126 Ark. 339 | Ark. | 1916
This is an action instituted by appellee in the chancery court of Pulaski county to compel specific performance of a written contract entered into between him and appellant, whereby he agreed to sell, and appellant agreed to purchase, certain real estate situated in the city of Little Rock. The contract set forth in the complaint is unambiguous in its terms, and constitutes an undertaking on the part of appellee to sell, and on the part of appellant to purchase, the two lots for the stipulated price. Appellant paid the sum of $100 on the purchase price, which is recited in the contract, and undertook to pay the balanee “upon presentation of a good and valid warranty deed, after allowing ten days from delivery of abstracts of title and taxes for examination of title only.”- It is further stipulated in the contract that appellee was to furnish “a fee simple absolute title.” Appellant refused to perform the contract on the alleged ground that appellee was unable to furnish a perfect title to the property which was the subject of the contract. The case was tried upon an agreed statement of the facts, and the chancellor decided in favor of appellee and rendered a decree for the specific performance of the contract. The only question, therefore, presented for our decision is whether or not appellee’s title was such that appellant was bound to accept, or whether appellee failed to present a “fee simple absolute title” within the meaning of the contract.
Appellee derived title to the property under the last will and testament of his great-aunt, Elizabeth S. Shall. The clause under which the property in question was devised to appellee reads as follows: “Item 5. I will, devise and bequeath to.my grand nephew, David F. Shall Eanes, lots 7, 8 and 9, in block 93, in the city of Little Rock, Pulaski county, Arkansas, the same to be controlled and managed for him by my grand nephew, David F. Shall Galloway, as trustee, until he is' twenty-one years of age, or until he is relieved of his disabilities of minority when the same shall vest in fee simple in the said David F. Shall Eanes. But until that time, the same shall be controlled as above set out, and the income thereof shall be used for the support and education of the said David F. Shall Eanes.” Under the preceding clause of the will, certain other property was devised to appellee’s mother for and during her natural life, with remainder over at her death to appellee. A subsequent clause of the will, under which the present controversy aris.es, reads as follows: “The property herein devised and bequeathed in items 4 and 5 to my. grand nephew, David F. Shall Eanes, shall in the event of his death without issue of his body surviving, vest in fee simple in his mother, my niece, Mary A. Eanes, her heirs and assigns.” The residuary clause of the will devised to D. F. S. Galloway all the rest of the estate of the testatrix not specifically devised.
Mary A. Eanes died during the lifetime of the testatrix, and at the time this contract was entered into appellee was 25 years of- age and was in full enjoyment of the use of the property devised to him. Appellee also had procured a quitclaim deed from D. F. S. Galloway, the residuary devisee under the will.
The contention of appellant is (stating it substantially in the language found in the brief) that under the terms of the will, appellee took only a qualified fee, in the lots in question, with a limitation over by way of executory devise to his mother upon the death of appellee without issue of his body surviving; that the devise over should be construed to be upon a definite failure of issue, and was therefore valid, and that it did not lapse upon the death of Mrs. Eanes during the lifetime of the testatrix or fall into the residuary clause of the will.
The language of the devise undoubtedly refers to a definite failure of issue, and the only question is as to the point of time to which it refers. The contention of counsel for appellant is, of course, that it refers to the time of the death of appellee, and that the title he took was not absolute.
We are of the opinion that this case is ruled by the principles announced in the recent case of Harrington v. Cooper, 126 Ark. 53, where we said: “This is an application of a rule that where an estate is devised to one for life with remainder to another, with the further provision that ‘if the remainderman shall die without having a child, then to a third person,’ the words ‘die without having a child,’ are restricted to the death of the remainderman before the determination of the particular estate.” In that case there was a devise for life, and we held that the language used with reference to the devise over referred to the death of the first taker. The application of the principle announced in that case is slightly varied in the present one so as to construe the language to refer to the period at which the appellee was to come into full enjoyment of the property — in other words, when the trusteeship for his benefit ceased and the legal title vested in him. The principle announced, and its application to the facts of the present case, are sustained by the authorities there cited and others. It will be noted that the devise of this property was to appellee, that the same should be “controlled and managed for him,” by D. F. S. Galloway, as trustee, until appellee should become twenty-one years of age or be relieved of his disabilities of minority, and that then the title “shall vest in fee simple in the said David F. Shall Eanes.” This language is very emphatic and it manifests unmistakably the intention of the testatrix to give to appellee at some time the title in fee.
One of the leading cases in this country on the question of construction of apparently conflicting devises is that of Washbon v. Cope, 144 N. Y. 287, where Mr. Justice Peckham, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “We are confronted in the first place by the well settled rule that courts refuse to cut down an. estate already granted- in fee or absolutely when the supposed terms of limitation are to be found in some subsequent portion of the will, and are not in themselves clear, unmistakable and certain so that there can be no doubt of the meaning and intention of the testator. * * * There is another rule which is also well settled, that where the devise or bequest over to third persons is not dependent upon the event of death simply, but upon death without issue or without children, the death referred to is death in the lifetime of the testator. It is true that in some cases courts have stated that they would lay hold of slight circumstances to vary this construction and give effect to the language according to its natural import as referring to a death, under the circumstances mentioned, happening either before or after the death of the testator. But those circumstances must be such that a court can reasonably say there is good and fair ground upon which to base an alteration of the rule outside of and beyond the language which courts have heretofore held compelled them to enforce the rule as stated. When the language of a devise or bequest is such that the courts, without looking at any other provisions of a will, would say that such language meant, within the well-settled decisions, that the death spoken of was death before that of. the testator, then the language in other portions of the will which is to alter that rule must be such as at least to give fair, clear and reasonable ground for saying that its proper effect is to change the rule in question.”
We are of the opinion, therefore, that the chancellor reached the correct conclusion in the interpretation of the will, and that appellant should be compelled to specifically perform the contract. The decree is therefore affirmed.