151 So. 869 | Ala. | 1933
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *67 The administration of the estate of testatrix was duly removed from the probate court to the circuit court at the instance of the executor. A bill filed by the executor of said testatrix sought construction of the will, particularly of the fifth and sixth paragraphs thereof.
The decree was based on pleadings and an agreed statement of facts. It was to the effect that the six securities held by testatrix and issued by the board of county commissioners of Madison county, Ala., were and "are warrants"; that "they constitute a part of the remainder of the estate" of testatrix bequeathed by and under paragraph "sixth" of her will; and decreed that they "should *68 be distributed amongst the heirs of said deceased in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 'sixth' of said will" of decedent in proportions and to the parties specifically indicated and declared to be entitled thereto.
The question for decision is stated as follows:
"That at the time of her death the said testatrix did own a number of stock(s) and bonds, but that she also owned in addition certain securities issued by the Court of County Commissioners of Madison County, Alabama, and this complainant is unable to say or determine whether they are bonds, which he should turn over and deliver to the said Olive Wiley under said paragraph five of the will, or county warrants which he should ask to be distributed as residue of the estate under paragraph Sixth of the will. * * * If these securities are bonds, then they belong to Olive Wiley under the provisions of said fifth paragraph of the will set out above, and it is the duty of this executor to deliver them to her; but if on the other hand theyare warrants, then they are part of the residuary estate of testatrix, and are to be distributed and disposed of as provided by paragraph Sixth of the will. * *
"Orator avers that the devisee in the will, said Respondent, Olive Wiley, claims that said securities are bonds and has made known her claims to me as Executor, while the remaining respondents in this cause claim that they are warrants of the County Commissioners, or Court of County Commissioners of Madison County, Alabama, and that they are not bonds, but theyshould be distributed along with the residue of the estate after disposing of the specific bequests, and this claim they have made to me as Executor of the estate." [Italics supplied.]
The intent of testatrix in using the words "and bonds" in the fifth paragraph of her will is the predominant question, and will prevail over any technical construction that may be given, unless the instrument and property to be considered, circumstances, and relevant facts show the technical meaning intended by testatrix.
It is a judicial axiom that a testator's intention, if legal, is the pole star to guide a court in the construction of wills. Ralls v. Johnson,
In Simmons v. Simmons,
It is generally true that words employed in a will are to be taken in their primary or ordinary sense and use, unless a different meaning is indicated by the context and circumstances of the case that may be considered under the exception to the general rule to give the words and expressions employed the meaning intended and placed thereon by the testator in the context in which they are employed and used. Wilson v. Witt,
It is further established that, when a testamentary instrument presents an ambiguity or "seeming conflict" (Cox v. Hale,
We agree that there is such ambiguity of kind, character, and peculiar "shading" within the rule of parol evidence in determining the intent of the testator (Chambers v. Ringstaff,
In Hanson v. First Nat. Bank of Birmingham,
It is well suggested by appellants' counsel that the ways in which a latent ambiguity, within the rules, may arise are: (a)In identification of the beneficiary or object of testamentarybounty, or (b) in the identification of or application to theproperty or subject matter so devised or bequeathed. Hanson v. First Nat. Bank of Birmingham,
The agreed statement of facts shows that testatrix acquired the evidences of Madison county's debt held by her; that they were purchased and transmitted to her as "bonds," and that thereafter she listed or scheduled them as bonds. We hold, under this record and agreed facts, that testatrix did not intend to use the word "bonds" in a technical sense, even though the will was drawn by a skilled attorney. It is not shown that the scrivener was fully acquainted with the exact or technical character or nature of these county securities, or that it was explained by the scrivener to testatrix that in a strict or technical sense these securities were called county interest-bearing warrants rather than bonds.
The owner of these instruments had the right of action against the county on default of payment, though the instruments are called warrants by the county authorities who issued them. However, they are once called bonds in the face of the instruments themselves; are signed by the county through the chairman and secretary of the board of county commissioners under the corporate seal of the county, and the authority of such officials to that end is shown by extracts from the minutes of that county board and by the agreed statement of facts. Upon the face of the instruments, they were purchased by her as "warrants" or "bonds"; they were transmitted to her by her agent as Madison county jail bonds, and treated thereafter by testatrix as bonds.
The mere fact, incorporated in the agreed statement of facts, that the will was "drawn by a skilled attorney" (Castleberry v. Stringer,
The construction now placed upon the fifth section of testatrix' will is more natural and more in accord with that exhibited solicitude and provision shown by the other provisions to which we have adverted. It follows in logical sequence as natural and personal provisions for protection, comfort, and for maintenance of the home for and by this daughter as beneficiary, and the power of its disposition given.
The decree of the circuit court is not in accord with the construction we have given the will, and it is therefore reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
BROWN and KNIGHT, JJ., concur.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the conclusion and result as I think the Madison county securities are bonds under the general definition of same. True, this court has drawn a technical distinction between county bonds, the issuance of which is regulated by the Constitution, and other evidences of indebtedness by the counties, yet instruments in question are unquestionably bonds. "A bond is an obligation in writing and under seal, binding the obligor to pay a sum of money to the obligee." Gutta Percha Rubber Mfg. Co. v. City of Attalla (Ala. Sup.) 39 So. 719.