106 A. 149 | R.I. | 1919
The above entitled cause is a bill in equity asking for a construction of certain provisions of the will of William H. Bridgham late of East Providence, deceased, and for instructions to the complainant, as executor of said will. Said cause, being ready for hearing *162 for final decree, has been in accordance with the statute certified by the Superior Court to this court for determination.
Said will was executed April 28, 1906. The testator died July 29, 1916. Said will was duly admitted to probate in the town of East Providence. By the first article of the will the testator provides for the place of his burial; by the second and third articles the testator makes two pecuniary legacies; the fourth article contains the provision as to which construction is sought and direction is requested by the complainant: and in the fifth and concluding article the testator appoints the complainant executor of the will and revokes all other and former wills by him made. Said fourth article is as follows:
"ARTICLE FOURTH.
"All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate of every kind whatsoever, real, personal and mixed, I give, devise and bequeath to the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company, IN TRUST, nevertheless, to collect and receive the rents and profits, interest and income thereof, and to pay over and apply the same to the use of my wife, Honorine G. Bridgham, during and for the term of her natural life, and upon her death, I give, devise and bequeath all such rest, residue and remainder of my estate, in fee simple, absolutely and forever, to my brother, Joseph Bridgham, and his issue.
"This disposition of my residuary estate to my brother Joseph Bridgham and his issue, is made because my brother Samuel W. Bridgham has an ample estate of his own."
By the allegations of the bill which are admitted by the respondents it appears that the testator's wife Honorine G. Bridgham and the testator's brother Joseph Bridgham died during the testator's lifetime and that "All of the property which is the subject matter of this bill is personal property and is either personal property of which said William H. Bridgham was possessed at the time of his death, or the proceeds or accumulations of such personal property, and *163 that none of said property is the proceeds of real estate of which the said William H. Bridgham died seized."
The complainant seeks the direction of the court "as to its duties as executor under the circumstances set forth and particularly as to which and how many of the respondents are entitled to share in the distribution of the residue of said estate under the provisions of said fourth article and as to in what proportions such respondents are entitled to share such residue." The respondents are Samuel W. Bridgham, Ida F. Bridgham and Eliza H. Appleton, children of Joseph Bridgham, and Frances M. Bridgham, Samuel W. Bridgham, Jr., and Jesse C.F. Bridgham, grandchildren of Joseph Bridgham and children of the respondent Samuel W. Bridgham. These three children and three grandchildren constitute all of the descendants of Joseph Bridgham. They were all alive at the time of the execution of said will except the last named grandchild, Jesse C.F. Bridgham, who was born May 4, 1908, eight years before the death of the testator. All of said children are of full age. Said grandchildren are minors and are represented before us by a guardian ad litem.
The three respondents first named, the children of Joseph Bridgham, in their answer and before us claimed that they are exclusively entitled to one third each of said estate in the distribution of the residue. It is claimed before us by the guardian ad litem in behalf of the infant respondents that each of said infant respondents, as one of the issue of Joseph Bridgham, living at the time of the death of the testator's wife, is entitled to either one-sixth or one-seventh of the residuary estate to be distributed.
The portion of the fourth article with reference to which construction is sought, is that in which the testator provides for the disposition of his residuary estate after the death of his wife. The language of the provision is as follows: "and upon her death, I give, devise and bequeath all such rest, residue and remainder of my estate, in fee simple, absolutely and forever, to my brother, Joseph Bridgham, *164 and his issue." As to this provision the adult respondents, children of Joseph Bridgham, suggest to the court three possible constructions, either of which if adopted by us will support their claim to the entire residue of the estate. These claims arefirst, that said provision should be held to constitute a devise in fee simple to Joseph of the testator's real estate and an absolute bequest to Joseph of the testator's personal estate; and that said bequest of personalty did not lapse by reason of the death of Joseph in the lifetime of the testator, but took effect and operated as a bequest to said three respondents in accordance with the provision of Chapter 254, Section 31, Gen. Laws, 1909; second, that the words "and his issue" may be construed as words of limitation, giving to Joseph a fee tail in the testator's real estate and an absolute gift of the personal estate in accordance with the rule that language, which in a devise of realty would create an estate tail, will if the property be personalty give an absolute estate; and third, if the word "issue" shall be regarded as a word of purchase and not of limitation it should be construed to mean "children" and not descendants generally. And if the gift to Joseph and his issue should be held to constitute a bequest to a class, of which Joseph was one member, then said children would take the whole of said residue as the members of such class surviving at the time of the death of the testator's wife; or, if the bequest should be held to be a gift to Joseph and his issue as individuals then each of said children would take one fourth of said estate under the provisions of the will, and the one fourth share bequeathed to Joseph would fall to said children under Chapter 254, Sec. 31, Gen. Laws, 1909, supra, which provides that certain legacies shall not lapse. And said respondents further urge that, whether the word "issue" be interpreted as meaning "children," or as meaning "descendants," said adult respondents should take by right of representation to the exclusion of the other respondents, the remoter issue of Joseph. Said respondents have not explicitly formulated all of said claims, but those *165 which we have named appear to be fairly deducible from the argument and brief of their counsel and seem to us to state the limit and extent of their contention made before us. We will consider these claims in the order in which we have stated them.
As to all of said claims the adult respondents urge upon us the generally accepted doctrine that "it is the duty of the court in construing a will to bear in mind the circumstances under which it was made so as to look at it as far as possible from the testator's point of view." In Re Boardman, Petitioner,
If by reason of ambiguity in the language of the will we were justified in seeking intrinsic aid as to its construction we would find nothing in the facts, recited above, which would throw light upon the intention of the testator with regard to the provision under consideration.
As to the first claim of the adult respondents that the provision in question may be construed as a devise in fee simple to Joseph of the testator's entire real estate and an absolute bequest to Joseph of all the testator's personal estate, these respondents urge that such intent may be found in an examination of the whole will and in the circumstances surrounding the testator. We have already pointed out that the testator's circumstances fail to furnish the basis for even a conjecture as to his intention, and the only general intent to be found in the will is the wish to give the income of his residuary estate to his wife during her life and upon her death to make an absolute gift of said estate; the meaning of which latter provision we are now seeking to determine. These respondents further urge that the concluding sentence of the fourth article indicates the testator's intention to give the residue after the death of his wife to Joseph absolutely. The apparent purpose of that sentence is to explain the testator's reason for making no gift to his brother Samuel and its language affords no assistance in the determination of the nature of the gift to Joseph, unless by the repetition of the words "and his issue" it should be *167 regarded as furnishing some indication that those words were used by the testator as words of purchase in the gift "to my brother Joseph Bridgham and his issue." This first position of said respondents requires us either to ignore the words "and his issue" or to treat them as superadded words of limitation. They should not be disregarded. They must be taken either as words of purchase or as words of limitation. The testator has specifically made an absolute gift in fee simple. To support a claim that the words "and his issue" are used merely as superadded words of limitation after the devise in fee simple, they must be construed as equivalent to the expression "and his heirs"; but the word "issue" used in a will as a word of limitation is not equivalent to "heirs" but to "heirs of the body," which import not a fee simple but a fee tail. Such construction would lead to the ambiguity of a gift in fee simple to be held in fee tail; which ambiguity is avoided if said words are treated as words of purchase. In a bequest of personalty the word "issue" is more readily construed as a word of purchase than it is in a devise of realty. "In gifts of personalty the tendency seems to be to treat `issue' as a word of purchase rather than a word of limitation." 2 Jarman on Wills, 1930 n (h). "The construction by which a devise of real estate to A. and his issue is held to give A. an estate tail effectuates the intention as far as possible while to hold that a bequest of personal property to A. and his issue gives A. an absolute interest defeats the intention because the issue takes nothing." 2 Jarman on Wills, 1199.
The second position of said adult respondents is equally untenable. The rule, that language which in a devise of realty would create an estate tail will if the property be personalty give an absolute estate, although not always followed by the courts may be considered as a generally accepted rule in the construction of wills. Such rule has been recognized by this court. Bailey v. Hawkins,
We are of the opinion that there is no warrant to be found in the will for disregarding the expression "and his issue" *169 or for treating it as embodying words of limitation, which either create an absolute gift to Joseph alone or cut down the devise of a fee simple to a fee tail and give the personalty absolutely to Joseph. The testator's plainly expressed intention is effected by treating such expression as words of purchase.
We now reach the third position of the adult respondents, which in part is that the word "issue," if treated as a word of purchase, should be interpreted to mean "children" and not descendants generally. In urging this as an unqualified rule the claim is clearly contrary to the great weight of authority in this country and in England. Said respondents are not supported by most of the reported cases which are cited by them as authorities upon this point. When used as a word of purchase "issue" is not a term of exact and inflexible meaning. By the context it may appear that the testator used it in the sense of "children" and then it must be so interpreted, but unless that is apparent or unless its meaning has been fixed by statute it will be interpreted in its legal sense of "descendants." Chancellor Kent in his Commentaries has urged that the intention of a testator will generally be effected by treating the word as synonymous with "children" unless a contrary intention appears in the will. And this view is approved by Judge Redfield, in 2 Redfield on the Law of Wills, p. 38, n. 9; but courts generally have not followed these text-writers. It has been frequently claimed and was so argued before us by these respondents that "in the ordinary parlance of laymen it means children and only children." It is by no means clear that this contention as to the popular meaning of the term "issue" is justified. Lord Loughborough in Freeman v. Parsley, 3 Ves. 421, said: "In the common use of language as well as in the application of the word `issue' in wills and settlements it means all indefinitely." And in Soper v. Brown,
Applying the conclusions which we have reached to the construction of the testamentary gifts under consideration we say that the testator's intention was upon the death of his wife to give the remainder of his estate to his brother Joseph and all his descendants then living. Since both the testator's wife and his brother Joseph predeceased the testator the gift passed to the descendants of Joseph living at the death of the testatorper stirpes and not per capita. As all of the first generation after Joseph survived the testator the estate will be distributed among them in equal shares.
The complainant executor is instructed to distribute the remainder of said estate in its hands among the respondents, Samuel W. Bridgham, Ida F. Bridgham and Eliza H. Appleton, in equal shares. The parties may present to the court on April 4, 1919, a form of decree in accordance with this opinion.