100 Wis. 650 | Wis. | 1898
Did the testatrix intend to include children and grandchildren of deceased nephews and nieces in the distribution of her bounty by the use of the words, “ I give and bequeath one twelfth to the children of each of my deceased brothers and sisters; ” and “ in case of the decease of either, ... I bequeath his or her share to be equally divided among his or her children ? ” That is the first question presented for consideration, and it must be solved by applying to the language of the testatrix, in the light of all other provisions of the will and the general scheme manifestly in her mind when she executed it, some well-settled rules for judicial construction, the most important being, that the several parts of the instrument are to betaken together, having regard to their relation to each other; that each and every part must be given effect if possible, and in line with the general scheme of the testator; that words are to be taken in their ordinary rather than some peculiar sense, though the former will yield to the latter when it is clear from the instrument that the latter meaning was intended, or that it is necessary, rather than that any part of the will shall fail; that while the circumstances under which the will was made may be taken into consideration, they cannot be resorted to to vary the meaning whiph must necessarily be attributed to words, the purpose of construction being not to get meaning into the language of the testator, but to get the testator’s meaning out of it; that such meaning when ascertained is to govern, if not contrary to
It is obvious that the testatrix intended to bequeath one twelfth of the residue of her property, after payment of her debts, expenses of last sickness, and the specific bequests preceding the general clause of her will, to each branch of her family in the collateral line. How remote she intended to go to reach a taker is the question. That the general scheme was as stated is quite manifest from her dividing the property into twelve equal parts, bequeathing one part to each of her living brothers and sisters, and one to the children of each of those dead, then providing that in case of the death of either of her living brothers and sisters during her lifetime, leaving lawful issue, the share of such brother or sister should be divided among his or her children ; and in case of such death without issue, that the share should be equally divided among the surviving brothers and sisters, the surviving child or children of either of the brothers or sisters to represent the share that party would receive. There are many other indications in the will showing the scheme to have been as stated, but those particularly mentioned are sufficient. If we had only the words “ to each of my brothers and sisters (naming those living), and to the children of each of my deceased brothers and sisters, share .and share alike,” and the other instances already mentioned where the word “ children ” occurs in the will, no question could arise warranting a resort to rules for construction of the instrument to determine the meaning intended by the testatrix. The word “children,” when not rendered obscure by the manner of its use, has a plain and well-understood ordinary signification. It means the descendants of human parents in the first degree. That is its lexicographical as well as its ordinary legal meaning. Yet, issue in the direct
Many very apt illustrations of the application of this doctrine are cited by respondents. In In re Schedel, 73 Cal. 594, the testator left property to each of the children of his deceased sister, to be paid as they respectively reached their majority, with a provision that if either child should die leaving children, before the death of the testator’s brother, who was given a beneficiary interest in the estate, such issue should take the parent’s share. When the will was drawn the sister and all her children had been dead for many years, but one of the deceased children left a child who was a minor at the date of the will, and it was held that the word “ children ” must have been used to signify descendants and to include the minor grandchild, as such child was the only person in existence when the words were spoken or who could have been in the mind of the testator. In Bowker v. Bowker, 148 Mass. 198, the court said that the word “ child ” may be so interpreted as to include grandchildren where the will exhibits that such was the manifest intention; and the term was so extended in construing the will there under consideration, in order, as was stated, to carry out “ the ruling idea of the testator.”
The general doctrine may be stated thus: Where there are no immediate children to whom the term can apply, or where it is manifest from other words in the will that it was used in the broad sense of issue or descendants, it may be construed to include grandchildren, stepchildren, illegitimate children, or descendants, however remote. 2 Redf. Wills,
Now, in view of the foregoing, tbe language following the general bequest to children of deceased brothers and sisters seems to have controlling significance, namely: “Iwill and di/rect that the money which, by the foregoi/ng distribution, would go to Theopolis Frich, grandson of Fred. DelUcher, deceased, shall be paid to Ms father, Jacob Frich, in trust for and to be applied for the support and maintenance of said Theopolis Frich.” Theopolis Frich, it will be observed, was not a child of a deceased brother or sister, but was a grandchild. Therefore, unless the term “ children ” as previously used “in the foregoing distribution” was intended to include descendants in the direct lines from the brothers and sisters, where necessary in order that the property in that line might reach a class to take under the will, nothing can go to Theopolis Frick, and the special clause referring to him must be left without any effect whatever. That seems to be a sufficient reason, under the rules before mentioned, for saying that the testatrix used the term under consideration as synonymous with descendants. The residuary clause provided for twelve equal parts corresponding to the twelve branches of the family, manifesting, as stated, a clear intention that each such branch should have the benefit of one such share, except in the case of the death without issue of one of the then living brothers or sisters, in which case the share going to such deceased brother or sister was to be equally divided between the brothers and sisters remaining. Unless we can say that the shares intended primarily for the respective classes of children of deceased brothers and sisters must go in the lines indicated, to a class that will satisfy the term used to designate the classes, in the mind of the testatrix, then, manifestly, the attempt to provide for Theopolis Frick will fail absolutely. There is no reasonable.
The remaining question is, Did the testatrix intend to include the illegitimate great-grandchild of Catherine "Witt-man ? Here again, if we adopt as the sense in which the word “ children ” was used the ordinary meaning attributable thereto, the illegitimate must be excluded. The description “ child,” “ son,” “ issue,” and words of that nature, includes legitimates only. Cartwright v. Vawdry, 5 Ves. 530, is often quoted as a leading authority on that point. There the testator, having four children of whom one was an illegitimate daughter, remembered them in his will in the following language: “ All and every of such child or children as I may happen to leave at my death.” The Lord Chancellor said: “How can I possibly put upon the will the construction the plaintiff desires, when there are lawful children ? It is impossible in a court of justice to hold that an illegitimate child can take equally with lawful children upon a devise to children.” That is authority only to the point that a general bequest to children, without something to clearly give to.the term an extended meaning, includes legitimates only. The mere fact of the existence of lawful chil
The rule at common law under which illegitimates were not deemed to have any inheritable blood from their father or mother and could not be given any by the marriage of the parents, finds no place in our system. In its stead the more humane policy of the civil law has been adopted,— a policy which considers justice to the innocent as outweighing the controlling idea, so called, of the common law, the discouragement of illegitimacy. The importance of the latter is by no means diminished in legal contemplation, but the injustice and futility of punishing the innocent result of illicit commerce as an effectual warning against the sin of it, is recognized in the more practical and intelligent system under which we live. That situation, which we may reasonably assume the testatrix had in mind in making the testamentary disposition of her property, is quite persuasive in determining what she intended. In view of it, less evidence than under the old system will sufficiently show that the intention was to include illegitimate children'in giving to a class as children, the mother of the class being the in
It follows from what has preceded that there must be some
By the Court.— So ordered.