23 Ga. 21 | Ga. | 1857
By the Court. —
delivering the opinion.
This bill was filed by the executors of the last will and testament of Lovett B. Smith, deceased, setting out the will, and asking the direction of the Court, as to its execution. A general demurrer for the want of equity, was filed thereto. The executors invoked the instructions of the Court as to their duty under the will, in respect to two legacies, which they found some embarrassment in settling according to the letter of the will.
They were relieved of the difficulty in respect to one of them, by the adjustment of the parties after the filing of the bill. The other as presented in the record, arises from the testator’s having disposed of, in his life time, certain notes to the amount of sixteen hundred dollars, bequeathed to the widow and children of his deceased son, Jackson L. Smith, for the purpose of purchasing a plantation. The clause of the will is as follows: “It is my will and pleasure that the children of my son Jackson L. Smith, deceased, be further
The position occupied by the plaintiff in error is, that according to the facts apparent on the face of the will, the testator bequeathed the notes of Killibrew, with George W. Collier as security, to the widow and children of his deceased son, and that the sale and transfer of them by the testator, in his lifetime, was an ademption of the legacy, and the duty of the executors was plain, and there is no necessity for instructions from the Court.
We think there is an error in assuming this to be a bequest of the notes and a specific legacy of the notes. “ A specific legacy may be defined, “ the bequest of a particular
Is this a bequest of the notes or a devise of land? The notes were to be used for the purchase of a plantation. The testator proceeds to direct how the plantation shall be disposed of. It is to be sold when the eldest child arrives at age. The testator did not consider the notes as the legacy. It is nothing more than a direction that a plantation worth sixteen hundred dollars should be purchased, and these notes, which he then had, were to be used in payment. Money directed to be employed in the purchase of land is to be considered land. Wheldale vs. Partridge, 5 Vesey Jr. 896. The case of Hinton vs. Pike, 1 Peere Wms. 139. decides that a legacy of £1500, to be laid out in land, shall be taken as land ; but if a deficiency of assets, then not specific, but to contribute in proportion. A specific legacy is what vests by the assent of the executor. The Lord Chancellor said that “ he agreed the £1500 legacy should be taken as land. The legatee of the £1500 cannot say he has the right to the £1500 in specie; indeed, if the money in such a hand were devised, this would be a specific legacy.” Admiral Littleton devised to his godson, James Masters, second son of Sir Harcourt Masters, £500, part of the money owing to him by Sir Harcom’t; the rest of the money owing to him by Sir Harcourt he gave to and amongst all the rest of the younger children of Sir Harcourt, &c. Sir Harcourt Masters, after the making of the will and at the request of the testator, paid him all he owed him, about £1000. The second son of Sir Harcourt Masters died in the testator’s life time, but his other younger sons were then living. If the second son had’survived the testator, it was held, that he would have been entitled to the £500, because it was a sum certain, notwithstanding the testator had collected the debt from which it was to be paid. Rider vs. Wa
The intention of the testator was to put the children of his deceased son, Jackson L., on a footing of equality with his other children. He had given each of the others land. He intented that they should have a plantation, considering this provision for them as a devise of land, and not as a bequest of notes. It is no more an ademption of the legacy that he sold and transferred the notes in his life time, than if he had directed sixteen hundred dollars in money to be laid out in land for them, and there had been no money in hand at his death.
It was not a specific bequest of the notes, because, if the executor had assented to the legacy, the children would not have been entitled to the notes in specie. That was not the bequest. They were given for a specific purpose.
But if the testator had stopped at the bequest of the notes, without declaring the purpose for which they were given, the legacy would not then have been specific. The words are, “ also, notes to the amount of sixteen hundred dollars on M. N. Killebrew, and George W. Collier, security.” The notes, areno otherwise identified than by the names of the parties. It does not appear how many notes, nor the apaount that he held on these parties. He does not give all the notes he held on them. He does not specify the number of notes. It is a bequest of a sum certain, sixteen hundred dollars, to be paid to the legatees, in notes on the persons named, for the purpose of purchasing land. In whatever light we view it, the
Judgment affirmed.