Black v. Cartmell

49 Ky. 188, 10 B. Mon. 188, 1849 Ky. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 19, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 Ky. 188 (Black v. Cartmell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Black v. Cartmell, 49 Ky. 188, 10 B. Mon. 188, 1849 Ky. LEXIS 53 (Ky. Ct. App. 1849).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of tile Court.

Jacob Cartmell, by his last will,, made on the 15th April, 1833, devised different portions of his estate to each of his four children, giving to his daughter Catherine Higdon 20H acres of land and four slaves, then in possession of William, PIigdon,.her husband: By the last clause of the will, the estate intended for Mrs. Higdon, is vested in trustees for the benefit of .said William and Catherine during their joint lives, or continuance in wedlock, free and exempt from any debts or liabilities of the husband, &c., giving them both the right to use and enjoy the property, or receive the rents, dfc.; and provides as follows: “If the said Catherine dies, without issqe, b.efore the said William, [all] of the the estate, hereby devised, is to be equally divided among my heirs; but if she survives the said Higdon, the trustees are to release the estate to her; and in that event, the estate devised to her, is to be vested in her tp ¿o with and dispose of the sa,me as she may thinly proper.”

By a codicil made on the 26th May, 1333, the testator reciting that by his will he had devised sundry estate to his daughter Catherine Higdon, that is, for her benefit and that of her husband during their joint lives, devises the same estate to trustees for the exclusive use and. [189]*189benefit of his daughter Catherine Higdon, during her natural life; and if she die without lawful issue of her body, then the said estate is to pass and vest, by this will, in my (the testator’s) lawful heirs. It is then expressly provided that the trustees shall manage the estate for her exclusive benefit; that the said William Higdon is not to have, use, or occupy any portion of it, nor to live on. the land but at their discretion; and they are not to permit him to sell, vent, or hire the same for any purpose or term. He is, in no event, to have control or management ofthé same, but the same is to remain in the .trustees, free from his debts, or liabilities, or use; and after the death of my daughter, if she die with [without] lawful issue, the same is to be sold and equally divided between my three-children, N. H. Cartmell, Sarah Lane, and Eliza Nelson, and the heirs of such as may be dead.

Decree of the in«. ferior Court.

Catherine Higdon survived her husband, and after his death had an illegitimate son, Moses Black, her only issue, who, in this suit, for partition, &c., between the three devisees, in remainder, claims the estate devised to his mother, all of which had been, in his possession after the death of the testator. ' The Circuit -Court being of opinion that he did not answer the description of ‘lawful issue,’ denied his claim, and decreed a partition ■among the devisees in remainder, The correctness of this opinion and decree is the only question now to be .considered. And this question depends upon the proper construction and legal effect of the will.

The words ‘with issue,’ in the last clause of the codicil, were obviously written by mistake, instead of the words ‘without issue;’ and the codicil must be undei’stood as providing for the case of Mrs. Higdon’s dying without lawful issue, and not for the case of her leaving issue. But the devise over, in case of her dying without lawful issue, implies, certainly and necessarily, that such issue was to take at her death; and th.e ■only question is, whether by force of the word lawful, as applied to issue, the illegitimate son is to be exclu,-.. ded,

[190]*190Upon comparing the provision for Mrs. Higdon in the body of the will with that made by the codicil, it is, we think, entirely obvious that the main object of the codicil was to correct the previous provision, so far as it gave to William Higdon, the husband, an interest in the estate devised for the benefit of his wife. It was, probably, ascertained that the estate, though declared to be exempt from his debts, might, in truth, have been made subject to them; and hence the necessity of the codicil, which, in the most express and formal manner, excludes him from all use and control, and confines the use, exclusively, to the benefit of the wife. It was to make a more formal and effectual provision on this subject, that the codicil was written and executed, and not with any view of defining the sort of issue which should take the estate on the death of Catherine Higdon, or of excluding any issue which she might have. And although the word lawful, which had been omitted in the original devise, is introduced into the codicil as qualifying the word heirs (of the testator,) and the word issue (of the devisee Catherine); yet, as it is certain, that it has not the slightest effect upon the import of the word heirs, but leaves it to import, as it would have done standing alone, the persons entitled by law to inherit the father’s estate; so if instead of the word issue, used in reference to the daughter, the words “heirs of her body” had been used, we might have felt fully authorized to conclude that the word lawful, prefixed to “heirs of the body,” was entitled to no effect whatever, but left these latter words to operate according to their legal and technical import, as indicating such of her issue as were entitled by law to inherit her estate. And as her illegitimate son, being under our law her heir, would, in this sense, be the lawful heir of her body, we should scarcely hesitate to decide that the [contingency of the mother dying without lawful heir of her body had not happened, and that the son coming under that description, was, notwithstanding the illegitimacy of his birth, entitled to all the benefit which would have accrued to a legitimate son, either as. [191]*191devisee under the -will, or as heir to his mother, if she had taken an estate of inheritance.

Such a construction would, of course, not be given, if it appeared, or should be inferred, that the word lawful was used not as a merely formal or common prefix to the word heirs, but with a special view to indicate legitimacy of birth, as a requisite qualification of the heir or devisee referred to. But there is not the slightest ground, either in of out of the will,so far as appears by this record, for supposing that the father anticipated that his daughter, then a married woman, might have an illegitimate child, or that he intended to provide against it. Nor can it be assumed, or even presumed, that if she had had an illegitimate son when the will was made, her father would, on account of her fault, have excluded his unoffending grandchild from all participation in his estate, and left him a vagabond dependent upon the charity of others for sustenance and education, The introduction of the word ‘lawful’ into the the codicil, was, as we infer, the mere act of the draftsman who intended to make the codicil more formal than the original provision, for which it was to be a substitute, and therefore implies no special view to legitimacy of birth.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ky. 188, 10 B. Mon. 188, 1849 Ky. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-v-cartmell-kyctapp-1849.