By his will, dated February 3rd, 1879, this testator, after ordering the payment of his
At the timé of his death, the testator was engaged in the business of buying and selling ice and delivering the same to customers along a certain established• route. After his death, his executors, in the exercise Of their discretion, continued that business, and in the year 1880 rendered their account. It appears by their second account, now submitted, that the expenses of the business have exceeded its receipts by $2.71; that its assets
The question whether the moneys derived from the sale of the plant of the £ 1 ice business” should be, either in whole or in part, applied to the discharge of the $3,000 legacy to Mrs. Gilíes divides itself into two parts, viz:
1. What is meant by the term “ice business,” as that term is used in the seventh clause of the will %
2. Was it the testator’s intention that his wife should receive her legacy, even though its payment might necessitate a resort to the proceeds of the sale of the ice business, or did he, on the other hand, by the seventh clause of his will, mean to give his children a specific legacy of such proceeds, to which they should be entitled, even though the funds of the estate might be inadequate to pay the legacy to the widow ?
First. It can certainly be claimed, with some show of reason, that the expression “ice business,” as used by the testator, should be taken in the restricted sense which contestant’s counsel claims to be its true interpretation : In directing the sale of the “business” no specific mention is made of horses, wagons, harness, ice, etc.
It is insisted, therefore, that, though the testator doubtless intended that the plant of which he had himself made use, and such other as from time to time the
I think, , nevertheless, that the widow is entitled to her legacy, even though it cannot be satisfied without resort to the proceeds of the sale of the ice business. Her legacy is given by the third clause of the will, as has been stated already. Kext comes the clause relating to the burial plot, and next the gift of the entire residue to the children. At this stage, the testator finished the purely dispositive provisions of his will. By the provisions which follow, he did not intend, I think, to vary aught that he had said before. He simply designed to countenance methods of administration which might, as he thought, be for the best interests of all his beneficiaries, but to which, without his express sanction; his executors could not lawfully resort.
Taking the will as a whole, clause seven seems to me practically subsidiary to clause five.
