Turner v. Evans

106 A. 617 | Md. | 1919

By the will of Clara I. Turner, late of Cecil County, the residuary estate of the testatrix was devised and bequeathed in trust for the benefit of her daughter, M. Genevieve Turner, upon a condition expressed in these words: "provided she does not intermarry with the person who is now paying court to her, it being my intention not to interfere with my said daughter marrying any person whom I regard as her social equal, but so far as in my power to prevent her contracting an unsuitable marriage." It was directed by the testatrix that in the event of her daughter "not marrying the objectionable person" referred to, "but marrying someone who is her social equal," then the trust should terminate and the whole of the trust estate should be distributed and paid to her daughter, and that in case of her marriage to the person previously designated, or to some person not her social equal, the trust should continue, but she should cease to receive any portion of the income, which, in that event, was to be paid during her life to certain other persons, and after her death the estate was to pass to her children.

The pending bill of complaint, filed by the daughter of the testatrix, disputes the validity of the provisions just noted upon the theory that they impose illegal restrictions upon her marriage. It is contended that the condition against her marriage to the person to whom the will referred is invalid because it would require the breach of a pre-marital engagement which had been entered into before the will was executed, and that the condition as to her marrying a person who is her social equal is void for uncertainty.

Since the bill was filed the marriage to which the testatrix objected has been consummated. The testimony of the plaintiff and her husband is to the effect that their engagement *240 occurred several years before the date of the will, she being then twenty-two and he forty-one years of age, but whether the testatrix was at any time aware that they were engaged is a question upon which there is a conflict in the evidence. It is clear, however, from the proof in the case that she openly and earnestly opposed the courtship from which the engagement and marriage resulted.

A condition in a will or deed which operates in only partial restraint of marriage is valid and effective unless it unreasonably limits the right of the beneficiary to enter into such a relationship. Pacholder v. Rosenheim, 129 Md. 462; 40Cyc. 1699. The validity of conditions in restraint of marriage with a particular person has been uniformly sustained. Bostick v. Blades, 59 Md. 233; Re Seaman, 218 N.Y. 77; Graydon v.Graydon, 23 N.J. Eq. 229; Jenner v. Turner (1880), L.R. 16 Ch. Div. 188; Case Note L.R.A., 1917, A. 44. The decisions upon this question have not been based upon a consideration of the motives for such provisions, but upon the conclusion that they are inherently not unreasonable.

In no case cited in the argument or discovered in our investigation has it been held that the validity of a condition like the present one is affected by the circumstance that it may interfere with an existing engagement for the marriage which it is intended to prevent. This objection was raised and overruled in the case of Graydon v. Graydon, supra, where the legatee to whom the condition applied was a minor son of the testator, and the decision was based on the ground that the pre-existing engagement of such a person to marry, contrary to the terms of the will, was without binding effect because of his minority, and could afford no ground for holding the condition inoperative. The question whether a prior engagement would ordinarily be sufficient to invalidate such a condition was not decided but was expressly reserved in that case.

No convincing reason has been suggested why the general and undisputed rule which supports the validity of conditions *241 in restraint of a marriage with a designated person should be held applicable only to cases in which the courtship preceding the marriage sought to be obviated had not progressed to an engagement at the time of the execution of the instrument by which the condition is prescribed. There is certainly no just ground for thus excluding from the general rule cases where such conditions represent the solicitude of parents for the future of their children. The considerations inducing such provisions may be as urgent after as before the engagement. The natural interest of a parent in guarding the son or daughter against an unfortunate marriage does not end at any appointed stage of the prenuptial relations. Notwithstanding a promise to marry, there may be ample and obvious reasons, entirely consistent with public policy and the highest morality, why the projected marriage should be discouraged and abandoned. The right to impose a condition like the one we are considering is usually exercised because there is ground for the belief that the marriage considered objectionable is actually in contemplation. It is to the marriage itself and not to any preliminary agreement or relationship that the condition which the law permits is directed. To make the validity of the condition depend upon the contingency suggested in the argument would tend to confuse its application and defeat its purpose. If the rule should be adopted that a condition in restraint of marriage with a specified person must be held invalid when there is shown to have been a pre-existing engagement at the time the condition was created, then such a result would have to be declared no matter how manifestly just and wise the provision may be and how improvident the marriage it is designed to prevent, or, as the only alternative, each case would have to be determined by a judicial estimate of the merits of the anticipated union and the sufficiency of the grounds upon which it was opposed. The settled principle which recognizes the right to attach to the disposition of property a condition in restraint of a particular marriage should *242 not, in our judgment, be qualified by exceptions based on inquiries as to the propriety of the marriage or as to the time and circumstances of the antecedent promise. Consequently our conclusion is that the condition imposed by the will in this case is not open to the objection we have discussed.

The provisions which make the termination of the trust and the absolute vesting of the estate in the daughter depend upon her marriage to "someone who is her social equal," and which divest her interest in the trust estate in the event of her marrying a person not her social equal, would be incapable of application because of the non-existence of any definite or reliable standard of social equality. As there has been a breach of the condition against marriage to a described individual, it would not be necessary to consider the one in reference to marriage to a social equal except for the contention that the two conditions are inseparable and that the invalidity of one because of its uncertainty renders the other likewise void. Our construction of the will does not enable us to adopt this theory. In one of the two connections in which the condition relating to marriage to a social equal is stated, its purpose is not to defeat but to enlarge the estate devised and bequeathed to the daughter, while in the other connection, where it would divest the estate previously given, it is placed in a disjunctive relation to the condition against the marriage which has since been contracted. The observance of both conditions was essential to the conversion of the daughter's equitable life interest into an absolute estate, while by the breach of either condition the life estate was subject to be divested. But in the provision as to the latter event the two conditions are not made so interdependent that the invalidity of one can properly be held to render both ineffective.

The appeal is from a decree giving effect to conclusions with which the views we have expressed are in full accord.

Decree affirmed, with costs. *243

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