest to them. The present will is unlike the ones considered, in the cases of
We do not think, however, that the will applied to the children of the testator’s children who died before the will was made so as to include them, under the terms of section- 3435, Code 1907, as there was no power of appointment, but a mere duty of distribution. — Russell v. Wright, 98 Ala. 652, 13 South. 594; Collins v. Toomer, 69 Ala. 14. The trial court erred in ordering a distribution among the descendants of these children of the testator who died before the will was made.
It is an elementary rule of law that the rent follows the reversion, and the estate of a life tenant is not entitled to rent for the premises of the life estate. The proof shows that the land was rented for the year 1906 for $100, which was collected by the respondent and retained by him for a debt claimed against the life tenant. It also appears that the life tenant died January 6. 1906, and upon no theory was her estate entitled to more than an apportionment of the rent for the year 1906, and which would be so insignificant as to make it almost, if not quite, subject to the maxim “de minimis non curat lex.” The respondent used this money to pay himself, and was also liable for the interest on same. — Harrison v. Harrison, 39 Ala. 489. Nor did the respondent have the right to use any of the proceeds of the sale of the
It is true the will made no provision for the tombstone over the grave of the testator, nor for the burial expenses for that matter, but such expenses would be a lawful charge on his property, and we do not think that the cost of the tombstone for the testator was disproportionate to the value of his estate. Nor can we indorse the contention of counsel that the erection of a modest slab over the grave of the father, the one who produced the property now in question, was but the gratification of the vanity of a child, who continued to reside near the scene of her childhood and the last resting place of her father, merely because the other members of the family had “dispersed and gone to the four winds.” Indeed, it seems unnatural that a child or other descendant of .Hezekiah Allen, should object to paying for a modest tombstone over his grave out of the fruits of his labor, and who was the man from whom they got the property in question.
The respondent should not be charged with interest on the proceeds for the sale of the land other than what was misappropriated by him.
The decree of the probate court is reversed and the cause is remanded in order that the settlement may be made under the rule above stated.
Reversed and remanded.