Sumner v. Westcott

84 A. 921 | Conn. | 1912

The devise to Charles B. Baldwin of a life estate in succession to his father is valid. Any invalidity of the limitation over after his death, being an entirely independent and separable matter, would not defeat the preceding life estate devised to him. Bartlett v. Sears, 81 Conn. 34, 41, 70 A. 33; Buck v. Lincoln,76 Conn. 149, 151, 56 A. 522; Johnson v. Webber,65 Conn. 501, 512, 514, 33 A. 506; Andrews v. Rice,53 Conn. 566, 573, 5 A. 823.

The limitation over, contained in division three of the clause under consideration, is not void as contravening the statute against perpetuities in force when the will took effect. Some portion of the estate thereby attempted to be given in remainder, and by possibility all of it, may, indeed, in the progress of events, fail of vesting. Whether or not such will prove to be the case can only be told upon the death of the life tenant, and will depend upon the family situation then disclosed. But neither the possibility that the testatrix's purpose and provisions in respect to some portion or portions of her estate coming under the purview of the third clause of her will may fail in certain contingencies, nor their actual failure as events may happen, operates, or will operate, to defeat the effectuation of her purpose and provisions in other contingencies, and thus defeat the entire limitation over. *221

This limitation over embraces a devise of shares of the remainder to the testatrix's six named brothers and sisters, should they then be alive to receive them. Should any of them be not then living, but have left children living, it is provided that the children should take the share which would have gone to the deceased parent had he or she survived. So far there is no disposition attempted which contravenes the statute. There follows, however, the further provision that, in the event that any of the brothers and sisters should have died without a child living at the termination of the life estates, the issue of such deceased brother or sister should take in lieu of the deceased. It is impossible to save this attempted disposition from the operation of the statute, unless it be by construing the word "issue" as here used to mean immediate issue or children. But this construction is absolutely forbidden by the context. The gift to issue is expressly conditioned upon the contingency that there are no children. There is thus no escape from the conclusion that the testatrix had in contemplation issue of a more remote degree than children, and such issue only.

Certain of the parties seem to assume that the invalidity of this last attempted gift to "issue" invalidates the entire remainder disposition. Such, as we have already observed, is by no means the case. An analysis of the third clause discloses that the testatrix's scheme and provision for the disposition of the remainder after the death of the Baldwins contemplated that the property should at that time be divided into equal shares corresponding in number to the number of the testatrix's designated brothers and sisters who should then either be alive or, having died, have left issue in some degree. Each of these shares was disposed of, and the manner of disposition is uniform as to all of them. Three possible contingencies were *222 provided for, to wit: one where the brother or sister survived the termination of the life estates, another where he or she did not so survive but had surviving children, and the third where neither the brother or sister nor child of him or her survived, but issue in a more remote degree was living. Any one of these contingencies might arise. Only one of them could. The last named was the last in the order of possibility; and it is that one in the contemplation of which the testatrix made the forbidden provision.

Her provisions in the event of the happening of these contingencies create alternative contingent remainders, or, using another terminology, constitute a limitation with a triple aspect. The legal result is that if the first contingency occurs, the remainder at once vests, and the subsequent alternative provisions become of no importance. That one which is repugnant to the statute does not come into operation. The same is true of the second. If events result in the happening of the third, a situation will arise which will come under the operation of the statute, and the gift in remainder of the share which the testatrix intended should go to the "issue" of the deceased brother or sister, will fail, and that share become intestate estate of the testatrix.Thomas v. Castle, 76 Conn. 447, 450 et seq.,56 A. 854. Such a result in respect of any one or more shares would not affect in any way the disposition of the remaining shares. Each share forms an independent subject-matter, and the fate of each will depend upon the facts pertinent to its bestowal under the terms of the will.

The Superior Court is advised that the defendant Charles B. Baldwin has a life estate in the property described in clause "Third" of the will; that the limitation over upon his death and that of his father, contained in paragraph three of said clause, is not void; *223 that it will be effectual to vest each share of the remainder estate, into which such estate is to be divided upon the termination of the life estates, in the donees designated therein, in the event that either the first or second of the contingencies described happens, but inoperative as to such share if the last-named contingency happens; that in the latter event such share will become intestate estate of the testatrix; and that said real estate has not passed absolutely to said Charles A. Baldwin.

No costs in this court will be taxed in favor of any of the parties.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.

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