80 Ga. 681 | Ga. | 1888
Young Hall made a will and died. In the 5th item thereof appears the following:
“All of the property which is to go to my daughters under the will, I give to them and each of them and their children, free from the control, debts and liabilities of their present or any future husband, to*682 and for tlieir sole and separate use. I desire that the husbands of those under coverture when this will takes effect shall be their trustees respectively of the portion given to their wives and children.”
Margaret F., one of the daughters of the testator, had, before the making of the will, intermarried with John A. Estes, and by him had two children who were in life at the death of the testator, and other children who were born subsequently to the testator’s death. Estes died, and she intermarried with W. P. Bruce, and by him had several children.
The main question in this case, and the only question we deem it necessary to decide, is whether, under this will, all of the children of Margaret F. were entitled to participate in this property upon the death of' the mother. The question was left to the decision of the chancellor in the court below, and he held that none of the children of Margaret F. but those who were in life at the death of the testator, took any interest under the will; and that decision is excepted to.
We think that the court below erred in this construction of the will. Wé think, from the language of the will, that it was the intention of the testator that all of the children of his daughter, Margaret F., bom and to be born, should be entitled to participate in the property. He uses the words, “ free from the control, debts and liabilities of their (his daughters’) present or any future husband ”; and in réferring to the husband as he does here, it is to be inferred that he had in view the probability, naturally flowing from the relation of husband and wife, that other children would be bom to his daughters than those who might be in life at the death of the testator. He speaks not only of the present, but the future husband. And the reasonable inference is, that in referring to his daughters’ children, he meant not only those who were alive at the time of his death, but such as might be born thereafter, and who would be equally near to him and equally entitled to be objects of his bounty. We think that the chancellor
Judgment reversed.