45 App. D.C. 128 | D.C. Cir. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an appeal from a decree in the supreme court of the District dismissing appellant’s bill to have declared void an attempted execution by Mary E. McOeney by her last will and testament of a power of appointment conferred upon her by the last will and testament of her mother, Harriet McCeney, in so far as it undertakes to create a- trust in favor of Edgar and George P. McCeney, nephews of Mary. Appellant, Heloise McCeney Wills, is one of the next of kin and heirs at law of Harriet McCeney. ■ ■
Appellees, Samuel Maddox and Arthur T. Brice, substituted trustees under the last will and testament of Harriet McCeney, deceased, and executors of the last will and testament of Max’y E. McCeney, deceased; and Harriet McCeney Wexlich et al., demurred to the bill generally, and the learned trial justice sustained the .demurrer upon the ground of prematureness, holding that the residuary clause of Miss McCeney’s will, which is the part attacked, presents a double contingency or contingency with a double aspect, and that even though in one contingency there may be invalidity for remoteness, in the other contingency there will be a vesting within the permissible period.
The residuary clause just mentioned reads as follows: “All the rest, balance, and x’emainder of my said property and estate I give and bequeath to my friends, Arthur T. Brice and Samuel Maddox, as trustees, in trust, to take, hold, and invest the same and from time to time in their discretion to change the investments, and the income and avails thex'eof to pay over quarterly one third to my nephew Edgar S. McOeney, and two thirds to my nephew George P. McCeney, during their natural
The rule upon this branch of the case is nowhere better stated than in Jackson v. Phillips, 14 Allen, 539, where the court says: “The general rule is that if any estate, legal or equitable, is given by deed or will to any person in the first instance, and then over to another person, or even to a public charity, upon the happening of a contingency which may by possibility not take place within a life or lives in being (treating a child in its mother’s womb as in being) and twenty-one years afterwards, the gift over is void, as tending to create a perpetuity by making the estate inalienable. * * * But if the testator distinctly makes his gift over to depend upon what is sometimes called an alternative contingency, or upon either of two contingencies, one of which may be too remote and the other cannot be, its validity depends upon the event; or, in other words, if he gives the estate over on one contingency which must happen, if at all, within the limit of the rule, and that contingency does happen, the validity of the distinct gift over in that event will not be affected by the consideration that upon a different contingency, which might or might not happen within the lawful limit, he makes a disposition of his estate, which would be void for remoteness.” See also Goldsborough v. Martin, 41 Md. 488.
The question now to be determined is whether there is an absolute legal certainty that the vesting of the estate created by the execution by Miss McCeney of the power of appointment will take place within the permissible period, that is, during the continuance of not more than one or more lives in being and twenty-one years thereafter. In determining this question we must have in mind the rule by which courts always are guided; namely, that estates “shall be held to vest at the earliest possible period unless there shall be a clear manifestation of the intention of the testator to the contrary.” Doe ex dem. Poor v.
Construing this clause as a whole, we think it reasonably clear that the testatrix intended the status of the children of either nephew, as legatees, to become fixed and certain upon the death of their father, and that the words relied upon as deferring such vesting merely defer the enjoyment and nothing more. In the event of Edgar’s death leaving issue, one third of the estate must be “distributed” among his children, that is to say, it must be apportioned or set apart for them, the actual possession being deferred until they reach the specified age of twenty-five years. In the event of the death' of the nephew George leaving children, two thirds of the estate must be “equally divided” among them,, in other words, apportioned or set .apart for them, the possession or enjoyment being deferred
The authorities cited by counsel for appellant on this branch of the case, in their very scholarly and instructive brief, we think are clearly distinguishable from the case before us. In Engle’s Estate, 167 Pa. 463, 31 Atl. 681, the direction was to pay out of the residuary estate, upon the death of the life tenant, a certain sum to a nephew of the testatrix, and certain other sums to his two sons, when those sons should attain the age of nineteen years. In the event of the death of either son before reaching that age, the survivor was to take his share. We think the difference between that provision and the one here is quite apparent; for there the status of the beneficiaries as such was to become fixed and certain, not upon the death of the life tenant, as here, but upon their attaining the specified age. A like difference might be pointed out in the other cases cited.
Reading this residuary clause as a vvhole, we conclude that the decision of the court below was right, and the decree is therefore affirmed, with costs. Affirmed.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 27, 1916, Mr. Justice Robb delivering the opinion of the Court:'
The court did not overlook those words. If, as previously contended by the appellant, there was to be no vesting in the afterbom children of the nephews until they reached the age of twenty-five years, no force could be given to the words now relied upon, for the obvious reason that the bequest would fall as being in conflict with the rule against peipetuities. Whatever may be the legal effect of those words, we do not think they may be construed as making contingent a remainder which we have held the testatrix intended to vest in the children of either nephew upon the death of their father. In McArthur v. Scott, 113 U. S. 340, 381, 28 L. ed. 1015, 1027, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 652, the court ruled that a similar provision “was evidently intended merely to provide for children of a deceased grandchild, and not to define the nature, as vested or contingent, of the previous general gift to the grandchildren * * * .” The court further said: “The remainder, being vested according to the legal meaning of the words of gift, is not to be held contingent by virtue of subsequent provisions of the will, unless those provisions necessarily require it.”
The petition is denied.