DocketNumber: Appeal, 7
Judges: Frazer, Kephart, Schaffer, Maxey, Drew, Linn
Filed Date: 5/27/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Margaret M. Mandeville died without issue on November 20, 1930. Her last will and testament contained these provisions:
"Sixth: All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, whether real, personal or mixed, wheresoever situate, I give, devise and bequeath unto my beloved sister, R. Philomena Byrne, absolutely.
"Seventh: Upon the death of my said sister, R. Philomena Byrne, should any part of my estate remain, I give, devise and bequeath the same to my beloved niece, Mrs. J. M. Shadle."
R. Philomena Byrne died without issue on January 26, 1933, having in her possession at the time securities of the face value of $16,000, which were clearly earmarked as having come from the estate of Margaret Mandeville. By the twelfth paragraph of her will, Mrs. Byrne ordered her executor, The York National Bank Trust Company, to divide the residue of her estate equally between certain charities. A petition was filed by Mrs. Shadle, as administratrix d. b. n. c. t. a. of the *Page 515 estate of Margaret Mandeville, praying that The York National Bank Trust Company be directed to deliver to her the earmarked securities. Preliminary objections raised in the answer filed by the charities were sustained by the court below, and a decree was entered dismissing the petition. From the overruling of exceptions to that decree the present appeal was taken.
The sole question raised is whether Mrs. Byrne acquired absolute ownership of the residue of her sister's estate or simply a life interest with power of consumption. The court below held that her interest was one of absolute ownership and that the securities therefore passed under the residuary clause of her will. It was of the opinion that the seventh paragraph of Mrs. Mandeville's will did not indicate a clear intent to restrict the estate previously given, but at most disclosed "merely a secondary or subordinate intent to strip the estate given by the sixth paragraph of one of its inherent attributes, to wit: the right absolutely to dispose of it." We cannot agree with that conclusion.
The cases of this character in our reports fall into two groups. On the one hand, we have repeatedly observed that "an estate devised in fee cannot by subsequent limitations be stripped of its legal incidents" (Fairman's Est.,
The repugnancy which causes a gift over of an unconsumed portion to fail in the first group of cases lies in the restriction imposed by the gift over upon the alienation of a previously given estate of absolute ownership. While some restraints on alienation (e. g., restraints which simply forbid alienation to a particular person or class of persons) have been held valid (see M'Williams v. Nisly, 2 S. R. 507, 513; Jauretche v. Proctor,
The sixth paragraph of Mrs. Mandeville's will provided for the gift of the residue of her estate to her sister "absolutely." This clause by itself would undoubtedly be sufficient to vest the entire ownership. In the paragraph immediately following, however, testatrix gives, devises and bequeaths to her niece whatever should remain of her estate upon her sister's death. It cannot *Page 519 be doubted that the phrase "should any part of my estate remain" refers to the unconsumed portion of the residue given her sister in the preceding paragraph. The language of the seventh paragraph clearly and unequivocally provides for a gift over of whatever portion of the residue might remain unconsumed at Mrs. Byrne's death. It therefore plainly indicates an intention to limit the estate given her in the sixth paragraph.
It is urged by appellees that this construction wholly disregards the word "absolutely" and hence runs counter to the rule favoring a construction which will render every word operative rather than one which makes some words idle and nugatory. But appellees' construction would render inoperative not one word but a whole paragraph. Nor can it be said that the word "absolutely" is being disregarded. The plain import of this word in the sixth paragraph is that, being about to provide for a gift over upon her sister's death, testatrix wanted to make it quite clear that her sister was to have an absolute and unrestricted power of enjoyment and disposition while she lived. There can be no doubt that Mrs. Byrne was entitled to use and consume or dispose of her sister's residuary property during her life for any purpose and in any way that she might see fit, and without interference or challenge from anyone. But it is equally clear that any of the property not thus expended was to go over to testatrix's niece. The fact that testatrix had lived with her sister for twenty-four years and apparently entertained considerable affection for her lends no strength to the argument in favor of appellees' construction. In vesting in Mrs. Byrne a life estate with power to consume, testatrix gave her the complete use and enjoyment of the property, and in fact all the benefits of absolute ownership except the power to control the devolution of the unconsumed portion upon her death. That testatrix should want to retain this power in order to benefit her "beloved niece," who is thus described in no less affectionate terms than her sister, is natural. *Page 520
The court below relied principally upon Cross v. Miller, supra, and Billmyer v. Billmyer,
In Stanton v. Guest, supra, the will provided as follows: "I give, devise and bequeath unto my husband Edward H. Addleton all my estate, real, personal or mixed, . . . to have and to hold to him, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns." Having thus used words which would clearly import absolute ownership, testatrix in the next paragraph stipulated: "It is my will, that upon the death of my said husband, I give, devise and bequeath unto my nephew and niece Edgar M. Guest and Elsie W. Guest . . . all of the estate real, personal or mixed . . . that my said husband shall be seized or possessed of at the time of his death, and that he has not disposed of." We held that the will vested but a life estate in testatrix's husband, with a remainder over of the unconsumed portion. Similarly, in Fairman's Est., supra, the language of the will was: "First. I give and bequeath to my husband, W. M. Fairman, all my property, personal, real and mixed, to him and his assigns, forever. 2nd. At his death if any is left I direct it to go to my sister, Mary A. Jefferson, if living at the death of W. M. Fairman." We held that Mary A. Jefferson took under this will, testatrix's husband having been given a life estate with power of consumption. In *Page 522 both of these cases the words of gift to the first taker were certainly no less appropriate to a gift of absolute ownership than in the present case. This language was none the less obliged to yield in each case to the controlling intention plainly indicated in the subsequent clause. We are satisfied that a like situation is presented in the case before us, and that the court below erred in holding the gift over to Mrs. Shadle void.
The difficulties which pervade this whole subject, vexing as it is and always has been to courts and lawyers, recall a remark of Sir Edward Coke's: "Wills and the construction of them do more perplex a man than any other learning, and to make a certain construction of them, this excedit jurisprudentium artem." The effort always is to determine the intention of the testator, and, unless public policy forbids it, to enforce that intention, so that in death his property may be faithfully disposed of according to his will. Courts have this duty in the last analysis, and cases, even in the same jurisdiction, which seem to be, on the one hand, completely parallel, or, on the other hand, in irreconcilable conflict, are really not so because in each instance the result reached is founded upon the court's decision, in view of all the circumstances, as to what the testator intended. As was said by Chief Justice MARSHALL in Smith v. Bell,6
Decree reversed and record remitted for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion, costs to be paid out of the estate in the hands of The York National Bank Trust Company as executor.
It is worth noting that this whole doctrine is forcefully castigated by Gray, supra, in sections 74b-d: "The establishment of this doctrine is an interesting instance of what naturalists call a reversion to a primitive type. In the barbarous stages of law, courts thwart the intention of parties to transactions by rules and restrictions which are not based on considerations of public advantage, but are formal, arbitrary, and often of a quasi sacred character. The process of civilization consists in the courts endeavoring more and more to carry out the intentions of the parties or restraining them only by rules which have their reason for existence in considerations of public policy. . . . It is to be observed that the rule is not a rule of construction, it is not a rule to carry out the intention of the parties, but its avowed purpose is to defeat that intention. The courts always recognize this fact; and that no considerations of public policy are involved, is shown by its being perfectly easy to carry out the desired result by a slight change of phrase. If you give a man a fee simple, you cannot provide that if he does not sell or devise it it shall go to T, but if you give him a life estate with power to appoint by deed or will, and in default of appointment to T, the gift to T is perfectly good. In both cases the intention is clear and undisputed; when you defeat the intention in one case, you are defeating exactly the intention that is preserved in the other."
Smith v. Bloomington Coal Co. ( 1925 )