Horatio N. Small died in 1887, leaving a will by the terms of which all of his estate, after the payment of debts, funeral expenses and the charges of administration, was devised and bequeathed to his widow for her life with a power of disposal for her benefit as she might deem necessary, and the remainder to his children and their heirs. She was also named as executrix of the will.
From the allowance of this account an appeal was taken by the administrator de bonis non with the will annexed, and at the hearing in the Supreme Court of Probate the court held that the will and codicil gave to the widow a life estate in all the property of the testator after payment of debts, funeral expenses and charges of administration, with a power of sale and disposal thereof as she might choose, and that at her decease any property of the testator remaining in her hands goes to his heirs at law; that any personal property so remaining should be delivered to his administrator de bonis non for that purpose. The court found that at the time of the death of the executrix there remained in her hands undisposed of, certain articles of personal property, enumerated in the decree, which were a portion of the estate of the testator, and made the following decree: “It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the appeal be sustained and that the decree below be reversed and the cause be remanded to the probate court to proceed in accordance with this decree, viz,- — So as to charge the appellee with the personal property above enumerated which may be sub
To this decree the appellee has alleged various exceptions. It is urged by him that the Supreme Court of Probate had no jurisdiction for the construction of the will further than was necessary in determining the issues before it and that the construction of the will by the court was erroneous.
It seems to us that the principle which should control the settlement and allowance of this account depended absolutely upon the will of the testator and the construction placed thereon, and that the Supreme Court of Probate could not have passed intelligently upon the questions before it upon appeal without first ascertaining by a construction of the will the rights of the devisees thereunder. Nothing further was done by the court in this respect than was necessary for that purpose.
As to the particular construction of the will given by the court at nisi prius, we are unable to see how any other conclusion could have been arrived at. That the testator gave all of his estate, after the payment of debts, funeral expenses and charges of administration, to his widow for her life, with an absolute power of disposal for her use and benefit, and at her death and “ after payment of her just debts and funeral expenses,” the remainder, if any, to his children, seems to be sufficiently clear from the language of the will itself. But in order to remove any possibility of doubt the testator added a codicil in which this language was used, “but to make more clear my intention therein I declare that my will is, that the gift, bequest and devise to my said beloved wife is not to be absolute or an estate in fee but an estate for and during her natural life, with the right to dispose of the property so given, bequeathed and devised to her, by full title under the authority of the said will as therein provided, for her benefit, so far as she may deem necessary.”
If an estate is given for life in express terms, it is not to be extended by implication arising from an annexed power of disposal, however unqualified. Copeland v. Barron, 72 Maine, 206.
In this case the widow took a life estate with an unlimited power to dispose of any portion of it “ for her benefit, so far as she may deem necessary.” She was the absolute judge of the necessity. Richardson v. Richardson, 80 Maine, 585.
But this power of disposal must be exercised during the enjoyment of the life estate, except in this case.because of the provision of the will, to the extent of the payment of debts owing by the life tenant at the time of her death, and her funeral expenses. The very recent case of Ford v. Ticknor, 169 Mass. 276, is remarkably like the one under consideration. In that case the court said: “We regard the power in the present case as one only to be exercised during the active enjoyment of the life estate, and in aid of that enjoyment.”
It is urged that the finding of fact by the justice presiding at nisi prius, who heard the appeal without a jury, as to the existence in specie of certain articles of personal property belonging to the estate of the testator was erroneous and unauthorized, but this objection is not open to the appellee upon his exceptions. Manning v. Devereux, 81 Maine, 560.
Again, it is said that the decree made at nisi prius was too indefinite, that it should have allowed certain items or classes of items and disallowed others, or it should have directed the judge of probate in what particulars he should require a modification of the
This duty and its extent is clearly expressed by the decree. It adopts a principle for the settlement of the account entirely different from that upon which the allowance of the account in the probate court was based. It is in accordance with well settled rules of law and is sufficiently definite to determine the rights of all affected by it.
Decree affirmed with costs.