239 Mass. 439 | Mass. | 1921
This petition for instructions brought by the trustee under the will of Jacob Foss was filed in 1917 and the final decree was entered in 1920. Procedure upon appeal, therefore, was to the Supreme Judicial Court sitting for the county under R. L. c. 162, § 9, and not under St. 1919, c. 274, because the proceeding was begun before the latter act took effect. The case is rightly before us by appeal from the decree of the single justice. Jordan v. Ulmer, 237 Mass. 577.
The testator died in 1866 a resident of this Commonwealth. His will was duly admitted to probate and contained many provisions. The will has been executed and his estate administered except as to clause thirty-fourth. That clause is in these words:
“ All the rest and residue of my estate, real, personal and mixed, I give devise and bequeath to my nephews and nieces in severalty, to share and share alike, except William A Foss my brother Luther’s oldest son. And I hereby direct, that my executors above named pay the same to my said nephews and nieces in equal proportions whenever at the end of each six months there shall be a sufficient sum to divide two hundred dollars or more, to each, except William A Foss aforesaid, until the whole of my estate is disposed of, as follows, to wit:
Charles W. Howland was a nephew of the testator and came within the class of beneficiaries designated in clause thirty-fourth of the will. He died in 1916, a resident of this Commonwealth, leaving no children, a widow Adelaide B. Howland and, as his nearest of kin, three brothers and the daughter of a deceased brother.
Adelaide B. Howland alone appealed from the decree of the Probate Court. She confined her objections to its third paragraph, which alone affected her rights. The question here to be decided relates solely to that paragraph. That question is whether the widow is entitled to share in the " half portion and interest on the trust fund,” held for the benefit of the nephew of the testator, Charles W. Howland, her husband, during his life, under the testamentary gift “ to his . . . legal heirs.”
The gift of the remainder of the estate, of which Charles W. Howland enjoyed the income so long as he lived, to his heirs on the termination of the life estate, was a gift to the heirs of the life tenant. This gift constituted a contingent remainder because it could not vest until the persons entitled to its enjoyment could be ascertained. Since no man can have heirs until his death, the ultimate beneficiaries could not be known until the death of the life tenant, when for the first time his heirs could be determined. Putnam v. Gleason, 99 Mass. 454. Hall v. Farmer, 229 Mass. 103, 104.
The heirs at law of Charles W. Howland at the time of his death in 1916 were his widow and his next of kin by blood. R. L. c. 140, § 3, els. 2, 3; c. 133, § 1, cl. 5. The wife was a statutory heir and thus a legal heir as well as his kindred of blood. Lavery v. Egan, 143 Mass. 389. Lincoln v. Perry, 149 Mass. 368, 374, 375.
Although the provisions of the statutes determining who are heirs at law have been changed subsequently to the date of the will of Jacob Foss and the admission of that will to probate, nevertheless the words of the statute at the time the words of the will become operative in fixing the ultimate beneficiaries are to control, unless a contrary intent is manifest from the will as a whole. When the testator in phrasing his will made the contingent remainder, which should vest upon the death of the several life tenants, payable to the heirs of each, it must be presumed that he intended that his beneficiaries should be the heirs as fixed by the law at the time the death of the life tenant occurred. He took his chances as to those who then should be established as heirs, because it would have been simple to have designated other remaindermen by definite and inflexible words if he had so desired. These principles have been settled by numerous decisions. Proctor v. Clark, 154 Mass. 45, 49. Olney v. Lovering, 167 Mass. 446. Blodgett v. Stowell, 189 Mass. 142.
, The present will discloses no testamentary intent that the words “legal heirs” in clause thirty-fourth were not used in their ordinary sense. There is manifest no disposition on the part of Jacob Foss to exclude the wife of his nephew from the classification “ legal heirs.” There are gifts in the will to a large number of blood relatives, gifts to strangers of the blood, and gifts to children of kindred. There is not any dominating and pervading purpose apparent from the words of the will that none save blood relatives should share in Ms bounty, or that husbands and wives should be shut out provided they come within the sweep of the
Decree of single justice affirmed.