Beardslee v. Beardslee

5 Barb. 324
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 2, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 5 Barb. 324 (Beardslee v. Beardslee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beardslee v. Beardslee, 5 Barb. 324 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

By the Court, Gridley, J.

Several questions material to' the decision of this cause, have be'en' discussed by the counsel for the respective parties, which we will prodded to eohside'f in their order.

I. It is claimed by the counsel for the defendant, that the defendant took, under the will of her deceased husband, a life estate, subject to be defeated by her marriage, in the real estate of which he died seised; and that his son, the deceased husband of the plaintiff, took á remainder in fee after the expi[329]*329ration of the particular estate upon which it was limited. On the other hand it is insisted,by the plaintiff’s counsel, that the defendant took nothing under the will, and that the deceased son took a present estate of inheritance, subject only to the payment of the legacies bequeathed by the testator. If the latter construction shall prevail, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover in this action, unless she be estopped, as the defendant claims she is, by the execution of the lease hereinafter mentioned. In support of this latter position, we are referred to Coke on Lit. 47, b ; 12 John. 357; 12 Wend. 57, and 1 Comstock's Rep. 251, 252, 258.) Without expressing any opinion upon the question of estoppel, we are of the opinion that it was the intention of the testator to vest in the defendant an estate in the premises during the continuance of her widowhood. The clauses of the will upon the construction of which the question arises, are the following: Imprimis : It is my will and order that my beloved wife Lavinia shall be master of my estate, both real and personal, so long as she remains my widow, subject to the payment of the different legacies out of the same hereafter mentioned to be paid.” Then follow bequests of legacies to the children of the testator amounting to $8229, after which comes the devise to John J. Beardslee in the following words : I give and bequeath unto my son John J. Beardslee and to his heirs and assigns forever, all my real estate I may die seised of, at my decease.” Then follows a bequest unto all his children, share and share alike, the residue of his personal estate to be divided after the widowhood of his wife ceases; and lastly, he nominates his wife sole executrix of his will and guardian of his infant children.

This will, it must be confessed, is unskilfully drawn, and the meaning of the testator is not entirely free from doubt. Looking, however, to the whole will, and considering that the testator manifestly intended to dispose of his entire estate; and bearing in mind the affection and confidence expressed in the will for his wife; and the onerous and responsible duties which he imposed upon her, we cannot believe that he intended to leave her without any provision for herself. And yet, this is [330]*330the necessary conclusion, unless the first clause in the will is to be construed as conferring upon her the estate ; that is, the use of his real and personal property during her widowhood. Again; we think that character and significance are given to the expression, “ master of my estate, both real and personal,” by the words “ subject to thepayment of the different legacies,” &c. It expresses the same meaning as though he had said, I make my beloved wife the owner of my estate both real and personal, during her widowhood, subject to the payment of the several legacies,” &c. It is also worthy of observation, that the same clause, and the same words, are employed to describe her interest in the personal estate, as in the real. And we see that the personal estate was not to be divided until the widowhood of the defendant should cease. We therefore conclude that the intention of the testator was to give his wife the use of his entire estate, (subject to the payment of the legacies,) .during her widowhood, and by consequence that she took a life estate in the premises, subject to be defeated by her marriage. There is nothing in the will to control or overrule this construction. It is true that the word “ master” is not the most apt word, by which to designate one as the owner of an estate; but in 20 Wendell’s Rep. 53, a testator directed in his will that his wife should “ have the care” of his property so long as she remained his widow, for the maintenance of herself and the children ; and that expression was held to convey an estate in the lands, by which an action for dower brought by the widow of a deceased son of the testator, who claimed under a naked devise of the fee, similar to that devised to John J. Beardslee in the will now under consideration, was barred. So too it has been held that when a testator declared one “ executor of all his lands,” there being obligations connected with the devise, he gave an estate in the lands, (5 B. & Al. 785.) Again; “ the use and benefit of all my estate,” has received a similar construction. In 25 Wendell, 633, the words “ rents and profits” were adjudged to carry an estate in the land for life, notwithstanding a devise of the inheritance, expressed in such words as, standing alone, would have conveyed a present [331]*331estate in possession ; and this was so held against a daughter whose share in the inheritance was expressed without reservation, while the shares of her two sisters were given subject to the widow’s right. These authorities seem to show very clearly that we are not transcending the legitimate rules of construction when we interpret this will so as to give the defendant an estate in the premises in question ; and also that the devise to John J. of the inheritance, without designating the time of the commencement of his estate, does not make that devise repugnant to that which gave the defendant an estate durante viduitate. And the last of the above cited cases shows that the omission to state the time when John J. should come to the possession of his inheritance, while the period for the distribution of the residue of the personal estate was fixed by the will, furnishes no argument against the. interpretation which gives an interest in the lands to the defendant. There is one fact which would seem, at first view, to favor the plaintiff’s construction of this will; and that is this, that John having no pecuniary legacy, and not being able to come to his real estate nor to his share of the residue of the personal estate, during the widowhood of the defendant, was subject to be left for a period without any provision at all. John, however, was but a child in 1825 when the testator made his will, and the period when he would need an advancement was so distant that it probably escaped the attention of the testator. This is far more likely than that he could have intended to invest his infant son with the immediate possession and income of one of the most valuable farms in the county of Herkimer, thus leaving his other children with greatly disproportioned legacies, and his wife without a dollar.

II. The plaintiff’s counsel insists that, if the defendant did take an estate in the lands, during her widowhood, nevertheless, the lease executed on the 10th of April, 1837, by the defendant, for the term of her natural life, operated as a surrender to the husband of the plaintiff, of the estate of the defendant, and that the two estates became merged and united in one; so that the husband became seised of the entire estate, in free[332]*332senti, and his wife, by consequence, became entitled to dower in the same. This proposition is met by the defendant w'ith two answers.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Barb. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beardslee-v-beardslee-nysupct-1849.