Blackbourn v. Tucker

72 Miss. 735
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 72 Miss. 735 (Blackbourn v. Tucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackbourn v. Tucker, 72 Miss. 735 (Mich. 1895).

Opinion

Cooper, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

By his will, made on the seventeeth day of August, 1887, A. L. Blackboiirn, after some small bequests to his wife, the appellant, devised and bequeathed the remainder of his estate, real and personal, to the Senatobia Educational Association, to be by said association applied “ in maintaining and keeping in a prosperous condition that institution of learning owned by said association, and known as the Blackbourn College for Girls, in Senatobia, Miss., or in both maintaining said college and erecting such additional and suitable buildings to said college as their [743]*743judgment may dictate, having always -in view the best interest-of said institution.” Blackbourn died on the first day of November, A.D. 1893, and his will was presented for probate-by Tucker, his executor, on the fourth day of said month. The appellant exhibited her bill in the chancery court of Tate-county, in which county the testator had resided and in which the will was probated, challenging the validity of the devise of the land and the bequest of the personal estate to the Senatobia Educational Association, on the ground that said dispositions of his estate by the testator were rendered void by §§ 269, 270 of the constitution of the state. These sections are as follows :

“Sec. 269. Every devise or bequest of lands, tenements or’ hereditaments, or any interest therein, of freehold or less than freehold, either present or future, vested or contingent, or of any money directed to be raised by the sale thereof, contained in any last will and testament, or codicil or other testamentary writing, in favor of any religious or ecclesiastical corporation, sole or aggregate, or any religious or ecclesiastical society, or to any religious denomination or association of persons, or to any person or body politic, in trust, either express or implied, secret or resulting, either for the use and benefit of such religious corporation, society, denomination or association, or for the purpose of being given or appropriated to charitable uses or purposes, shall be null and void, and the heir at law shall take the same property so devised or bequeathed, as though no testamentary disposition had been made.
“Sec. 270. Every legacy, gift or bequest of money or personal property, or of any interest, benefit or use therein, either direct, implied or otherwise, contained in any last will and testament, or codicil, in favor of any religious or ecclesiastical corporation, solo or aggregate, or any religious or ecclesiastical society, or to any religious denomination or association, either for its own use or benefit, or for the purpose of being given or appropriated to charitable uses, shall be null and void, [744]*744and the distributee shall take the same as though no such testamentary disposition had been made. ’ ’

The constitution became operative on November 1, 1890. The chancellor was of opinion that, since the will was executed before the adoption of the constitution, it was not controlled by the sections of the constitution above set out, although the testator died after they became of force, and, entertaining this view, sustained a demurrer to and dismissed the bill. This ruling of the chancellor presents the question principally argued by counsel, but, as will hereafter appear, the question of the construction of the constitutional provisions, if applicable in the present controversy, is also presented. Counsel for appellee, in an exceedingly able and learned brief, contend that to apply the constitution to wills executed before its adoption, is to give it a retroactive operation, to annul a valid and lawful disposition of property, and, while they concede the competency of such legislation, either by statute or by constitutional provision, they contend that the presumption is against such having been the intention of the framers of the constitution, there being in the instrument no provision that it should have a retroactive operation. It is urged by them that our constitutional provisions are, in effect and purpose, the same as the English statute of mortmain. 9 George II., ch. 36. And since, they say, the English statute had uniformly been held by the courts of England, and by those of Pennsylvania, in which state alone it is in force, to apply only to wills executed after its passage, it should be assumed that the framers of the constitution intended, in adopting our provisions against mortmain, to adopt also the construction which had been given to its prototype. It would unnecessarily protract this opinion to enter into a full discussion of the authorities cited by counsel for the respective parties, nor is it necessary to affirm that, in the construction of the act of George II., the English courts were prolonging the controversy that had so long existed between parliament and the ecclesiastics, who formerly presided in chan-[745]*745eery. The language of the English act, that £Cno lands or tenements, or money to be laid out therein, shall be given or charged, ’ ’ etc., is quite different from that of our provision, which condemns the dispositions forbidden when ‘‘ contained in any last will or testament, or codicil or other testamentary writing. ’5 At the time of the adoption of the English statute, after-acquired lands could not pass by devise, which was considered in the nature of a conveyance or appointment of an estate then owned, or to which the devisor was beneficially entitled. 1 Jarman on Wills, ch. 4. What influence, if any, this fact had upon the English courts, and.whether the fact that with us a different statutory rule prevails would lead to a different constructions of the same statute, need not be considered. The ¡Drovisions are not the same. The rule of construction invoked by counsel for appellees, that when a statute of another state which has received judicial construction is adopted, the presumption is that its construction is also accepted, is met by the opposing rule that a change in the words of a prior statute is an indication that the lawmakers intended a different, and not the same, construction to be thereafter adopted. Rich v. Keyser, 54 Pa. St., 86; Endlich on Inter, of Stat., § 382. But these rules of construction aré not of very great value in determining the question involved, because the very nature and character of the constitutional provisions impel us to the conclusion that they apply to all devises becoming operative by the death of the devisor after their adoption. An examination of the cases cited by counsel for the respective parties will show them to have been decided under statutes of three distinct classes: First, statutes limiting or denying testamentary power, as the statutes of mortmain; second, statutes affording a rule of construction for discovering the intent of the testator; third, statutes regulating the execution and publication of wills. When the purpose is of discovering whether the legislative will was that the statute should' operate what is sometimes not accurately called retroactively, it is manifest that the question is largely controlled by the very [746]*746nature of the act. We are now dealing with a question falling within the first of the classes of cases as just noted. The statute of 1 Vict., ch. 26, may be taken as illustrating the second class. As a rule, before this statute, when a testator referred to an actually existing state of things, his language was deemed to be referred to the date of the will, and not to his death. Jarman on Wills, vol. 1, p. 288. The act of parliament provided ‘c

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Bluebook (online)
72 Miss. 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackbourn-v-tucker-miss-1895.