29 Md. 443 | Md. | 1868
delivered the opinion of the court.
The first inquiry in this case is, did Mrs. Imogene Tayloe, the mother of the complainant, take, under the will of her grand-father, James Mosher, any interest transmissible to her son? Upon the answer to this question depends the complainant’s right to any relief; and it must be decided, because we are of opinion if his mother did take such interest, he is entitled to a part of the relief prayed in his bill.
By this will, executed in February, 1840, the testator, subject to the devises, bequests and dispositions in favor of his wife and his servants, gave and devised the whole of his estate, real, personal and mixed, not otherwise specifically disposed of, to two trustees, in trust for the purposes thereafter declared in his will, with power of leasing his real estate during the continuance of the trust. He then directs the trustees to pay certain annuities to the grand-children of his wife by a former marriage, to his niece, and for the support of the family of his son William and his wife, in case she survived him without a child; and then the will proceeds thus:
“ I will and desire that the clear income of my estate, if anything remain after the application annually or otherwise, of the several sums of money hereinbefore charged thereon, shall be invested in such manner as my trustees or the survivor of them shall think proper, and so on from time time, until a final distribution of my estate be made as hereinafter directed. Upon the death of my son William, I will and desire that a distribution of my estate be made among all my grand-children, to wit:
At the date of the will, and at the death of the testator in March, 1845, he had and left three grand-children, the children of his deceased son James, viz: Imogene, Eliza and Theodore, the first of whom married John Tayloe, and died in August, 1846, leaving the complainant her only child and heir-at-law, and her husband surviving her. The testator’s son William, who is still living, has never had any issue. The question thus presented is, did the grand-children in esse at the death of the testator take under this will vested interests in the corpus of the estate and its accumulations, or was the vesting in interest postponed to the period of William’s death, leaving the whole to be distributed to those grand-children only who should be then living ?
It is very difficult, in any case, to gather the intention of a testator from the language employed in the will, where events have occurred which probably were not in his contemplation when the will was executed, and the present case is surrounded with more than usual embarrassment and doubt. The intention is certainly, in every case, the object of ascertainment; but, wherever there is doubt and difficult}'-, the courts must resort for aid to settled rules of construction. The most important of these, and indeed, the only one which seems to be general, definite and fixed, is that the law favors the vesting of estates, and where words of futurity are employed they are not to be
The argument against the vesting has been presented with much ability and force of reasoning, by the appellees’ counsel. It is said this is a devise to trustees to pay and transfer, at a future period, to a class of individuals with provision, that the income shall, in the meantime, accumulate; that no previous mention is made of the grand-children in any other clause of the will; that no part of the income, or of the interest of the invested accumulations is given them for support 'and maintenance before the period of distribution shall arrive; that there is no limitation over, and no provision made for issue or survivorship of individuals of the class specified; that there is no antecedent gift of which the enjoyment could be postponed, and the only gift being in the direction to pay and distribute, it can only attach to those who may come within the description of the class at the period of distribution, when the gift takes effect; that this intention is made more manifest from the fact that, as to the children of William, the devise is clearly contingent upon the event of such child or children surviving their father by force of the words, “provided any child he shall leave ” and where an estate is made contingent as to one of a class, it must be so construed as to all.
But it makes no difference, as to the vesting, whether the legal estate be devised to trustees who are required to convey *according to the directions of the will, or whether the interest is provided to take effect without the intervention of trustees, nor that the trust provides for the accumulation of in
Two subsequent decisions, Mower v. Walker, 16 Beav. 365, and Chance v. Chance, 16 Beav. 572, have been strongly pressed upon our attention. In the first, there was a devise and bequest of real and personal estate to trustees, in trust for A. for life, and after her death to convey and assign the same unto, and equally between all and every, the child and children of A., “ on their respectively attaining tzventy-one years of age,” with a gift over in case of A.’s death, leaving no child *surviving her; and it was held that A.’s child, who survived her, and died before attaining twenty-two, did not take a vested interest, and that the gift over failed. In the second, the testatrix appointed a trust fund to two trustees, in trust, to pay the dividends to A. for life, and after his death, she gave the dividends to B. and C. for life, and after the death of the survivor, she directed the principal to be divided into two parts, and to be transferred or paid unto, and equally divided between, “all the children” of B. and C. respectively, “at the age of twenty-five years;” and it was held the legacies did not vest until the period of payment, and as that period violated the rule as to remoteness, the gifts were void. These decisions were made by Sir J. Romily, Master of the Rolls, and in each of
Nor is the rule that any provision in regard tó a particular member of a class affecting or defining the time of vesting, or tending to determine whether the estate was intended to be contingent or vested, should be applied to all the members of the class, a rule of universal force and application. In ordinary cases, and in the absence of any other guide to the intent, it would be a circumstance of controlling weight, but each will depend for its construction, in a great measure, upon its own peculiar language, phraseology and circumstances. The testator here directs a distribution of his estate to be made among all his grand-children, to wit: the children of his late son James, and the children of his son William, provided any child he shall leave. It is doing no violence to this language or to any rule of law, to hold that the children of James, who were in esse -at the date of the will and of the testator’s death, took
To what relief is the complainant entitled, constitutes the remaining subject of inquiry. By a memorandum executed in 1842, and adopted as a codicil in May, 1843, the testator -directs that if his estate should accumulate beyond the amount required to pay the legacies and bequests in his will, his executors and trustees, “ in their discretion, shall appropriate a part of the surplus to Mrs. Eliza M. Mosher,” (the widow of his deceased son James and the grand-mother of the complainant,) “ for the benefit of her children until the estate shall be finally settled.” It appears a balance of $470.28 had ac
The complainant is clearly not entitled to relief under this memorandum codicil, as being one of the parties for whose personal benefit the appropriation, authorized by that codicil, was to be made. That appropriation is to the “ children ” of Mrs. Mosher, and this word, in this connection, cannot be held to extend to and embrace grand-children. In this construction of the codicil we concur in the opinion expressed by the learned Judge of the Superior Court. Neither can the complainant claim in right of, or as deriving from his mother, any part of the surplus so appropriated, because it does not appear any such surplus accrued, to be distributed under the codicil, until after his mother’s death in August, 1846. Nor is he entitled to recover back, or to an account for, any portion of the surplus which has already been paid over under the several orders following the original order passed by the Chancellor. These orders were passed by courts of competent jurisdiction, and we must assume, in this proceeding, that the necessities and condition of the children were inquired into and au
But we are of opinion, upon the facts presented in this record, the complainant is entitled to an injunction to prevent *any further payments under this codicil, until the further order of the court. He has an interest under the will in the whole estate, with the accumulations of rents and profits, upon the death of the testator’s son William, whenever that event shall happen, and is, therefore, interested as against the codicil, that no more of the surplus shall be appropriated thereunder than the necessities and wants of the children of Mrs. Mosher may require. All the surplus income not needed for the other annuitants, nor required by this codicil, in the proper exercise of the discretion thereby reposed in the trustees, must be invested and accumulate for the benefit of those ultimately entitled to its possession and enjoyment. Thé complainant has, therefore, a clear right to insist that the discretion thus vested in the trustees shall not be abused to his prejudice, and that the money shall be applied as the codicil directs, and to the extent only which the necessities and condition of the children therein intended to be benefited, now demand. To this extent the relief asked must be granted and the bill sustained.
There is nothing in the proceedings in the Circuit Court of the District of Columbia, instituted by his father, precluding the complainant from obtaining relief, to the extent indicated, upon his present bill, because, if for no other reason, he was no party to those proceedings, and any decree which may have been passed therein could in no way affect his rights. Nor is it necessary for us to determine to what extent, if any, the father, as surviving husband, is or may be interested in the devise or legacy which, as we have decided, vested in his deceased wife under the will of her grand-father, because whatever may be his interest, it cannot interfere with the complainant’s right to the relief now granted, unless it should be held that all the personalty and all the accumulated rents and profits and income of both the realty and personalty, devolved upon him absolutely as surviving husband, a position which cannot be sustained, and which has not even been asserted in argument.
Decree reversed and cause remanded.