Judges: Brunt
Filed Date: 2/17/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This is an action to partition certain real estate, in which the plaintiff claims to be seised of one ninth share as tenant in common by inheritance from his deceased daughter, Mary E. Balen; and the question involved in this action is whether the said Mary E. Balen, having died before the determination of a precedent life estate, could transmit by inheritance that portion of the estate of which, if she had been living at the termination of the life estate, she would have been entitled to possession. We might very well leave the determination of this question upon this appeal to the grounds stated in the opinion of the court below, but there is one circumstance which seems to indicate so plainly the intention of the testator that we think we ought to call attention to the same. It is one of the prevailing principles in the construction of wills that the intention of the testator is to govern, and therefore, as no two wills are exactly alike, and the surroundings of testators are always different, the interpretation given to provisions in one will affords but little aid in the construction of the provisions of another will, except so far as certain meanings have been given to certain terms and phrases in particular connections. By the third clause of the will the testator gave, devised, and bequeathed to his wife, for and during the period of her natural life, “the income, rents, and profits of all my real estate;” and by the tenth clause, at and after the de
It is also claimed that the complaint in this action was defective, because there was no sufficient allegation of possession upon the part of the plaintiff; but we think that the allegations in the ninth clause of the complaint are amply sufficient to meet the requirements of the Code. In that it is alleged that' the plaintiff and the defendants are seised and possessed of all those certain lots and pieces of land, etc. The allegation that the defendants have received all the rents, issues, and profits from said real estate, and have neglected and refused to the plaintiff his share, is no allegation that they claim under a title hostile to the plaintiff. We think, therefore, that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.