120 Mo. 409 | Mo. | 1894
Action of ejectment against defendant Amelia C. Kennel -and her tenants, for the possession of a lot in the city of St. Louis. Both
“I give and bequeath to my beloved wife, Regina Schorr (maiden name Regina Schlienger), all my right, title, claim and interest in three certain tracts or parcels of land [which are thereupon specifically described, and include the premises in dispute]; * * * four shares of the Domicile Saving and Loan Association, numbers 1813, 1814, 1815 and 1816, dated January 15, 1858; and all mixed property whatever I may be possessed of at the time of my death; and after my death, all real, personal and mixed property of whatever she, the said Regina Schorr, may be possessed of at the time, shall be equally divided between my next relations and her next relations -or heirs; that is to say, after the payment of all just debts and funeral expenses.”
On the twenty-second day of October, 1881, Regina Schorr conveyed by warranty deed the lot in controversy to the defendant, Kennel. She, Regina, died childless in 1885. So far as the record discloses, she left no heirs of any kind or description, while the plaintiff was the nearest of kin to the testator of any of his relations, being a nephew. The answer was a general denial, although it was admitted on the trial that defendants were in possession of the property at the time of the commencement of the .suit. The trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for possession of the premises sued for and $98.50 damages, from which judgment defendants appealed to this court.
The trial court held that Regina Schorr took only a life estate by the will; that nothing except that passed by her deed to the defendant Kennel, and that
In construing a will, 'all of its provisions should be taken together and effect given .to every clause of it, and the words used so construed as to meet as near as possible the intention of the testator. Our statute provides that in the construction of wills, courts “shall have due regards to the intent and meaning of the testator.” Shumate v. Bailey, 110 Mo. 411.
In Morrison v. Thistle, 67 Mo. 598, Sherwood, C. J., says: “Equity looks to the intention — and will glean it, if possible, from the four corners of the instrument, and will not allow such intention to fail by reason merely of the accidental mislocation of the words designed to impress the estate conveyed with a particular character, and thus effectuate a specific purpose. * * * But the rule is to give, if it may be, to every word in the writing its appropriate meaning, and not to suffer the very intention to be defeated, although it is unequivocal and manifest, by a hair-spun, technical construction of the instrument.”
In Chiles v. Bartleson, 21 Mo. 344, the will that was before the court for construction contained the following provisions:
“Section 3. I will and bequeath unto my beloved wife, Frances Bartleson, my negro man, Charles, his wife, Clara, and their four children, and all of my lands, with the appurtenances thereunto belonging, with a sufficiency of stock to support the farm. * * * Section 8. And, further, after the above and foregoing bequests have been complied with, then out of the remainder of my estate, it is my will that the bequests made to my four children shall be made equal, according to my estimate, valued agreeably to their several bequests; the residue of my estate to be equally divided*414 between my wife and four children. And, further, it is my will that the bequests made to my wife, Frances, at her death, be equally divided between my four children.”
It was held that the intention of the testator manifestly was to give the land to his wife during her life only, with remainder to his children. It will be observed that the third section of that will gave the personal and real estate to the wife without saying during her natural life, while the eighth section provides that the bequests made to the wife, at her death, be equally divided among the testator’s four children; yet it was held that the wife only took a life estate in the land.
While it may be conceded that, when the testator is the owner of the fee, a devise of all right and title to the same will pass the fee (2 Redfield on Wills [3 Ed.], star p. 322; 3 Wash. Neal Prop. [5 Ed.], star p. 694), it is also a well settled rule of law that the whole will must be construed together, not in detached parts; and if it be manifest, when so construed, that he did not intend to pass the fee, then the intention must prevail. The rule thus announced does not conflict with the one that, where an estate is given in one part of the instrument, such estate can not be taken away, or cut down by raising a doubt upon the extent of meaning or application of a subsequent clause, or by inference therefrom, or that a remainder can not be engrafted on a fee.
In Harbison v. James, 90 Mo. 411, it was held that a will which gave to the testator’s widow all of his property, real or personal, with power to sell and reinvest, as she might desire, any part of the same for her separate use and benefit, and any portion of the estate remaining undisposed of at her death,, to his three daughters, created in the widow a life estate, with power to use the principal, if necessary, for her support, and the remainder, if any, at her death went to the daughters.
There is no substantial difference in the provisions of the will in the case in hand and the provisions of the wills in the Chiles, Ilarbison and Munro cases, and it should, we think, be governed by the same rules of construction laid down in those cases.
In arriving at the intention of the testator, his sit
Defendants were not entitled to a reduction of damages for outlays expended in the preservation of the property, and the court committed no error in excluding all evidence with respect thereto. The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.