118 Me. 473 | Me. | 1920
Bill in equity on report praying for the interpretation and construction of certain portions of the will of Charles F. Achorn.
After mailing provisions for the purchase of a burial lot, perpetual care of the same, erection of a suitable monument thereon, and small specific bequests to seven nieces, the testator thus declares:
“Third: To my beloved wife, Etta M. Achorn, I give, bequeath and devise 'all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate both the real, personal and mixed, wherever situated and whenever and however acquired that I may own at the time of my death. Giving my wife the full power to sell, convey and dispose of any or all of said estate during her lifetime that she may choose to, and to use in any manner she chooses the whole of said estate and the proceeds realized from the sale of same for her support and maintenance or the support and maintenance of any person or number of persons that she may select. Meaning and intending to give my wife the full power to dispose and consume of all my property, if she so chooses, same as I could do if living and without any interference or suggestions from any heirs or legatees.
Fourth: If, after the decease of my wife, there is any part of my estate left, after my wife has exercised the power heretofore stated, then I give bequeath and devise to my nieces all the rest, residue and remainder of said estate to my nieces in the following manner, viz.”
The proportionate shares to the nieces here follow but they do not affect the controversy. The testator died in June, 1918, and on the following January his widow died leaving a will which was executed only a few days after the probate of her husband’s will. The twenty-fifth paragraph of her will reads thus:
“It is my purpose by this will to dispose of both my separate estate and all the estate that came to me by the will of my late husband. Charles F. Achorn, or of which I have the power of disposal by his said will, and to that end I do by this will exercise all rights of disposal over the estate which belonged to my said husband, which rights of disposal were given to me by his said will.”
The plaintiffs claim that the widow, by the will of her husband, took a life estate with qualified power of disposal by deed or gift in
The case therefore presents the oft-recurring task of first ascertaining the actual intention of the testator, a question of fact, to be gathered from the entire instrument, viewed in the light of existing circumstances; and, second, determining as a question of law whether the actual intention is so stated that it may be carried into effect, or whether fixed canons of interpretation require that his intention must fail of execution.
What was the actual intention of this testator viewed in the light of existing circumstances and 'as found within the four corners of the will? The bill, answer, and the two wills constitute the record. From this record, and the existing circumstances thereby disclosed, we feel justified in finding that Achorn and his wife were well advanced in years, were childless, had jointly accumulated a goodly portion of this world’s goods, and that his affection for and confidence in his wife were very great. Aside from small pecuniary legacies to-seven nieces his chief thought was that his beloved spouse should spend a serene, comfortable and independent widowhood, and enjoy his estate according to her wishes and station in life. The first sentence of the third paragraph, when read alone, would undoubtedly create in her-an estate of inheritance under R. S., Chap. 79, Sec. 16. Stopping here we should unhesitatingly say that the actual intention was to devise and bequeath title in fee to real estate and absolute interest in personal property. But although the second and third sentences are separated from the first by a period, as occurred in the very recent case of Reed v. Creamer, 118, Maine, 317, yet, as in that case, the second and third sentences are linked with the first and all must be
That the power of disposal which Mr. Achorn gave to his wife was limited rather than unlimited is further shown by the language employed by him in the beginning of the fourth paragraph, viz: “If, after the decease of my wife, there is any part of my estate left, after my wife has exercised the power heretofore stated” &c. For if her power was absolute, then after its exercise there could be nothing left; if her power was limited, then after its exercise there would or might be something left. Therefore, the fact that he provides for a remainder, after the exercise of the power by her, clearly shows that he regarded the power as limited rather than unlimited, qualified rather than unqualified.
Had he said “In case my wife fails to exercise the power, then I give” &.c. that would be consistent with an absolute or unqualified power which remained unexercised, as' was the case in Burbank v. Sweeny, 161 Mass., 490, but here he provides for a remainder after a full and complete exercise of power, and that necessarily implies that the power itself must be limited or qualified.
We are of the opinion that the actual intention was to create a life estate in the widow, with remainder over; that the intention was judicially expressed, that no rule of law has been forced, and the fourth rule in Barry v. Austin, 118 Maine, 51, must be applied, viz: If the devise is expressed in such general terms as would otherwise create an estate of inheritance under R. S., Chap. 79, Sec. 16, and those general terms are followed by a qualified and restricted power of disposal in the first taker, a life estate by implication is created and the limitation over is valid.
The residuary legatees under the will of Charles F. Achorn are to share in the residuum of his estate, according to the terms of his will, and decree will be prepafed and presented by the plaintiff to any Justice of this court, sitting as a court in equity, for his signature, in accordance with this opinion. Parties to pay their own costs and counsel fees.