Turner v. Balfour

Andrews, C. J.

Thomas Balfour died on the 15th day of January, 1890, leaving a will, of which the following paragraphs only are necessary to be considered:

Second. After the payment of my said debts and funeral expenses, I give and bequeath to my wife, Elizabeth R. Balfour, the use of the tenement in which she now lives, and fourteen dollars per month during her life.”
“Ninth. I give, devise and bequeath to my grandson, Robert Balfour, the house known as the Geer house, subject to my wife’s use of a tenement during her life as before mentioned, to him and his heirs forever.
Tenth. After the payment of my said debts and funeral expenses and the preceding legacies and devises, I give, devise and bequeath half the rest and residue of my estate, .of whatever kind and wherever situate, to my son David Balfour, to have and hold the same during his life, and at his death his share goes to my grandson Robert Balfour, to him and his heirs forever. The other half of said rest and residue of my estate I give, devise and bequeath to my son Thomas Balfour, to him and his heirs forever.
Eleventh. In case my said grandson Robert Balfour dies •leaving no issue, I give, devise and bequeath his share, above indicated, to my six children, share and share alike.”

By the finding of facts it appears that the testator left a widow, who has since died; and that he had six children living at his death and who are still living, each married and having children. Robert Balfour, the grandson named in the ninth, tenth and eleventh paragraphs of the will, was a son of Thomas Balfour. He died about a year after the death of the testator at the age of fifteen years and ten months, never having had issue.

Upon these parts of the will two questions are propounded to ,the Superior Court, and reserved for the advice of this court.

Eirst. Does the share of Robert Balfour, conditionally disposed of in the eleventh section, include the gift to Robert contained in both the ninth and tenth sections, or only that contained in the tenth section ? Second. Rob*91ert Balfour the grandson having died after the death of the testator leaving no issue, do the Geer house devised to him in the ninth section and the one half residue given to him in the tenth section, or does the property given to him in either section, go to the six children of the testator, as provided in the eleventh section, or does it go to the brothers and sisters of said Robert? ”

The word “ share ” in the tenth paragraph of the will means the undivided half of the rest and residue of the testator’s estate given to the testator’s son David Balfour for his life, with remainder in fee to Robert Balfour, the testator’s grandson. The other undivided half of the rest and residue is given to Thomas Balfour, another son of the testator, in fee. The word “ share ” ordinarily means a part or a definite portion of a thing owned by a number of persons in common. It contemplates something owned in common by two or more persons and has reference to that part of the undivided interest which belongs to some one of them. The word “ share ” in this tenth paragraph is used strictly according to this definition. The testator had in mind the rest and residue of his estate as being owned in common by his sons David and Thomas. He then speaks of the interest in this undivided part of his property which is to belong to his son David and calls it his, David’s, share. But at the death of David his share in the rest and residue becomes the share of Robert, the grandson. And in this way the share of the grandson Robert is indicated in the tenth paragraph. In the eleventh paragraph the share of the grandson Robert Balfour, “ above indicated,” is given over, in- case he dies without issue, to the testator’s six children. It is a familiar rule of construction that when a word is used in one part of a will with a certain meaning, it is to have the same meaning in other parts of the will unless the context shows that it must have a different one. We are led then to believe that when the testator used the word “ share ” in the eleventh paragraph of his will he intended precisely the same thing that he had indicated by that word in the tenth paragraph that is, an undivided half of the rest *92and residue of his estate, and that he did not intend the share mentioned in the eleventh paragraph to include the devise to Robert in the ninth paragraph of the will. , The meaning of the word “ share,” the rule of construction, and the words of the will, all concur to bring us to the same conclusion.

The tenth section of the will taken by itself would clearly give to Robert Balfour a vested remainder in fee in the share of the residue there given him. It would not affect the case that he died before the determination of the preceding life estate. That is an incident that may occur in any case of a remainder after a life estate. But the eleventh clause of the will is manifestly to be read as if it was a part of the tenth, and the provision of that clause that if Robert should die without issue his share should go to the six children of the testator, must be taken to mean, a dying without issue before the termination of the life estate. This was clearly the meaning of the testator, as, if he had meant a dying without issue in middle life or old age, he would hardly have given the property over to his six sons, who were a generation older then his grandson Robert. Construing this provision as having this meaning, it then becomes a condition of the gift of the remainder to Robert that he should be living at the expiration of the life estate. It makes no difference whether this remainder did not vest, or having vested was defeated by the condition as a subsequent one, since in either case Robert would have had no existing interest when the life estate terminated, as he was not then living. Upon his death the remainder to the six children of the testator immediately took effect and became a vested one. The devise does not operate at all as an ex-ecutory devise, but is good at law, and is governed wholly by the settled law as to remainders, whether created by will or by grant.

The limitation of the effect of the provisions of the eleventh clause to those of the tenth, makes our conclusion fall in fully with the actual intent of the testator, which we regard as clear. If however it should be construed as applying to the gift of the Geer house in the ninth clause, a *93question would arise as to whether the gift, being expressly in fee, could be reduced to a life estate by the later provision of the eleventh clause. This question we have no reason for considering.

In answer to the first question, we say that the share of Robert Balfour conditionally disposed of in the eleventh paragraph of the will includes only the gift to him contained in the tenth section.

The answer to the first question substantially answers the second. Robert having died without issue, and intestate, (he was not of an age to be capable of making a will,) his interest in the Geer house vests in his brothers and sisters.

The Superior Court is advised to render judgment in accordance with the views herein expressed.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.