Beadle v. Beadle

40 F. 315
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nebraska
DecidedMay 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 F. 315 (Beadle v. Beadle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beadle v. Beadle, 40 F. 315 (circtdne 1881).

Opinion

McCbary, J.

1. We are to consider in tbe first place the question whether the complainant, David E. Beadle, derived title to the undi[316]*316vided half of the real estate in question under the will of John L. Beadle. The particular provisions of that instrument to be construed are the third and fourth clauses. The third clause provides “that alter the payment of all debts, as above provided for, all the rest and residue of my propertyresting in real estate, [describing it,] together with all other, the land and real estate or interest therein, that I may have or hold in said county of Sarpy, in the territory of Nebraska, or elsewhere in that or any other’territory, state, or county on the face of the earth; that my said real estate and chattels real be sold by my said executors for the best prices that can be procured therefor, either at public or private sale, (or by the survivor of my executors,) in their discretion, at any time within the space of ten (10) years after my decease, at such times as they shall deem best, and out of the avails of such sales, and the proceeds thereof, or any part thereof, I give, devise, and bequeath,” etc., (naming various bequests to relatives, amounting in the aggregate to $950.) And the fourth clause is as follows:

“And the rest and residue of my property and estate, real and personal, of whatsoever nature or kind, not hereinbefore disposed of and already devised and bequeathed, (except the right and interest in a certain patent and invention hereinafter named,) 1 give, devise, and bequeath to my brothers, Mishael Beadle and David E. Beadle, to be divided equally between them, share and share alike; to have and to hold unto them, the said Mishael Beadle and David E. Beadle, and to their heirs and assigns, forever.”

Respondent insists that this will vested the title in the executors, and made it their duty to sell the land and convert the proceeds into personalty, and that therefore the will.itself was a conversion, so that the land must be treated as personalty. This upon the ground that, where a testator distinctly directs in his will that land shall be sold and converted into money, equity considers it as done. 2 Story, Eq. Jur. §§ 791, 793, 1212, 1214; Craig v. Leslie, 3 Wheat. 563. On the other hand, it is insisted by the complainant that these clauses of the will did not vest title in the executors; that they only authorized them to sell for the purpose of paying the several legacies named; and that by the terms of the will no equitable conversion was provided for or intended.

We must, if possible, construe the two provisions of the will above quoted so that both may stand; and there is therefore much force in the suggestion that it could not have been the intention of the testator by the third clause to require the sale by his executors of all his real estate, since by the fourth he bequeaths “the rest and residue'’ of his property and estate, both real and personal, to his brothers, Mishael Beadle and David E. Beadle, the complainant and respondent herein. The fourth clause bears upon its face strong proof that the testator did not anticipate that all his realty would necessarily be sold by the executors under the previous clause. The fourth clause not only expressly devises the residue of the realty, — thus assuming that there might be a residue of realty, — but it bequeaths the same, “to have and to hold, unto them, the said Mishael Beadle and David E. Beadle, and to their heirs and assigns, forever,” which is the phraseology usually employed in convey-[317]*317anees of real estate. In the light of these considerations, let us look at the language of the third clause in the will. Does it convey the title to the executors, or simply vest in them a naked power of sale? If the latter, then the title, which could not rest in abeyance, must have passed to the devisees subject to the right of the executors to sell. Upon this subject Judge Redfield, in his work on Wills, (volume 3, p. 136,) says:

“It is often made a question whether the executor takes a fee-simple under the will, upon which his power to dispose of the same is ingrafted, or a mere naked power to dispose of the title to the estate in a particular mode, in order to effect the purposes of the will.”

And in anote, on page 137, the same author lays down the rule for determining the question in these words:

“It is said the devise of the land to the executors to sell passes the title; but a devise that executors may sell, or shall sell, lands, or that they may or shall be sold by the executor, gives them only a naked power of sale. ” Citing Sugd. Powers, (8th Ed.) 112; Doe v. Shotter, 8 Adol. & E. 905.

Judged by this rule, it is clear that the will now under consideration did not vest the title in the executors. There are no words of conveyance or devise to them. The language is “that my said real estate and chattels real he sold by my executors,” etc. He does not say: “I give and bequeath to my executors,” etc.; nor does he use any equivalent language. There are certainly no words expressly passing the title to executors, and since the purpose of the testator is secured as well by treating the instrument as conferring only a power of sale, and since by this construction all the provisions of the will may be harmonized, I adopt it.

Another consideration has great weight with me in determining the true construction of this will. It is conceded that all the legacies provided for in the will, to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the land, have been paid in full. The legatees are therefore satisfied, and there is no one to claim the property as personalty. The complainant and respondent both claim realty under the will. They have both elected to claim the realty, as their pleadings in this case abundantly show. The complainant sues as devisee, and claims title under the will. The respondent claims title in himself by virtue of the will and a conveyance from complainant. He sets out the will as a part of his answer, and as the source of his title, and prays that his title may be quieted. The legacies having been paid, it is clear that the whole beneficial interest under the will, whether that interest be in the land or in the proceeds of a sale thereof, is in the same parties; that is to say, in complainant and respondent jointly, or respondent solely, — in both, if complainant succeeds in this controversy; in the respondent, if he is successful. Now, the law is well settled that where the same person is to receive the bequest, whether it remain in the form of realty or be sold and converted into money, that person may elect to take either. This for the reason that no other person can by possibility have any interest in the question. It is only in cases where if the property he treated as realty it will go to one party, and if regarded as personalty to another, the questions arise [318]*318requiring the intervention of courts, and the application of the principles contended for by the respondent. Courts of equity cannot be called upon to hear and determine controversies concerning purely abstract questions, and which do not involve substantial rights. If the same result follows a decision either way, there is nothing with which a court ought to be troubled. A court of equity will not compel a trustee to execute a trust against the wishes of the cestui que trust. If the latter is entitled to the land, or its proceeds if it be sold, the court will allow him to take his choice. This rule is settled by the case of Craig v. Leslie, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
40 F. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beadle-v-beadle-circtdne-1881.