Wylie v. . Lockwood

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 293

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 294 The action is for partition of real estate devised by Samuel Norsworthy. There was no dispute as to the facts, and judgment followed the prayer of the complaint. The exception is to so much of it as depends upon the construction given by the trial court to these words of the testator: "Fifth. Immediately after my youngest child shall become of age, I give and devise the whole of my estate, real and personal, to my said children, or such of them, as may be at that time living, to have and to hold to them, as tenants in common, during their respective lives. And I order and direct that, in case any or either of my children should die without issue, his, her or their share shall go to the survivors or survivor of them living at the time of such death respectively, without issue, equally during their respective lives, and after his, her or their respective deaths, to their issue respectively, in fee simple. On the death of either of my said children leaving issue, I give and devise to such issue, and to their heirs and assigns forever, the share or proportion of my estate hereinbefore devised for life to the parent of such issue. And I do earnestly recommend to my said children that they do agree upon and appoint *Page 297 one of themselves, from time to time, to manage, improve and conduct the concerns of the property hereby devised to them respectively to the best advantage and in such manner that the benefit intended to them and their issue by this my will may not in any way be impaired."

He died in December, 1828, leaving three sons and five daughters. The sons died unmarried and intestate before October 13, 1843. On that day Amelia S., the youngest child, reached the age of twenty-one years. Then the trust provided for in the earlier clauses of the will terminated, and she and her four sisters took a life estate as tenants in common by virtue of the first paragraph in the clause above quoted.

Amelia S. afterward married. Her husband died, and she also, on the 20th of May, 1850, leaving one child, Christina, who married George S. Wylie, and under the name of Christina Sharp Wylie is the plaintiff herein. Frances M., another of the testator's daughters, died intestate and unmarried August 26, 1864, leaving her surviving three sisters, all of whom were married and had issue.

The only question upon this appeal is, whether the plaintiff has, under the will, an interest in that part of the testator's property in which the said Frances M. was given a life estate. The judgment treats the plaintiff as taking the same rights her mother would have had, if living, and therefore entitled to one-fourth of the share dropped by Frances. On the other hand, the appellant contends that, upon the death of Frances, her share went to the three surviving daughters of the testator, and consequently that the plaintiff is entitled only to one-fifth of the whole, that being her mother's share at the time the life estate vested. In deciding this question, we get little aid from the several cases referred to by the learned counsel for the respondent. In none were the words of the testator precisely similar to the words of the will in the record before us. While, therefore, we may be instructed by the reasoning applied to the language there criticised, and find the cases useful by way of illustration, we cannot yield to any statement or conclusion if it perverts plain and explicit language of the testator. I think, *Page 298 however, all of those cases recognize as the true rule of construction, that every word is to have its natural, that is to say, its ordinary, meaning, unless there is sufficient reason to the contrary to be collected from other parts of the will. (Badger v. Gregory, L.R., 8 Eq. Cas. 78; Byng v. Byng, 10 H. of L. Cas. 171.) In Wake v. Varah (L.R., 2 Ch. Div. 348), a case said by the respondent to be closely parallel to the present, we find the learned court declaring that the language of the testator should be literally interpreted by it, "unless satisfied, upon a consideration of the whole contents of the will, not only that the language used was insufficient to effect his full intention, but that the will itself afforded sufficient evidence of what his intention was." In that case it was also said to be "apparent that the testator had not used language adequate to provide for all the events for which he has expressed his intention to provide." Now, I suppose the principle above laid down goes none too far, and we are quite sure that the testator in the present case has not failed in the respect alluded to. His language is apt, and expresses an intention; we have only to declare it. Wherever we examine the phraseology used by him, we find it without obscurity, and adapted to define the share of bounty designed for the several classes enumerated in this clause. The whole will shows he had in his mind from the beginning to the end of its dictation, from the first line to the last, his children and their children, but each class in its own place. We are unable to find any context or any language in the will showing an intention to use the words indifferently or alternately, or give to them any other than their plain, primary and common meaning. They are arranged with a precision which indicates an intention to confine the first to his immediate offspring, or nearest, as distinguished from a remote descendant, and enlarge the other to take in their increase, or his lineal descendants. By the first sentence in the will he relieves the land of dower; the second preserves the house in which he then lived, and its furniture, "until" (in his words) "my youngest child comes of age, for the use of my wife and of such of my children as may be unmarried and choose to live with her;" the third directs *Page 299 his executors to make an inventory of his estate, "and deliver a copy thereof * * * to each of my children," distinguishing the articles left "in my house for the use of my wife and such of my children as may reside with her;" the fourth clause creates a trust in his executors, after making certain payments from the income of his estate, "to pay and appropriate the whole of the residue of the net income, in equal proportions, among my said children, until my youngest child shall become of the age of twenty-one years," with power to lease until "my youngest child shall attain to lawful age." No one can doubt who were intended by these words of description or relationship. He contemplates the possible marriage of some of his children, and discriminates between those and the unmarried. In other sections there is no such discrimination, but in each the limitation is plain, to his, not to their children, to his sons and daughters, not his remote descendants. When we consider the fifth section, can there be found any signs of a different intent, when the same word is employed or referred to? Take the first paragraph of that clause. It is conceded by the respondent that it takes in the children only, and excludes the grandchildren. In the second paragraph the testator goes further: I direct in case any of my children should die without issue, her share "shall go to the survivor or survivors of them living at the time of such death respectively, without issue, equally during their respective lives, and after his, her or their respective deaths, to their issue respectively in fee-simple." Now as this is read, it is difficult to see how any paraphrase can make it plainer. Evidently the children are referred to, the same as in preceding sections or in the other part of the paragraph. If one of these children dies, her share goes to the "survivor or survivors of them," clearly meaning those of his children who are left alive, and who had already been classed with the deceased child. No other person can be so termed. Always the testator had in his mind the "living" child. There is first a gift to such of his children "as may be living" when his youngest child arrives at maturity, and here it is to the survivors "living" at the time of the death of another child without *Page 300 issue. We may say, therefore, as BACON, V.C., said in In reStanfield (L.R., 15 Ch. Div. 86): "With all respect to decisions which have been arrived at in cases where the court has had to deal with puzzling or ambiguous expressions, I find here no puzzle, no ambiguity." In such a case we have no right to depart from the ordinary meaning of the words. (In re Parker, L.R., 15 Ch. Div. 528.) Emilia, the mother of the plaintiff, died before Frances, and, therefore, never took a portion of her share. I do not see how we can put her child in the place of the testator's child. The shares of those dying without issue are thus disposed of. In the next paragraph the testator disposes of the fee, the share of those children who die and leave issue. He says: "On the death of either of my said children, leaving issue, I give and devise to such issue, and to their heirs and assigns forever, the share or proportion of my estate, hereinbefore devised, for life, to the parent of such issue." What was devised to the plaintiff's mother? That question has been answered above in setting out the clause containing the devise. Five children were living when it took effect. The plaintiff's mother was one of them. The day of the majority of the youngest child must, as we have seen, be looked to as the period of distribution, and with that in mind it seems not doubtful that the plaintiff is entitled in fee, as the mother then was for life, to one-fifth; and as the latter, by reason of her earlier death, never became entitled to any portion of the share of Frances, neither did the former. The death of one child released her share to her living sisters. The meaning of the testator would not be more evident if he had used those words of relationship instead of the words "survivor or survivors." (Mowatt v. Carow, 7 Pai. 328.)

The remaining part of the fifth clause has been referred to as throwing light upon the testator's intention. It seems immaterial for that purpose. The recommendation contained in it would apply to either construction, for in any event the interest of a child and her issue, a child or grandchild, is concerned, although in different degree. The respondent also cites the eighth clause of the will as giving some aid to his *Page 301 contention. I cannot so regard it. By it the testator declares: "If any of my daughters shall marry without the consent, in writing, of my wife and the said William B. Skidmore and Burtis Skidmore, or some two of them, she shall forfeit her share of my said estate, which shall immediately pass to and be vested in her surviving sisters, who shall hold and enjoy the same during the life of my daughter so marrying without consent; but after her death, her children shall enjoy the share hereinbefore devised to them in the same manner as if their mother had married with consent." He defines no interest or estate, but a contingency, upon which such estate as the disobedient child has under other portions of the will, shall be taken from her. He does not diminish the bounty intended for the child because of her mother's fault. Upon the mother's death, her child is to enjoy the share before devised, in the same manner as if that mother had not offended. In the fifth section he says, "their issue," meaning children of his children. In the eighth he says, "her children," meaning "issue" of his daughter. The will is well composed. Its provisions are clear and simple, and we find neither in it or the circumstances under which the testator distributed his bounty, or the various authorities to which we are referred, any reason for taking the testator's words in any other than their natural sense. (Jackson v. Blanshan, 3 Johns. 297; Jackson v. Staats, 11 id. 337; Mowatt v.Carow, 7 Pai. 328; Lovett v. Buloid, 3 Barb. Ch. 137;Guernsey v. Guernsey, 36 N.Y. 267. (Some of these cases are referred to by the late learned Chief Justice DAVIES, inGuernsey v. Guernsey, and they, as well as the principal case, sustain our conclusion, so far as decisions involving such questions can sustain the construction given in another.

In order to carry out the intention of the testator as declared by him, we think the judgment appealed from, so far as it awards to the plaintiff any part of the estate of Samuel Norsworthy by reason of the death of Frances Norsworthy, should be reversed, with costs, and the case remanded to the Supreme *Page 302 Court to ascertain and award to the appellant so much of said part as he is entitled to.

All concur.

Judgment accordingly.