Biscoe v. Biscoe

6 G. & J. 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 6 G. & J. 232 (Biscoe v. Biscoe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biscoe v. Biscoe, 6 G. & J. 232 (Md. 1834).

Opinion

Buchanan, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is a well known and inflexible rule, which hardly needs to be stated here, that no limitation can be good and operative as an executory devise, unless it be upon a contingency that must happen, if at all, within a life or lives in being, and twenty-one years, and a portion of a year afterwards, allowing for the time of gestation; and that if it be upon an event, or contingency, which may, or may nal happen within the prescribed limits, that the limitation is voidab initio, and cannot take effect, notwithstanding the event should afterwards in fact occur within the time allowed by the rule for the happening of a contingency, on which an executory devise may be limited: the ingredient, that it must happen, (if ever) within the limits which the law prescribes, and not that it may, or may not happen, being wanting to the validity of such executory estates.

The rule being, not that the limitation over is to take effect within the time allowed, but that the contingency on which it is made to depend, must happen, if at all, within the prescribed limits. This rule applies as well to executory bequests of personal property, as to executory devises of real estate. With this difference in the practical application of it, remarked upon in Dallam vs. Dallam, 7 Harr. and Johns. 220, and Newton and Griffith, 1 Harr. and Gill, 111, that in relation to personal estates, courts generally incline to pay attention to any circumstance, or expression in the will, that seems to afford a ground for construing a limitation after dying without issue, &c., to be a dying without issue, living at the death of the party, in order to support the bequest over; but that in the case of real estates, the construction is generally otherwise, in favor of the heir whose interest is concerned, which is always much favored by the law. Fearne on Remainders, (by Butler) 476, which is exemplified in Forth vs. Chapman, 1 Pr. Wrns. 663; where the [236]*236testator gave the residue af his real and personal estate to his two nephews generally, with a limitation over to another, in case either of them should die and leave no issue of his body.

There was a disposition for life in the same clause of a will of real and personal property, with a limitation over on the event of a dying without leaving issue; and it was held, that the devisees of the freehold, took an estate tail, the contingency being too remote to support an executory devise, and that the limitation over of the personal estate, was good by way of executory bequest, by force of the. word leave. The words leave no issue, when applied to a disposition of personal property, being construed to mean a failure of issue at the time of the death of the first taker; and when applied to a disposition of real estate to mean (in favor of the heir) an indefinite failure of issue, which seems to be an almost imperceptible shade of distinction. It has, however, become a settled rule of construction. But “Lex plus laudalur, quando raiioni probatur

The distinctions too, in relation to executory limitations of personal property, between dying without issue, and dying without leaving issue, appear to be very subtile; seeing that if the reason for the avidity of courts to seize upon slight circumstances to support such limitations be, (as is sometimes said,) that the issue of the first legatee can under no construction take; the same reason applies as well to the former, as to the latter set of words. Still it has become a settled distinction not now to be overturned. For it is the established law, that whenever an executory devise, or an executory bequest, is limited to take efifect after a dying without issue, or without heirs, &c., subject to no other restrictions, the limitation is void. The rule being in relation to personal property, that if the limitation be, after a dying without issue, &c. generally, without the concurrence of any other circumstance of intention, those words shall not, ex vi termini, signify a dying without issue then living; but if the limitation rests solely upon the usual in[237]*237tent and import of those words, the limitation over is too remote, and therefore void, and the whole vests in the first legatee; and that on the other hand, when there is any other circumstance of intention, these words shall not ex vi termini, import an indefinite failue; but that the signification of those words may be confined to a dying without issue then living, by any clause or circumstance in the will, which can indicate or imply such intention, (Butler’s Fearne on Remainders, 485,) and effect be thus given to the limitation over. And it matters not whether the estate be limited to the first legatee indefinitely, or for life expressly, or such legatee and his heirs or heirs of his body, or issue, or children, the restriction is equally valid. Ib. 478, 479. In. this case, the words of the will are, “I give and bequeath unto my nephew John McKay Biscoe, my slave Samuel; in case the said John McKay Biscoe should die without lawful heir, I then give the said slave Samuel, to my nephew Thomas Kay ton Biscoe. John McKay Biscoe died without having ever had any issue; and the question upon the construction of the will is, whether those words “die without lawful heir of his body,” mean an indefinite, or a definite failure of heirs of his body.

If the limitation over is to be considered as resting entirely upon the usual extent and import of those words, as settled in legal understanding, there can be no question that it is too remote, and therefore void, and that the whole property in the negro vested absolutely in John McKay Biscoe.

We have seen the rule to be, that the contingency on which the limitation is made to depend, must happen, if at all, within the prescribed limits; and that if an executory devise or bequest, be limited to take effect after a dying without issue, or without heirs, &c. subject to no other restriction, the limitation is void. But we have also seen, that in relation to executory bequests of personal estates, those words may be restricted to mean a dying without issue living at the death of the party, by any clause or cir[238]*238cumstance in the will, that can indicate or imply such intention in the testator, and that in order to support the limitation over if they can, courts generally incline to lay hold on any expression or circumstance in the will, that seems to afford a ground for such a construction; as appears by the construction given to the expressions, leaving no issue, or without leaving issue, &c. when used in a limitation of personal property, though in the same clause of a will, making a disposition of both real and personal estate. So that, although the contingency on which the limitation is to depend, is required to be such as must happen, if ever, within certain prescribed limits; yet whether that be the character of the contingency, depends upon the sense in which the testator, from any clause or circumstance in the will, is supposed to have used the expressions, dying without issue, fyc.

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Bluebook (online)
6 G. & J. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biscoe-v-biscoe-md-1834.