52 Conn. 518 | Conn. | 1885
The plaintiff is executor of the will of James L. White, and asks for a construction of the will.
The part of the will about which there is any question is as follows: “ After all my debts, burial expenses, etc., shall have been paid, I give and bequeath my entire property, real and personal, to my children, Eliza Whitlock and Caroline and James Russell White, one third to each. In the event of none of my above-named children leaving issue, then my property shall be divided equally among the children of my brother, John Jay White, and my sister, Mary Ann Fitzgerald, each child to receive the same amount, or, as it is generally expressed, share and share alike.”
It is a well-settled rule that the intention of the testator is first to be ascertained in construing his will, and when discovered must control the construction. In arriving at this intention all parts of the will are to be taken into consideration, and the language used is to be taken in its ordinary sense and import, and if there is any ambiguity or any room for doubt as to the meaning of words, they are to be so interpreted as to effectuate the intention of the testator rather than defeat it. In this respect the rule differs from that in relation to the construction of deeds, where words are to be construed most strongly against the grantor.
The general rules as to the construction of wills are so familiar and well settled that it is unnecessary to cite authorities in support of them ; and as to adjudicated cases, Chancellor Kent sensibly says (4 Comm., 534): “ The attempt to examine cases at large on this subject would be impracticable from the incalculable number of them, and though we are not to disregard the authority of decisions even as to the interpretation of wills, yet it is certain that the construction of them is so much governed by the language, arrangement and circumstances of each particular instrument, which is usually very unskillfully and very incoherently drawn, that adjudged cases become of less authority and are of more hazardous application than decisions upon any other branch of the law.” And the learned chancellor further adds: “The intention of the testator is the first and great object of inquiry, and is admitted to be the polar star by which the courts must steer. Technical rules are subservient to it, and the control which is to be given to it by the rules of law applies not only to the construction of words but to the nature of the estate, and the only limitation upon the intention of the testator is that he shall not attempt to create an estate prohibited by law, as a perpetuity, &c.; and even here courts have gone in some
It does not require the word “heirs ” to create a fee ; but other words denoting an intention to pass the whole interest of the testator, as a devise of “all my estate,” “all my interest,” “all my property,” “my whole remainder,” “all I am worth or own,”.“all my right,” “all my title,” or “all I shall die possessed of,” and many other expressions of like import, as in this case “my entire property, loth real and personal,” will carry an estate of inheritance, if there be nothing in the other parts of the will to limit or control the operation of the words. 4 Kent Com., 535, and authorities cited in the notes; Comyn’s Dig., Devise; Doe v. Morgan, 6. Barn. & Cress., 512; Sheppard’s Touchstone, by Preston, 439 ; 2 Preston on Estates, 68, 173.
The first clause in the will of Mr. White clearly and unmistakably indicates that his intention was to give his .entire estate equally to his three children named. The language used is susceptible of no other interpretation; it is appropriate, though unprofessional; but no one with common understanding of the signification of plain English words can fail to perceive that his children were the chief objects of his solicitude, and that he meant that they should have and enjoy to the full all his estate.
Is there anything in the other parts of the will that should control the operation of these words, or in any way limit the extent of their meaning? The words indicate that the all-controlling intent of the testator was to give all his estate to his children, and this intent must prevail over every other minor intent, and the clear meaning of the words is not to be controlled by subsequent words of uncertain or doubtful intent. But it is equally manifest that the testator had no intention of creating any other or different estate by the second paragraph in his will than the one created in the first. The whole will, taken together, shows that the only idea the testator had in his mind when he
It is hardly supposable that a sane man, if he intended to entail his estate or create simply a life estate in his children, would insert in his will such provisions as these, as he must have known that he was requesting his children to do an act impossible of performance. It is said that the legacies and bequests in this portion of the will amount to some 880,000, among which is the conveyance of real estate in New Jersey to presumably some faithful old servant, and this conveyance is to be made by his children and not by his executors. This, of course, would be impossible for the children to do, if they have only a life estate. And the pecuniary legacies they could pay only from their incomes, if they have only life estates, a supposition that we cannot believe the testator ever entertained.
Where an absolute estate is given to one, and in case of his death to another, the death of the first must happen before that of the testator. The whole tenor of the will, we think, shows that the testator had no thought of giving the estate to the nephews and nieces named unless the event mentioned, the death of all his children without issue, happened before his death. If the event had hap
The Superior Court is advised to render judgment that the children of the testator take an absolute estate in fee simple.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.