70 So. 893 | Miss. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellants, the executor and surviving children of R. G. Rives, deceased, filed their hill in chancery in the chan
“I desire she should take, for her natural life, all of such property and effects as I may own at my death, whether exempt from execution under the law, or not»
Amanda F. Rives and the two sons of the testator, Henry W. and Joel E. Rives, were nominated executors, to qualify without bond or security, and they were empowered to sell any property of the estate, publicly or privately, for cash or on time as they might think best. ■By a codicil dated September 13, 189-2, the son, J. E. Rives, was given all of the law books and all office furniture, on condition that he should finish up all cases and business in which he and the testator were engaged as partners at the time of the death of the testator, and account for and pay over to the executors the testator’s part of the fees in the same manner and to the same extent that the testator would have been entitled if living. On the 1st day of August, 18-94, shortly before the death of R. G-. Rives, he executed another codicil containing the following provision:
“At my death I wish my wife, Amanda F. Rives, to hold and enjoy not for her life merely, but absolutely as her own property, subject only to the provisions herein
Then follows the devise in remainder to his children, Lucy, Agnes, and Robert one-fifth interest; and to Henry •and Joel E. each one-fifth, in trust for their respective defendants, to be held and used as they might, respectiveljq ■deem advisable for the beneficiaries.
If we take the clause in .the original will alone, it seems clear that the devisor only intended that his wife should take a life estate in the property devised, with power to use and enjoy it if necessary. This codicil, we think, was added merely for making clear the power of his wife to •convey an indefeasible title to the property should she 'think it advisable to dispose of it during her life. If we •are to look to the wfill as a whole to discover the purpose and intention of the testator, we find but little difficulty ‘in the way of a satisfactory conclusion. It is evident that Mr. Rives had perfect confidence in the judgment and justice of his wife; he wanted her to take control of all 'his property and use and enjoy it during her life even to the extent of consuming the entire estate. If she did not use or dispose of any part of the estate before she died, 'the part undisposed of would go to his children. This will is essentially the same as the will construéd by this court in Murdoch v. Murdoch, 97 Miss. 600, 53 So. 684. Speaking for the court in the Murdoch Case, Mayes, C. J., used
“The testator reposed confidence in his wife, and believed that she would not waste the estate, and would, make conveyance of same only when necessary; but'the absolute dominion over the property was left, with the-wife. If she consumed it, there was no power resting anywhere to prevent, after the coexecutors refused to act.. The will expressly provides that no inventory shall betaken of the estate. It provides that the wife has the-right to sell any of it as may be for the best, and she is-the sole judge of that. It further provides that no account is to be kept of the disposition or management of the property — ‘my wife to have full use, and manage it the best, she can, with the advice of the two co-executors.’ All. that the testator leaves to his brothers ánd sisters is-‘what is left of the property’ after the death of Mrs. Murdoch. Mrs. Murdoch does not take the property in fee,, but she did take it with full authority to consume the-whole estate, if she so desired, and without the power of. anybody to put a stop to it. ’ ’
Construing a will very like the will in the present case,, this court said:
“Taking the will by its four corners and construing it: as a whole, it is clear that the testator did Mot mean to* vest his wife with power to dispose of the property by will, but that what he did mean is simply this: That, his wife should have the use and enjoyment of the property during her lifetime, with full power to mortgage- or sell it, and that in event it, or any portion thereof,, should not be sold by her, it should be divided after her-death . . . among his children.” Hannah L. Selig v. William Trost et al., 70 So. 699.
In the case just quoted the court said further:
“If it were permissible to construe the two clauses of it separately, and by so doing to hold the first to be a-devise in fee, the limitation over contained in the second clause would be valid as an executory devise. ’ ’
We think it must he said that the testator in the pres- . ent case reposed a trust and confidence, in his wife, and gave to her the' power to dispose of any of his property to take effect during her life; and we are quite satisfied that her estate in the property was a life estate only.
The hill alleges that Mrs. Rives sold some of the property and reinvested the proceeds in other property; and the remaindermen ask the court to vest the title of that property in them. What we think about this will we have set forth above, and we do not think the widow could defeat the will of her husband by resorting to the device of selling the property devised and putting the proceeds in other property. A mere change of form will not have the effect of defeating the manifest intention of the testator to give his children what was left after his wife’s death. If Mrs. Rives sold any of the property for cash and invested the money in other property for the purpose of defeating the intention of her husband and robbing his children, or through a misinterpretation of the will, neither the one nor the other can destroy the rights of the children. If this could be done the wife could have nullified the will by converting into cash the entire estate within a month after her husband’s death and investing the money in real estate. The wife could not will the property devised, nor can she will other property which she bought with the proceeds of sales of property in which she had only a life estate, and which she did not consume or otherwise dispose of during her life.
The demurrer should have been overruled.
Reversed and remanded.