Mills v. Thompkins

Bischoff, J.

The question of title presented by the pleadings in this action depends for its solution upon a construction of the will of John Tice, who died seized of the premises in suit. The premises were conveyed by his widow, the assumed devisee of the testator’s real estate, under the residuary clause of his will, and the dispute turns upon the question whether this residuary clause, and the will as a whole, was or was not confined to the disposal of the testator’s personal property.

The will commences with the statement, “ I, John Tice, of the City of New York, being at present weak and low in body and apprehensive of death but of sound and disposing mind, memory and understanding and wishing to make a suitable *457disposition of all such personal property as I may leave behind me, have thought proper to make and publish the following as and for my last will and testament and by these presents do make and publish the same.” The testator then proceeds to dispose of all his household furniture by gift to his wife, with the exception of certain articles which he gives to one of his daughters; next, he provides for the disposal of his interest in certain cloths manufactured in a certain factory, and then directs that certain accounts existing between him and one Higgins be adjusted and a balance struck; the will, then continuing, “And that after the balance is struck the same he paid over to my executrix and executor and that they apply the same for the payment of my debts generally, and it is my will'and wish that all other property of which I may die possessed be applied to the payment of my debts, and I hereby give and bequeath to my wife, Hary, all the rest, residue and remainder of my property, after my debts are paid to have and to hold the same for her and her heirs and assigns forever.”

Hindful of the rule that a residuary clause is generally to he given a broad and liberal construction, agreeably to the presumption that the testator intended to dispose of all his property and to avoid intestacy, I am of the opinion that the actual intention of this testator was to dispose of no more than the personal property of which he died possessed. There is, throughout this will, no mention of real estate in any way; no power of sale is given to the executors and each specific gift relates wholly to personal property. The residuary clause itself, in view of its placing and its connection iri the same sentence with other matter, quite clearly bears the construction that the testator had only his personal property in mind when directing the general disposal “of all other property;” for this residuary clause is a part of a sentence which commences with the direction that accounts he struck as between the testator and a certain person with whom he apparently maintained relations out .of which a balance of account in his favor would arise, and that the moneys thus derived be applied for the payment of his debts; that all other property “ be applied ” to the payment of his debts, *458and that after the debts were paid all the rest, residue and remainder ” of his property should go to his wife.

It is to be presumed that the testator was aware that real estate is not usually turned over in kind for the payment of debts; that the property first applicable to the debts of a deceased person is his personal property and that the use of the words “ personal property ” has a well-defined meaning in law. When preparing his will he prefaced his disposal of his property with the statement that he wished to dispose of his “ personal property,” and, while these words might he given the sense of property, of which the testator was personally possessed, and so might include his real estate, if this should effectuate his apparent intention, the whole instrument is so consistent with the preliminary statement as to make the rejection of the words “ personal property,” in their ordinary acceptance in law, purely arbitrary and not in consonance with the testator’s disclosed intention. The rule that a residuary clause should have a broad interpretation is a canon of construction adopted to effectuate a testator’s apparent intent, hut this canon of construction applies only where a contrary intention is not otherwise to be gathered from the instrument. Here, as I take it, the contrary intention is quite plain, and it is further supported by another presumption which- should not he overlooked, the presumption that a father does not, usually, intend to disinherit his children. There is not a word in this will which suggests that Mr. Tice had in view such a disposal of his property as to leave nothing to the nine children whom, as appears from the complaint, he left him surviving, and a disposal of his personal property to his wife, knowing as he did that she was also entitled to her dower in his real estate, is more in harmony with his natural intention and with the actual form of words which he adopted to express such intentions as he had.

I conclude, therefore, that the widow did not take this real estate under the residuary clause of the will, hut, except as to the defendant Irene Gr. Granun, it is conceded that the defendants are barred from the assertion of any claim of title, as heirs-at-law, by reason of adverse possession and the running of the Statute of Limitations. As to the defendant *459Irene G. Ganun, however, there is some dispute as to the application of section 375 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

It appears that the adverse possession available to the plaintiffs did not commence until the year 1876, and that at that time Zoradia 0. McGovern, the mother of this defendant and the daughter of the testator, was living. Mrs. McGovern died in 1877, her daughter Irene then being of the age of four years.

It is claimed by the plaintiffs that the Statute of Limitations, having commenced to run against the mother, continued to run against the daughter and was not suspended by reason of the daughter’s disability, through infancy, while, for this defendant, it is contended that under section 375 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the defendant’s right to interpose a defense or counterclaim, founded upon title to real property, as in this case, accrued when she was an infant, and that this being her condition when the title thus descended to her, the fact that the statute had commenced to run against her mother had no effect as against her right to assert her disability by reason of her infancy, as a ground for the suspension of the statute. The point has been directly ruled agreeably to the contention of the defendant, upon an exactly similar state of facts in Meiggs v. Hoagland, 68 App. Div. 182, 188, and, under this construction of section 375 of the Code, the claim of the defendant Irene G. Ganun was hot barred by the Statute of Limitations at the time when this action was commenced.

There should accordingly be judgment for the plaintiffs as against all the defendants except the defendant Irene G. Ganun, the claim of title on the part of which defendant is found to be established.

Judgment accordingly.